Myrtle Beach’s magnificent Ocean Forest Hotel opened formally on Friday
evening, February 21, 1930. The hotel, standing twenty-nine feet above
sea level, with a ten-story wedding cake tower flanked by two five-story
wings, was South Carolina’s Statue of Liberty. Together with the gardens,
pools, and stables, the hotel occupied thirteen acres. Amenities such
as marble stairways, Czechoslovakian crystal chandeliers, Grecian
columns, faucets that dispensed salt water to the 202 ventilated bathrooms,
oriental rugs in the marble floored lobby, the grand ballroom, and
dining room all attested to the Ocean Forest's inclusion among an
exclusive list of world-class hotels. High standards of etiquette
were the rule. Gentlemen never entered the dining room without a tuxedo.
Ladies wore evening gowns. By the 1940s and 1950s, patrons altered
their lifestyles and the Ocean Forest Hotel changed with the times.
“Resort attire” was accepted, and in the late 1940s, Governor Strom
Thurmond played volleyball in his swim trunks.
During the 1960s, the
owners of the hotel declined to make much needed improvements. The
Ocean Forest showed signs of neglect. The hotel closed its doors in
June 1974. On Friday the thirteenth of September 1974, explosives
were situated around the hotel. The ten-story building that had taken
a year and a half to build was reduced to a pile of rubble in six
seconds.
The author Mickey Spillane
said, “The Ocean Forest Hotel was a beautiful piece of architecture,
and for down here it was actually superb.” Thurmond recalled the hotel’s
“wonderful hospitality, and I consider the visits I made there some
of the happiest and most enjoyable trips I have taken.”
Gragg, Rod. The
Illustrated History of Horry County. Myrtle Beach, S.C.: Southern
Communications, 1994.
Lewis, Catherine
H. Horry County, South Carolina, 1730-1993. Columbia, S.C.:
University of South Carolina Press, 1998.
Monk, John. “Landmark
Crumbles to Memory.” Myrtle Beach, S.C., Sun-News, September
14, 1974.
Nancy
Rhyne
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