Official shovel toss of sacrificial corn!

It’s been months in the making, cleanup and clean-out has already started, but the much-anticipated Every Man A King distillery project became official on June 26 with a groundbreaking. It was easy to see the excitement the project is generating simply by counting the number of smiling, sweaty supporters who broke away from work and office to come lift a glass of lemonade and wish congratulations.

Co-founder Andrew Larson

“We are literally surrounded by history,” said EMAK co-founder Andrew Larson in comments prior to the groundbreaking. Larson and wife Lindsey Pennington plan to use the history of downtown and the building to inspire and intrigue people, and the amenities of the new distillery— its modern French restaurant, patio, balcony, speakeasies, and bars — to lure them. An important part of the mix will be music. “We plan to bring in the finest musicians and singers the city has to offer,” says Larson.

Co-founder Lindsey Pennington

“This is getting a face lift befitting a king,” said Shreveport Mayor Adrian Perkins. “Appropriate for Every Man A King.” “It is going to be a huge asset and will help create a metropolitan vibe, an exciting piece of downtown Shreveport.” He is right. Not only is the adaptive reuse project saving a building that might have fallen under the weight of decades of neglect, it is create a hub of excitement in a business not currently available in northwest Louisiana. Plans are for the project to be completed in 2020 and soon enough you’ll be able to grab a bite, lift a glass, and share an experience at Every Man a King.


Story from week of June 12, 2019

Work started this week on the old Arlington Hotel at the corner of Louisiana and Cotton, and after decades of deferred maintenance and outright neglect, it  was a welcome sight to see. The first step for crews is to remove ALL the years of debris from the interior. That includes the collapsed roof and large sections of the top floor that had also caved in. Once that is done, structural

stabilization can start in earnest. The General Contractor on the project is Weiland and the architect is Kevin Bryan Architect.

Debris removed from the old Arlington Hotel prior to construction of the distillery

Much of the debris is from the collapsed roof.

This is eventually what the property will look like…

As the Arlington looks now and the proposed new look.

Every Man A King logo

A view of the Cigar Bar.

The view from the patio adjacent to the old Arlington.

The view from the back. This is what you would see from the Strand Theatre.

The Revenir is the name of the Modern French, open- fire cookery.

Architect Kevin Bryan says the owners are aiming for a January 2020 project completion.

KSLA TV Story on the the distillery

 


The following story was posted on Thursday, April 4, 2019.

The Shreveport Metropolitan Planning Commission voted unanimously Wednesday, April 3, to allow Larson Family, LP a Special Use permit for property at 700 Cotton Street, the old Arlington Hotel. The limited partnership’s stated use for the property is for the “Every Man a King” distillery. Every Man a King refers to a movement started by then-US Senator Huey P. Long. His national organization called the ‘Share the Wealth Society’ used ‘Every Man a King’ as its motto. Long gave speeches with that theme multiple times in the early 1930s.

Huey P. Long’s ‘Every Man a King’ Speech– one version of it, anyway. He changed it a bit depending on the audience. goes here

Architect Kevin Bryan told MPC members on Wednesday that the upscale project will include a large outdoor patio space on land adjacent to the property, a new building that will house distillery operations, and the total rehab of the historic Arlington into space for gift shops, tasting rooms, and other commercial uses.

Courtesy Twin Blends LLC

The Arlington has been the subject of concern for years. Vacant since 1990, the Arlington has been open to the elements and used by transients. It has caught fire multiple times, and most recently, a large part of the roof collapsed.  The Downtown Development Authority has been working for several years with various potential developers, but until the Larsen Family LP, none were willing or able to acquire the property. The Arlington was a standard bearer for ‘demolition by neglect’ – a process under which a property deteriorates because no one maintains it. It was not always that way for the hotel.

The Arlington Story

In 1897, the openings of the Union Train Station and Central Train Station changed the course of downtown. Union Station was one-half block away from the Arlington; Central, about a block. Trains were plentiful. For a period, some 45 passenger trains per day would stop in Shreveport and those travelers needed places to eat, shop, be entertained and sleep. One of those places was the Arlington.  Built by John McLoyd Comegys in 1913 and opened in 1914, it was called in a newspaper story, a ‘hell of a place’.  (We don’t know if this was a good thing or bad thing.) What we do know is that the Arlington, though not a 5-star accommodation, was clean and neat. We were told by the Comegys family that the initial contractor ran off with the construction money and it appeared for a time that the hotel would not be completed. It was, but Mr.  Comegys did not run it for long. In 1937, Mr. Baylor Culpepper of the Ruston area entered into a 99-year lease for the hotel that gave him rights to it until 2036! Mr. Culpepper was nothing if not BULLISH on Shreveport. So who was this man?  Culpepper grew up on a farm near Athens, LA., in Claiborne Parish. In 1917, he enlisted in the Army but spent his military service in the U.S. After the war, he and his wife moved to Homer, La., where he worked as an oil rig builder. They saved their money and in 1921 he came to Shreveport and purchased his first hotel, saying “Shreveport was the best place in the world to live.”

So how much did his 99-year lease cost? $300,000…or about $3,000 per year. It’s important to remember that $300,000 in 1937 is the equivalent of $5.2 million now. Mr. Culpepper, in this ad that ran in the Times in 1937, talked about Shreveport as one of the ‘leading cities of the Southwest’ The hotel was in one of the ‘coolest’ spots in the city- not cool as in awesome, but cool as in airflow. The Arlington sits on a high spot. It had 44 comfortable, fire-proof rooms with oscillating fans, telephones and Spring-Air mattresses. Rates were $1-$2 dollars per night.  Mr. Culpepper did not keep the hotel the entire 99 years…by 1978 it had turned into a lower price boarding house. During its heyday, though, the Arlington was active. Along the Louisiana Street side are 5 retail spaces that were in use from 1914 until the 1980s. There were bicycle and motorcycle sales, shoe repair, a tailor, a small grocer, a barber, jeweler, clothing cleaner, a confectioner, and a BBQ stand. Likely the most famous was a bar called the Gay Nineties that opened in Sept. of 1959. The Gay Nineties featured gas air conditioning and REAL Can-Can dancers, plus ‘Kenny Rasmussen at the piano.’ It also featured a Silver Dollar Bar that ran the length of the bar and was studded with real silver dollars. Hours of operation were high noon until midnight each day.

In researching the old newspaper articles, we found an interesting bit that relates to the Arlington’s new future as a distillery. In 1913, local police pulled off a sting on the hotel. After seeing a large amount of coming and going, police became suspicious and went in armed with a warrant. And discovered that proprietor Philip Kohlbrunner and his wife were running a bootlegging operation, selling illegal Budweiser out of a cask for the ‘unheard of’ price of .30 per quart! At the time, Shreveport was dry, meaning no liquor could be sold. Fast forward 100 years- wouldn’t Mr. Kohlbrunner be surprised?

We are thrilled that the Arlington has found a possible new life and new owners that want to return the building to use and usefulness. Though there are more decisions and challenges ahead for the Larson Family L.P., the old Arlington at least now has a chance at a future. Prior to their ownership, the historic building’s future -and its days- were numbered.