Previous forms of the hospitality company in Bethesda, Maryland, United States
Marriott Corporation
![](//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/9/9a/Marriott_Corporation_Logo.jpg) |
Formerly
| The Hot Shoppe (1927?1929)
Hot Shoppes, Inc. (1929?1964)
Marriott-Hot Shoppes, Inc. (1964?1967)
|
---|
Company type
| Public
|
---|
| NYSE
: MHS
|
---|
Industry
| Hospitality
|
---|
Founded
| 1927
; 97 years ago
(
1927
)
as
The Hot Shoppe
in
Washington, D.C.
,
U.S.
Incorporated in 1929
; 95 years ago
(
1929
)
as
Hot Shoppes, Inc.
in
Wilmington, Delaware
, U.S.
|
---|
Founder
| J. Willard Marriott
|
---|
Defunct
| 1993
; 31 years ago
(
1993
)
|
---|
Fate
| Corporate split
|
---|
Successor
| Marriott International
and
Host Marriott Corporation
|
---|
Headquarters
| Bethesda
,
Maryland
, U.S.
|
---|
Area served
| Worldwide
|
---|
Key people
| Bill Marriott
(Chairman, CEO and President) at time of corporate split
|
---|
Products
| Hotels
,
resorts
,
restaurants
,
food service
|
---|
Total assets
| $9.1 billion (1992)
|
---|
Owner
| Marriott family (25%)
|
---|
Footnotes / references
[1]
|
Marriott Corporation
was a
hospitality company
that operated from 1927 until 1993, founded by
J. Willard Marriott
and
Frank J. Kimball
as
Hot Shoppes, Inc.
In 1957, Marriott Corporation opened its first hotel in
Arlington County
,
Virginia
,
United States
as the
Twin Bridges Motor Hotel
(demolished 1990).
[2]
Marriott Corporation's first international property was opened in
Acapulco, Mexico
, in 1969.
[2]
Hot Shoppes became Marriott Corporation in 1967, which subsequently split into
Marriott International, Inc.
and
Host Marriott Corporation
in 1993.
History
[
edit
]
J. Willard Marriott, who had moved away with his business partner Hugh Colton and his wife Alice from Utah to
Washington, D.C.
, in 1927, where he operated a curbside food stand selling
A&W Root Beer
in the
Columbia Heights
neighborhood of Washington at
14th Street
and Park Road NW.
He would later rename the food stand The Hot Shoppe, adding Mexican food items to the menu.
[3]
[2]
Marriott's business expanded to
Baltimore, Maryland
, in 1934, shortly after which the company started its food services division. During
Second World War
, the business expanded to include the management of food services in defense plants and government buildings, such as the
U.S. Treasury
.
They introduced popular items such as the
"Mighty Mo"
, a double hamburger served in a bun, topped with sesame seeds and divided into three slices. It was stacked with a dill pickle strip in the top layer and tomato, lettuce, and a distinctive dressing on the bottom layer. Very thick milk shakes were served with a long-handled spoon and an unusually wide straw, both of which would stand upright by themselves in the thick drinks. Similarly thick orange sherbet drinks were served in the same tall glass with a spoon and a straw, often called a "freeze". These would become mainstays of the luncheon menu and be imitated forever thereafter.
Then in the 1950s, Hot Shoppes, Inc. started providing food services to
public schools
and to Children's National Medical Center in 1955, a contract which they held for 35 years.
The company went public in 1953.
[4]
[5]
[6]
In 1957, the firm expanded into the
hotel
industry by opening the first Marriott hotel (actually a
motel
), the Twin Bridges Motor Hotel, in Arlington County, Virginia.
In 1964, Hot Shoppes, Inc. was renamed Marriott-Hot Shoppes, Inc.
[7]
The company became Marriott Corporation in 1967.
In 1967, Marriott acquired the
Big Boy
family restaurants chain from
Bob Wian
.
[8]
[9]
The following year, Marriott acquired the Fort Wayne-based RoBee's, a roast beef sandwich fast-food chain,
[10]
but later discovered that they would not be able to use the RoBee's name nationally.
[11]
At the suggestion of the new Marriott board member Bob Wian, cowboy actor
Roy Rogers
was contacted to lend his name to the roast beef sandwich venture, and the
Roy Rogers Family Restaurants
was formed a few months later by converting RoBee's and a few Hot Shoppe locations.
[12]
[13]
Over the years, Marriott's company interests expanded. Continuing with food services, Marriott eventually became involved with
airline in-flight food service
. This segment of their enterprise continues to be a large part of their business, providing food services to many major airlines.
