100th Meridian Motel Then and Now

2300 W Chestnut St / Wyatt Earp Blvd

This may come as a surprise but national trends sometimes take a minute to catch on in Dodge City. The transition from tourist or cabin camps to motels was no exception. Arthur Heineman coined the term “Mo-Tel” in 1925 but that term didn’t pop up in Dodge until after World War II when the Shangri-La Motel was built.

R. Roy and Leona Taylor built the 100th Meridian Court and Service Station in 1946. At that time, the location was half a mile west of town on the north side of Highway 50.

Dodge City Daily Globe, January 2, 1947

Like most tourist courts, the 100th Meridian consisted of a cluster of individual cabins.

Dodge City Daily Globe, March 16, 1948

The Taylors hopped on the motel bandwagon by 1948 and the 100th Meridian Motel was officially born.

Dodge City Daily Globe, November 19, 1948

This postcard, printed with the wrong street number, shows the motel office with the service station to the right.

The next postcard was printed with the correct street number and shows the first in a series of additions as well as the five flags, which the Taylors had installed at the front of the property.

As cleanliness in accommodations became the norm, motels moved away from the white motif and toward the blonde mid-century modern brick.

Around 1962, the Taylors sold the property to John and Betty Koepke and it was renamed Thunderbird Motel by 1963.

By 1967, Ben Jr. and Dorothy Clark operated the Thunderbird and the famous swimming pool was quite the attraction.

From the Kansas Heritage Center Motels Collection

Once upon a time, local motels allowed people to pay a small fee to swim. The Thunderbird was the best of those, mainly because the pool was so large, but also because we didn’t get in trouble for doing cannonballs.

This is the Thunderbird Motel I remember with the colorful barrier around the pool.

Photographer Unknown

I somehow never heard about the murder which took place in the basement under the office building in March of 1992. At that time, the Thunderbird was managed by Roger Sr. and Kelly Taubr, aka Jones. Roger apparently beat and strangled employee Patrick “Buddy” Howe to death in that basement because Howe wanted to move to Oklahoma or Texas to be near family. Howe’s body was found in a culvert near the Ford/Gray County line.

A warrant was issued in 1996 but the couple fled and were finally arrested in Monroe County, Georgia in the Spring of 2015 after working in several states under numerous aliases.

Although the Thunderbird Motel continues to operate in the location of the former 100th Meridian Court, the pool we enjoyed so much was filled in ages ago. The glorious neon sign has been restored and is extremely popular with roadside photographers.

These photos were taken in June of 2023:

I seriously considered including a nighttime photograph of the illuminated sign but have never been able to do it justice. The next time you’re out and about after dark, drive by and see it for yourself. Functional neon signs are going the way of the tourist court.

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Boot Hill Grill Then and Now

604 W Chestnut St / Wyatt Earp Blvd

It seems impossible now but for many years, the north side of Chestnut Street west of the immediate downtown area was completely residential. In 1885, Nicholas B Klaine and Louis K McIntyre platted a narrow strip between Fifth and Seventh Avenues bordered by Elm Street to the north and Maple Street to the south. It’s a strange area where the streets don’t match up properly because the older part of Dodge City is crooked.

Various homes came and went from what was then the 100 block of Chestnut. Street numbers were standardized around 1909 and the 1911 Sanborn Fire Insurance Map shows a frame dwelling at 604 W Chestnut Street along with its previous number of 107.

The Hayes family’s Crystal Pool, which was nestled into the north hill between their house at the west end of the block and the home at 604, opened in June of 1915. By 1932, the home at 604 W Chestnut had been removed and the pool was replaced by a row of tourist cabins.

The Boot Hill Grill, operated by Mrs. Tena Anderson, was built in 1939.

The Dodge City Daily Globe, December 23, 1939

By the mid-1940s, Boot Hill Grill was recognized as the most burglarized business in Dodge City.

Photo courtesy Kansas Heritage Center Photo Collection

The restaurant changed hands several times and was operated by Bill and Bessie Lethem, Troy Hunnicutt, and Art Corley before being taken over by Vern and Ruby Collier in the early 1950s.

Dodge City Daily Globe, June 18, 1954

The Colliers sold the restaurant around 1962 and it cycled through a couple proprietors before Ralph and Ailine Long of California assumed management in August of 1963, apparently to the delight of local pancake lovers.

This photo from May of 1964 (sorry, Mom) was taken in front of Mammel’s and shows the Boot Hill Grill sign in the background.

New owners changed the name to Pancake House in the Spring of 1965.

Dodge City Daily Globe, March 11, 1965

But by August of that year, the business was for sale once again.

Dodge City Daily Globe, August 28, 1965

By 1967, the building was home to water-based skincare brand Fashion Two-Twenty Studio.

Dodge City Daily Globe, September 12, 1968

Due to Urban Renewal, the building was running out of time. By 1970, the entire block had been cleared. Wyatt Earp and Front Street were replatted to create the Centennial Addition in 1973 with much larger commercial lots.

The larger lot sizes made it possible for Dodge Citians to enjoy fine dining establishments like Golden Corral and Montana Mike’s. Currently, the lot once occupied by the Boot Hill Grill is home to a Casey’s General Store.

This photo was taken in August of 2023:

You have to admit this stretch of Wyatt Earp looks a lot better than it did 40 years ago. The Boot Hill Grill building wasn’t anything spectacular but I would really like to know what happened to that neon sign.

If you like what you see, be sure to subscribe (way at the bottom of the post on mobile devices) to receive an email each time a new post is published and share on social media. You can also support my work by donating below. This content is 100% funded by history fanatics such as yourself. Thanks for reading!

Some of you have requested additional donation options. If you would like to send a direct donation, you can now do so by clicking here.

Donation

Your support keeps the content flowing! Make a one-time donation. Your contribution is appreciated!

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