Historic Tidewater Inn Redevelopment PDF  | Print |  Email
Written by Jim Andrews   
Sunday, 10 April 2011

Access Andrews Consulting conducted an ADA/Americans with Disabilities Act Accessibility Guidelines (ADAAG) compliance survey for the owner of the Tidewater Inn, a historic hotel located in Easton, Maryland, which dates back to 1947. The survey included the hotel sleeping rooms, meeting rooms, common/public areas, a 5-star restaurant and adjacent commercial space including a dress shop and bank. This inn is a popular special events location.

historic-tidewater-inn

The Tidewater Inn has long been renowned. The roots of the Chesapeake inn stretch back more than 265 years to 1712, when the Talbot County Courthouse was moved here from Oxford. Early reports indicate the presence of more than one tavern, the courthouse, but only three to four houses. These early homes provided lodging as well as food and drink to their patrons who would have business at the courthouse.

In 1786 authorization was given to lay out a town around the courthouse. The new town was first named Talbot, but two years later received permission to be named Easton.

As Easton grew, the community became a center for travelers in the Tidewater area. By the late 19th century, the various taverns and hotels had given way to two larger hotels and a few boarding houses. In 1891, a new frame hotel was erected on the site of the present-day Tidewater Inn. It operated for several years under the name of the Avon Hotel. When it was later sold, the name reverted to Avon until the Hotel was destroyed by fire in 1944. The destruction of the Avon left Easton without a major hotel.

In 1947, A. Johnson Grymes broke ground for the Tidewater Inn. Immediately, Eley Construction Company began building, but the postwar shortages of steel and plumbing delayed construction. The hotel was to have all of the latest features, but these were often hard to buy.

As construction resumed, Mr. Grymes knew there was no point in having the finest hotel unless it was tastefully decorated. Accordingly, he retained Marion Booth Trask as decorator.

On September 3, 1949, an open house attended by 4,000 persons marked the opening of a building that would mean more to Easton that any other structure since the Talbot County Court was constructed in 1712. The Tidewater Inn was constructed over a two-year time period.

In 1954, the Tidewater Inn added the Gold Room and additional guest rooms. Since then it has been a site of hundreds of conventions and meeting, and has hosted many of the great names in America.

In the fall of 2005, The Tidewater Inn entered a new chapter in its storied existence as Josh Freeman and The Carl M. Freeman Companies selected Access Andrews Consulting to conduct a site survey to determine compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act Accessibility guidelines. It was designated a Historic Hotel of America by the National Trust for Historic Preservation in October 2006.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 28 June 2011