In 1976, Marriott opened two theme parks called Marriott's Great America in
California
[14]
and
Illinois
.
[15]
Another was planned for in
Maryland
but local opposition prevented construction from ever beginning at any of the three proposed sites. The parks had replicas of the first Hot Shoppes. Both parks were sold in the mid-1980s, the one in California was sold to the city of
Santa Clara, California
and the one in Illinois was sold to
Six Flags
in 1984. They are both renamed California's Great America and Six Flags Great America, respectively.
[16]
[17]
In 1982, the company acquired
Host International
for $120 million
[18]
and also
Gino's Inc.
, the owner of
Gino's Hamburgers
and
Rustler Steak House
restaurant chains, for $48.6 million.
[19]
[20]
108 Rustler Steak House Restaurants plus three other restaurants were sold in the following year to two different firms for undisclosed amounts. Newly formed Tenly Enterprises purchased 94 restaurants while
Sizzler Restaurants International
purchased the remaining 17.
[21]
By 1984, Marriott had formed a vacation
time-share
division, now called
Marriott Vacation Club International
, through the purchase of American Resorts Group for an undisclosed amount
[22]
and also a senior-living division.
[
citation needed
]
In 1985, the company purchased the
Howard Johnson's
restaurant chain from the
Imperial Group P.L.C.
of London for $314 million
[23]
[24]
with plans of converting the acquired restaurants to the Bob's Big Boy brand and to make Bob's the largest coffee-shop business in the country.
[25]
In 1987, Marriott sold the Big Boy restaurants franchise rights to
Elias Brothers
for an undisclosed amount while keeping 208 company-owned
Bob's Big Boy
restaurants in California and selected locations on the East Coast.
[26]
In 1988, Marriott purchased all 91
Wag's
restaurants from
Walgreens
Corporation,
[27]
but dissolved the chain in 1991.
The Roy Rogers chain was sold to
Hardee's
in 1990 for $365 million in cash.
[13]
The Marriott Corporation ended its existence as a single company in 1993, when it was split into two separate entities:
[28]
1) Marriott International Corporation, which operated the hotel and lodging aspect of the business and
Marriott Vacation Club International
, and 2)
Host Marriott Corporation
, the new name for the original Marriott Corporation and operating the Marriott Food Services Management. The last Hot Shoppes restaurant, located in the
Marlow Heights Shopping Center
, closed on December 2, 1999.
[29]
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
McDowell, Edwin (February 4, 1993).
"Will Marriott Ever Stand Divided?"
.
New York Times
.
- ^
a
b
c
"The Marriott Timeline"
.
Marriott International
.
- ^
Feldmeier, Julia (October 8, 2006).
"Capital Knowledge: Trivia to Challenge Longtime Locals and Newbies Alike"
.
The Washington Post
.
- ^
"Hot Shoppes Stock Offering"
.
Wall Street Journal
. February 18, 1953. p. 13.
ProQuest
132074273
.
Hot Shoppes, Inc., Washington, D. C., plans to offer its stock to the public for the first time since the curb-service restaurant chain was founded in 1927.
- ^
Goodman, S. Oliver (February 17, 1953).
"Hot Shoppes Plans Public Sale of Stock"
.
Washington Post
. p. 14.
ProQuest
152563052
. Archived from
the original
on October 29, 2017
. Retrieved
October 29,
2017
.
Hot Shoppes, Inc., family-owned for a quarter of a century, is expected to file a registration statement with the Securities and Exchange Commission this week for the first public offering of shares.
- ^
Goodman, S. Oliver (March 18, 1953).
"Hot Shoppes Issue Is Sold In Two Hours"
.
Washington Post
. p. 17.
ProQuest
152580613
.
First public offering of Hot Shoppes Inc. common stock was snapped up within two hours yesterday. Some local brokers reported oversubscription by two or three times the amount allotted to them.
- ^
"Hot Shoppe Name Change Is Proposed"
.
The Washington Post
. October 18, 1964. p. C15.
ProQuest
142117126
.
Marriott Hot Shoppes, Inc., will be the new corporate name of Hot Shoppes, if shareholders vote approval at the annual meeting on Nov. 10.
- ^
"Marriott-Hot Shoppes Negotiating Acquisition Of Wian Enterprises"
.
Wall Street Journal
. December 8, 1966. p. 10.
ProQuest
133077023
.
