This fine building stands at 7 S. Stolp Ave. on Stolp Island in Aurora. The 1920s was clearly an age of fine buildings, and we’re fortunate to still have so many in Chicago and environs.
Built as the Leland Hotel in 1928, it’s now Fox Island Place Apartments. A helpful plaque on the exterior wall told me that the structure is on the National Register of Historic Places. “Designed by Anker Sveere Graven and Arthur Guy Mayger… it was the tallest building in Illinois outside of Chicago.”
That seems like reaching to find a distinction, but never mind. “In addition to being a first-class hotel, it became an important entertainment center,” the plaque continued. “In the 1930s it was the recording studio for some of the most influential blues musicians of the golden age of blues recording. This plaque honors this historic building, and these artists.”
And it lists some of them. I will too, just as the plaque does. With some links. As the plaque cannot. Not yet, anyway.
John Lee “Sonny Boy” Williamson – Harmonica Legend
Big Bill Broonzy – Guitar/Singer
Hudson “Tampa Red” Whittaker – The Guitar Wizard
Yank Rachell – Mandolin
“Robert Night Hawk” Robert Lee McCoy – Guitar
Bill “Jazz” Gillam – Harmonica
Big Joe Williams – Guitar
Washboard Sam – Washboard
Lester Melrose – Producer
Across the street from the former Leland is the former Aurora Hotel, now the North Island Apartments. It dates from 1917 and is also a nice bit of work.
Not, as far as I can tell, where bluesmen hung out. A simpler plaque on the building says that one H. Ziegler Dietz was the original architect; hope his commissions didn’t dry up because of the war. The redevelopment architect in 1998 was Carl R. Klimek & Associates.