Dolphin Hotel, Southampton
The Dolphin Hotel is a Grade II* listed 4-star hotel, which is the oldest in Southampton, Hampshire.[1][2] Recorded mentions of the hotel date back to 1454 although it is believed to older than this and remnants of the original medieval timbers, and stone vaulting are extant.[2]
Dolphin Hotel, Southampton | |
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Type | Hotel |
Location | 34 & 35 High Street, Southampton |
Coordinates | 50°54′0.2″N 1°24′13.0″W |
OS grid reference | SU 42035 11352 |
Area | Hampshire |
Built | Before 1454 |
Owner | Mercure Hotels |
Listed Building – Grade II* | |
Official name: Dolphin Hotel | |
Designated | 14 July 1953 |
Reference no. | 1178854 |
Location of Dolphin Hotel, Southampton in Southampton |
The hotel was a famous coaching inn during the 17th-century and became quite fashionable during the city's stint as a spa-town from 1750 to 1820.[2] The Georgian frontage, complete with coaching entrance and oriel windows, said to be the biggest in England, was added about 1760.[2][3]
After a period of closure the hotel reopened on 4 May 2010 following a £4 million redevelopment programme.[2]
Guests and ghosts
Famous guests have included Queen Victoria, Admiral Lord Nelson, Edward Gibbon, William Makepeace Thackery and Jane Austen, who celebrated her 18th birthday there in 1793.[2]
Molly, a maid seen gliding across the ground floor from the legs up, is the most famous of the hotel's six reported resident ghosts.[4][2]
References
- "Mercure Southampton Centre Dolphin Hotel". Mercure.
- "Mercure Southampton Centre Dolphin Hotel - A Brief History". Mercure.
- "Dolphin Hotel". Historic England. Retrieved 20 January 2018.
- "Ghost of City's Past". Daily Echo. 31 October 2002.