The Peabody Memphis built in 1925, originally in 1869 |
There is nothing like a stay at an old fashioned luxury hotel. We just experienced ours at the Peabody Memphis Hotel. My son is going to Rhodes college in Memphis in the fall and as soon as I found out there was a Rhodes rate at the Peabody I booked it. The desk clerk asked if I would like to upgrade to a superior room. I immediately accepted, as I am wont to do. So we got a deluxe corner room on the 10th floor and could see the Mississippi River from our window.
The beds felt like clouds with an excess of downy pillows; and the design of the room, well I am sure The Peabody won’t mind if I show you one of their photos.
Room at the Peabody |
I just like elevators doors that look like this:
I like hearing Nat King Cole and Frank Sinatra in the breakfast room. I like the
exquisite service, with staff members greeting me every few yards and offering help. I like getting up in the morning, having the newspaper delivered
in a special bag:
and heading to a deluxe health club. I like
room service, especially when it rolls in on a cart between our beds.
I am sure I could live quite
happily in a hotel like this, become a modern day Eloise. I promise I would work out
every day. There’s a spa where I could get my hair and nails done, there is food and drink and shopping and what in the world more do I need? The occasional trip to the rooftop to get some air and see the sunset over the Mississippi:
Sunset over the Mississippi |
I read that the Peabody's lobby is “the living room of the mid-south" which has been visited by “some of
the most influential and famous people of the world.” A Southern historian
called The Peabody “the Paris Ritz...the London Savoy of this [Delta] region.” Well no
wonder I loved it.
"The living room of the Mid South" |
If you have ever heard of the
Peabody, you have heard of the ducks. The expression “ducks in a row” may have
started here in the 30’s. The duck procession occurs every morning at 11 where
they come down the elevator and march in a row
on a red carpet into the beautiful marble fountain topped by a flower
arrangement the size of a washing machine.
Who gets this floral contract? |
There is much pomp and circumstance
leading up to the arrival of the ducks, there is a man in a red uniform who
tells the legend and history of the ducks. Everyone must be seated in the
lobby, no standing is politely enforced and then once the ducks splash in, it
is photo opp time. The same ritual goes on at 5 p.m. when they return to their
penthouse enclosure.
No Exit at the Gift Shop
My son needed a sweatshirt so we
popped into the gift shop. Let me back up by saying that my son has incredible
blond curly hair that has drawn attention from strangers since he was a toddler,-stop-on-the-street
attention. So much attention, in fact. that the tiresome question of “where did
you get that curly blond hair” forced me to become a blonde. Here it is:
The famous hair |
But never has it attracted as much attention
as it did by an employee in the Peabody gift shop who had her hands in my son’s hair
in minutes, was raving about it and said it was so pretty she had to put a bow
in it. She went behind the counter, cut a blue ribbon and and sat him down
and fixed him up. Talk about your Southern hospitality.
Franky Bowed |
I pledge my allegiance to the Peabody.
I expect to be going to Memphis several times over the next four years and I
will stay nowhere else. I will just pack, quack and go. I encourage you to do
the same.
I really want to see those ducks.
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