Hotel Blazimar, Taylor, Texas. (original) (raw)

Blazimar Hotel Taylor Texas The Blazimar (c. 1943) TE Postcard Archives

The card is unused, but the print reads:
Here you will find: Good Beds - Fine Food - Friendly Hospitality in a truly great Community that you will want to visit again and again.

Our Coffee Shop is Always Comfortably Cool

Blazimar Hotel Taylor Tx

The Blazimar today
TE Photo, October 2000

The vaguely Arab-South American sounding name is actually an amalgam of three family names. They were investors/owners Howard Bla (nd), A. J. Zil (ker), and T. W. Mar (se). (Correction: "Those of us born and raised in Taylor know that the Blazimar was named after Bland, Zizinia and Marse. We are unsure of who the Zilkers might be as they or unknown to Taylorites." - Ella Jez, March 10, 2009) We are happy to report that the building is still standing in Taylor, and has recently been sold.

If you can read the front window in the postcard, the Blazimar also served as the Greyhound Bus Station for Taylor. Las Lomas Hotel in Junction also served as the town's bus station, and you'll have to admit, it was a pretty practical arrangement. The arrival of a late night bus would keep the night staff alert in anticipation of the midnight coach from Brady (of course it did) and the weary bus traveler merely had to walk from the bus seat to the front desk.

The impressive (for the time) four-story hotel was fireproof, had steam heat and ceiling fans in each of its 90 rooms. The rooms were furnished with "sanidown" mattresses, a company whose name said it all in the trade-name idiom of the day. Taylor used a lot of the area's cotton in making mattresses for the military during WW II. The mill in Eldorado, Texas provided blankets. When we find out who made the pillows, we'll let you know.

A ballroom on the second floor of the Blazimar was used for social gatherings, the kind they rarely have today. It was the site of dinners, dances, receptions, and reunions. Being a bus station as well, there was always the possibility of a young drifter getting off the bus and meeting a debutante whose "daddy grew cotton." This was the kind of plot that they made movies about in the 30s and 40s, but might've actually happened in Taylor, Texas.

In 1920, The St. Louis Browns wintered in Taylor. They roomed at the Blazimar Hotel and practiced on what is now Memorial Football Field. It was an era when a wintering Yankee baseball player could fall in love with a southern debutante that had just broken her engagement (see last paragraph) to a drifter who had just gotten off the night bus from Brady. We believe Randolph Scott and Hedy Lamar were in that one.

Many Northern teams took advantage of the mild winters by staying in Southern Hotels. Waxahachie's Rogers Hotel was one of these, as well as the Aumont in Seguin.

The Blazimar is keeping its secrets well. We tried to uncover stories of ghosts, murders, suicides, unrequited love, former employees that became war heroes or even people who skipped out without paying their bill, but we came up with nothing.

John Troesser
January 2001

More Rooms with a Past


Our special thanks to Taylor Librarian Bonnie Brooks who researched the Blazimar for our readers and included in her email that her information came from the following sources:
The Taylor Daily Press newspaper dated 6/30/38, and information from Our Town.

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