- ^
"Marriott, Big Boy Chains Dickering"
.
Los Angeles Times
. December 8, 1966. p. c10.
ProQuest
155571592
.
Marriott-Hot Shoppes Inc., is negotiating to acquire Robert C. Wian Enterprises Inc., and its affiliated Big Boy Properties Inc., officials of the two firms announced Wednesday.
- ^
"Marriott Buys Ro Bee Restaurant Franchise"
.
Washington Post
. February 9, 1968. p. D6.
ProQuest
143546118
.
The Marriott Corp. has completed the acquisition of the RoBee's fast-food franchise organization based in Fort Wayne...
- ^
Heath, Thomas (April 17, 2016).
"Brothers bring back Roy Rogers and its 'holy trio' of burgers, chicken, roast beef"
.
Washington Post
.
- ^
Marriott, Bill
(December 30, 2013).
"Tasting Success With Roy Rogers"
.
Marriott on the Move
.
Marriott International
.
- ^
a
b
"Roy Rogers Chain Is Sold to Hardee's"
.
New York Times
. January 31, 1990.
- ^
Warga, Wayne (July 4, 1976).
"Sugar-Coated History in New Marriott Fun Park"
.
Los Angeles Times
. p. N1.
ProQuest
158085073
.
- ^
Enstad, Robert (May 23, 1976).
"Planning your trip to Great America"
.
Chicago Tribune
. p. 12.
ProQuest
171342023
.
- ^
"Santa Clara to Buy Park for $101 Million"
.
Los Angeles Times
. February 2, 1984. p. F1.
ProQuest
153735173
.
The city of Santa Clara has decided to buy Marriott's Great America amusement park in a $101-million deal to save 138 acres of prime Silicon Valley land from developers...
- ^
"Bally completes purchase of Great America"
.
Chicago Tribune
. May 26, 1984. p. A7.
ProQuest
170742626
.
Bally Manufacturing Corp. completed Friday its previously announced $114.5 million acquisition of Marriott's Great America theme park in Gurnee from Marriott Corp.
- ^
"Marriott Plans To Buy Host"
.
New York Times
. December 4, 1981.
- ^
"Marriott Offers To Buy Gino's"
.
New York Times
. January 5, 1982.
- ^
Knight, Jerry (January 5, 1982).
"Marriott Corp. Makes Bid For Gino's"
.
Washington Post
.
- ^
"Briefs"
.
New York Times
. May 3, 1983.
- ^
"Marriott Acquires American Resorts Group"
.
Washington Post
. April 19, 1984. p. B1.
ProQuest
138325625
.
Marriott Corp. has acquired the American Resorts Group, a Florida-based developer and operator of vacation time-sharing condominiums, it was announced yesterday. Terms were not disclosed.
- ^
Horovitz, Bruce (September 25, 1985).
"Marriott and Partner Buy Howard Johnson"
.
Los Angeles Times
.
- ^
Daniels, Lee A. (September 25, 1985).
"Howard Johnson Acquired"
.
New York Times
.
- ^
Abramowit, Michael (September 25, 1985).
"Marriott Corp. Buys Howard Johnson's"
.
Washington Post
.
- ^
Walsh, Sharon Warren (November 5, 1987).
"Detroit Company Picks Up Rights to Marriott's Big Boy Franchises"
.
Washington Post
.
- ^
"Marriott to Buy 91 Wag's Restaurants"
.
New York Times
. June 30, 1988.
- ^
"Marriott to Split Into 2 Firms, Shift Debt Load : Strategy: The hotel management and franchise business will be separated from hotel and retirement properties"
.
Los Angeles Times
. October 6, 1992.
The two companies, known as Marriott International Inc. and Host Marriott Corp., will be listed separately on the New York Stock Exchange and have their own management teams.
- ^
Brown, DeNeen L. (December 3, 1999).
"Last Taste of a Tradition; In Marlow Heights, Hot Shoppes Closes Its Doors and an Era"
.
Washington Post
. p. A.01.
ProQuest
408564853
.
But the last of the Hot Shoppes closed its doors at exactly 1 p.m. yesterday, bringing an end to a chain of restaurants that epitomized the '50s and '60s... Most of the Hot Shoppes closed in the '80s. A few weeks ago, the second to the last closed in Crystal City.
External links
[
edit
]
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People
| |
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Luxury
| |
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Full service
| |
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Focused service
| Short-term lodging
| |
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Extended-stay lodging
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Vacation ownership
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Related
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International
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National
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Artists
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