Curry's Lebec Lodge: Room Key and Fob
Lebec, California
The fact that this hotel room key and fob exist today is remarkable, considering they would have been made and used only between 1922 and 1924 (or 1925 at the latest) when the Lebec Hotel was owned and operated by Foster Curry, who renamed it "Curry's Lebec Lodge." The hard leather fob measures 4¾ x 2-3/16 inches and is stamped: "Curry's Lebec Lodge / 236 / Lebec, Calif. / If carried away return unsealed / By Mail / Postage 3 Cents." The back is blank. Room 236 would have been upstairs in the 2-story, ornately appointed art deco hotel, which was built in 1921. The key measures 2¼ inches in length and is manufactured by Niessen Bros. of Fair Oaks, California, style No. 529. The meaning of "172" on the back is unknown. The key rings measure 1⅛ inch in diameter (bottom ring without key) and ⅞ inch (top ring with key). The overall weight is 1.25 ounces. One thing of note during Curry's ownership: Most of the earlier cabins that constituted the pre-1921 hotel and the associated commercial buildings burned down. Further reading: Hotel Lebec: The Untold Stories, 1916-1971.
About the Lebec Hotel. Harrison Scott in Californian Historian (Vol. 43 No. 4, Summer 1997) writes: The last major structure in place during the highway's glory was the Lebec Hotel. Construction began Jan. 15, 1921, and it opened for business four months later, on May 21. The hotel was the brainchild of entrepreneur Thomas O'Brien, a saloon-keeper from Bakersfield. Financing for the opulent hotel was provided by Cliff Durant, an automobile manufacturer. The Lebec hotel was a "complete gambling joint with a ball-room, rooms and apartments" during its heydays from 1925 to 1934. Clark Gable and his actress wife, Carole Lombard, as well as gangster Benny "Bugsy" Siegal, frequented the Lebec Hote1. A 1926 touring guide describes it: "Hotel Lebec is new and high class, 80 rooms, thoroughly modern single $2-$3, with bath $4, coffee shop open 24 hours."The Lebec Garage nearby was the largest and best equipped on the ridge. Labor was $1.75 an hour, increasing to $2.40 after 6 p.m. Shortly after the hotel opened, Durant sold his interest to Foster Curry (son of the concessionaire at Yosemite) of San Francisco. Early postcards from this period show the hotel under its brief stint as "Curry's Lebec Lodge," once located along the west side of Lebec Road just north of the Lebec off-ramp. The hotel fell into disrepair and was officially closed on November 13, 1968, in response to health department charges concerning its substandard water system and dilapidated condition. The hotel went into receivership and was purchased by the Tejon Ranch Company. They torched the hotel and demolished the remains on April 27, 1971, only two weeks after acquiring the property. Two tall Italian Cypress trees mark the former location. Read more here.
LW3686: 9600 dpi jpegs. Original key and fob purchased 2020 by Leon Worden.
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