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HomeMy WebLinkAboutLaSalle closing forces move; newspaper article (05-07-1980)- ;t>.. ~ rl .~l%I nesday LaSalle closing forces move J.C. Jaques has lived at the LaSalle dace 19~. ryan-College Station ME~f6lYam! By JANE )HILLS SMITH Stott Writer On April 16, 1980 the 25 elderly persons living in the LaSalle Hotel in downtown Bryan were given 30 days notice to vacate the premises. Word that the senior citizens, some in wheelchairs and walkers, would have to move from the place they'd called home for many years caused quite an upheaval. Many had no other place to go. Local nursing and retirement homes have long waiting lists. But the announcement of the hotel's closing affected some more than others. The hardest hit was J.C. Jaques, an 86-year-old North Texas entrepreneur who bought the hotel in 1959 and moved into the seventh floor with intentions to stay there for the rest of his life. Tuesday afternoon after talking with The Eagle about the situation, Jaques collapsed with what witnesses described as a mild stroke. A resident of the hotel said this morning Jaques was resting 'comfortably. He had called The Eagle and asked to talk with a reporter. "I bought this place out in 1959," Jaques said as he settled into a chair in his living room•bedroom com• bination suite. "I picked it up and turned it into the first licensed nursing home in Bryan," "You know this LaSalle was the pride of Brazos County in its time - the best place between Houston and Dallas." An inventor with 12 patents to his credit including one of the first power saws ever marketed, Jaques set to work to do something about the declining number of residents at the hotel. In 1962, the second and third floor was added for the nursing home Carter_ R~9ns~n avfen~l Ia~.,lr - s 1 ~~W~ ~~aanu rushed to the LaSalle Tuesday when Ja s bec ~`°~°`°~'~ithj"°°°` 9~ ameill, From page U, col. 6 guess we literally could have thro him out on the street two years ago feel we've bent over backwards Mrs. Walker said. "No one is any sadder than we a that it (the hotel) didn't work out, she said. "I don't know where I'm going go," Jaques said as he looked aroun the room, "I'm not ready. My w' died here. I kept her right in this roo with nurses around the clock,"he sai as tears came to his eyes and his voic faded. Jaques has kept everything just a it was when his wife died of cancer ' 1974. He still has her clothes. Her tw' bed is still made. Unpacked boxe from their original move to the hole remain in one room. "Let me tell you. For a man my age...I've got stuff here that's precious. I had this place for as long as I live. When I have to give this uP•.. he said his voice again trailing off as memories filled his head. It s a dirty shame that outside entrants can come in and steal a place like this. To see those old ladies moving out Breaks your heart;' Jaques said. Before he moved to the LaSalle, Jaques lived in a fashionable home in Dallas. He and his wife brought their antiques with them to the hotel and many have been displayed for years in the lobby. "He had a wonderful, beautiful home -furnished exclusively by Neiman Marcus," said Mrs. Eloise egg Johnson, a resident of the LaSalle who lives down the hall. "The lobby was what gave the hotel its mystic and made it so different from other hotels," she said. "What a wa to end up." Y A former extension service em- ployee who moved to Bryan in 1944, ,Mrs. Johnson called the forced move a "tragedy." She also planned to ~e_ _ - ~ . n I go. There should be adequate provisions made for old people. They „ ' need planning for just like an infant I . have a cane, but some bad walkers e and wheelchairs. " "One woman cried. It w asn't lack of money, she just loved it here. She was ] ~ crushed," she said. d Portions of the letter received by e the tenants reads as follows: "This is to announce the temporary d closing of the LaSalle Hotel. e "We are planning to sell the building to people who want to s completely remodel the hotel and want the building empty, We are required by Texas law to give 30 days notice. "However, since ou ' Y will all be moving anyway, we are hoping that Mrs. Elohle Johnson. everyone will find a place and go ahead with their move by May' 1st spend the rest of her life at th e LaSalle a d i . Any Persona] items left in the ~ building become the ro t n n Bryan but the nearest place she could find what she feels i p per y of and are sub'ect to " ~ be sold by our com- 1 s com- parable is in Galveston at Mood House. Y an . P Y Jaques had called movers to pack ' She ahead has Y a room there but was back at the LaSalle t and store some of his belongs_s Tuesday afternoon. He was d B own in o pack her belongings the lobb when Y the truck pulled u . She and Jaques like o thers in the h p and shortly after that, he collapsed at the elevator as he tri d t otel, have become good friends. She e o return to his suite is writing his biography. "The clouds have been hovering for . The mo vers refused to move a while," Mrs. Johnson sai d• We an in ~h„ g until Jaques was of sound mmd knew somethin but ever g was going to happen, yhme we got discouraged . 'I'm very worried about him " ' ~ said `B , they'd tell us to hold on, that things ryan attorne Elm has filed Y er McVey who a law it would be worked out." Mrs. Johnson said th su against Abbott SeQ~g to set aside the sale for failure e declining quality of the food was the first si n t of consideration. " g o the tenants that things weren't goin g well ith h He set been °P the LaSalle Hotel use he wanted to hel ld w t e management. She and Ja ue 9 s b th p o people in Brazos County. He bas been active o said prostitutes had been allowed to stay in in benevolent work. This is Brea ' kmg his heart the hotel and that it upset the elderly tenants. to established see the thing he g0 down the drain " "Life was once wonderful „ here, she said "Th , McVe Y said. McVey said it would do no o d f . e ]e tter was very up• setting, Many people had g o or JaiYues to~•y to stay in tie hotel after no place to it is closed on May 16. "The fact of the :not ter ~s he's going to have to move . He can't climb the stairs if they cut off the electricity. He can't continue without food being brought u t p o him, he said. lout as lie interview -ended Tuesday, Jaques still had hope. " I think we can still save it," Jaques said. w r if m m m s I "You better hurry, brother," an- sweredMrs. Johnson, ~ wvj~ _ _ end the fifth, sixth and seventh floors vere converted to senior citizen partments. At its peak, Jaques had 120 beds full o the nursing home. But in 1976 the ederal government instituted more trict requirements for nursing homes nd the 50-year~ld hotel could not be onverted to meet those requirements Tithout great expense. The nursing bme patients were transferred to Cher facilities, but the senior citizens nd other people, including many lggies, continued to call the hotel 'home." In 1975, Jaques was ready to retire }om active management of the LaSalle. "I made a deal with a man named lee Abbott from Dallas and my son, n6n, In that contract, it said I had f»m that glass door back (about 5 noms of the hotel) for the rest of my lfe with maid service and my meals s'rved up here," Jaques aid. "When I lost my wife,..that yas when they started taking ad- wntage of me, He (Abbott} kicked ry son out. They had a falling out and h fired him," Jaques said. Abbott sold the hotel to Mary Trances and Bil] McHam iD May, 178. The McHams have now sold the htel to a Houston firm identified as tie Omega Company which they say i~going to renovate the LaSalle, Sandie Walker, a member of the 1►cHam family, told The Eagle this turning that when they bought the htel, Jaques' contract became void. "His deal was with the people we bught it from. We have clear title. ~ haven't charged him (Jaques) a dme. We've allowed him to live up tlere and have maid, linen and meal stvice, but we owe him nothing. I fern to FOAHEA, page 4A.