If you stand atop Nob Hill today, looking out over the Golden Gate Bridge, you’re standing at the epicenter of San Francisco’s resilience.

On May 4, 1907, the Fairmont San Francisco officially opened its doors—exactly one year after the 1906 Great Earthquake and Fire. The building had been nearly finished when the quake hit, and while it survived the tremors, it was gutted by the subsequent fires. Its opening wasn’t just a hotel debut; it was the signal to the world that San Francisco had been reborn.

Under the direction of Julia Morgan, California’s first female licensed architect who would later design Hearst Castle, the Fairmont became the first major business to open its doors following the devastating 1906 earthquake.

The grand opening was a legendary affair that people still talk about over a century later. To celebrate the city’s survival, the hotel hosted an extravagant fête where guests were treated to 13,000 oysters and “rivers of champagne” that flowed throughout the night, all while a spectacular display of fireworks lit up the San Francisco sky.

As the story goes, the celebration was so impactful that it solidified the hotel’s reputation as a landmark “so grand they built a city around it.” It wasn’t just a place for travelers to rest; it was a triumphant toast to the enduring spirit of the Golden City.

The hotel’s significance shifted from social to global in 1945. It was in the Fairmont’s Garden Room (now the Garden Court) that delegates from 50 nations met to draft the United Nations Charter. It wasn’t just a place to sleep; it was the “Little White House” where the world sought to ensure a lasting peace.

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Exterior view of the Fairmont Hotel in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Bettmann Archive/Getty Images)

	Bettmann / Contributor for Getty

As Flaunt Magazine notes: “…the past residence for U.S. presidents, world leaders, and entertainment stars, the Fairmont San Francisco has a reputation for expert service and hospitality as well as incredible history.”

Travelers today still flock here to ride the only three cable car lines that meet right at the hotel’s front door, or to sip a Mai Tai in the legendary Tonga Room. As noted by Visit California, the Fairmont “harkens back to an opulent era in San Francisco history” where “dressing up for dinner still makes sense.” It is the kind of place where, as architectural photographers have noted, just entering the lobby “feels like a special occasion.”

Whether you’re visiting to see where Tony Bennett first sang “I Left My Heart in San Francisco” in the Venetian Room or just to soak in the Julia Morgan-designed architecture, the Fairmont remains the gold standard for “old-world” elegance. Happy 119th to the “Grand Dame of Nob Hill.”

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