"Warren Harding died here" doesn't quite have the tourist draw of "Washington slept here," but for the Palace Hotel in San Francisco, the distinction of being the only hotel where a president of the United States drew his last breath is enough to put it into the pantheon of presidential sleep spots.
Scores of hotels around the country can lay claim to a little White House luster, having bedded down famous men before, during or after their stints in the White House. Most will tack the term "Presidential Suite" onto the spot and start charging the highest rates in the house.
But there are a handful of places nationwide that have earned a tighter tie with presidential history. Two gave us political terms we still use: "lobbyist" and "smoke-filled rooms." Another might have cost one man the presidency and later could have cost a president his life.
The places on this short list are, not surprisingly, big, old luxurious hotels in key cities -- which means that with or without the bit of chief executive cachet, they're worth checking out.
The Willard, Washington, D.C.
The nation's capital is crammed with hotels containing presidential lore. The Hay-Adams, near the White House, was built on land that once held the homes of John Adams' grandson and Abraham Lincoln's private secretary and is where Barack Obama moved in for two weeks before his inauguration. Until recently, another hotel in town was synonymous with political corruption: The Watergate now houses offices and condominiums. But for a true slice of American history, nothing can beat the Willard.
A couple of doors down Pennsylvania Avenue from the White House, the Willard has hosted presidents going back to Zachary Taylor. Lincoln snuck into town after his 1860 election (Washington was basically a Southern town and many in the capital were friendly to the secessionist cause) and used the Willard as his pre-inauguration headquarters. But the hotel's place in the dictionary was cemented by Ulysses S. Grant, the great Civil War general turned not-so-great president. Grant occasionally strolled to the Willard to enjoy a cigar. Men seeking to influence legislation or gain political appointments would hang out, hoping they could elbow their way to the president to make their case. Those who loitered in the lobby were dubbed "lobbyists." The term has stuck for advocates of all types who seek to bend laws and regulations by plying the halls of Congress, the party circuit and, yes, occasionally a hotel lobby -- including the still-sparkling Willard.
The Willard Intercontinental Hotel, 1401 Pennsylvania Av. NW., Washington, D.C.; 1-202-628-9100; www.washington.intercontinental.com. Rates from $180 per night.