9 Historic London Hotels
In the years since, the Aga Khan and John Paul Getty have had suites there, minor European royalty in exile from republican regimes have haunted its corridors and Hollywood stars have Opened in 1906, the Ritz immediately became a haunt of the rich and the famous. 2.The Ritz Although he had already retired from the Savoy following financial scandals and mental health problems, the hotel was built to the specifications of the legendary hotelier Cesar Ritz and it became what he called 'the small house to which I am very proud to see my name attached'. Churchill declared the suite Yugoslav territory for a day to ensure that the child would have a right to the throne - a right that the 60-year-old prince still maintains in 2006. During World War II the exiled king of Yugoslavia was living at Claridge's when his wife gave birth to a son and heir. 'Claridge's, late Mivart's', as it was known for several years, had a high reputation as the London haunt of Continental aristocrats and its prestige was enhanced in 18 60 when Queen Victoria visited the French empress, Eugenie, who had taken up temporary residence there during her stay in England. 1.Claridge's The actor Spencer Tracy once remarked: 'Not that I intend to die, but when I do, I don't want to go to heaven, I want to go to Claridge's.' William Claridge, butler to an aristocratic family, bought a small hotel in Brook Street and, in 1854, expanded his business by adding another hotel in the same street called Mivart's.
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