Manufacturer: Scammell China
User: Hotel Mayo
Date of platter: circa 1926 – 1928
Notes: In 1903, brothers Cass A. Mayo and John D. Mayo started a furniture store in Tulsa, Oklahoma, two years before the Glenn Pool oil field was discovered in 1905 and the local economy boomed. In 1908, they moved to a permanent location on 5th and Main in Tulsa.
In 1925, the brothers built the Mayo Hotel. The hotel was patterned after the Plaza Hotel in New York City and was constructed by architect George Winkler in the Sullivan-esque style of the Chicago School. The edifice boasts a base of two-story Doric columns, while the rest of the façade is mostly terra cotta accented by stone trim. It had 18 floors, a two-story basement and 600 rooms at the time of construction. A story in the March 25, 1923, Daily Oklahoman estimated the cost at $2,250,000.
The Mayo Hotel quickly became the premier hotel in Tulsa. Constructed during the height of the oil boom, the hotel was the host for decades-worth of high school proms, weddings, corporate events and other social functions. A literal "who's who" of American history stayed there, including President John F. Kennedy, Bob Hope, Charles Lindbergh, Babe Ruth, and Elvis Presley. The Mayo also served as a residence for J. Paul Getty for several years, and the John D. Mayo family lived in the hotel from 1941 until Mayo's death in 1972. The hotel was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.
By early 1981, the state of the economy, coupled with the oil bust, forced the hotel to close. Downtown Tulsa, like many other downtowns across the United States, had largely ceased to be the center of retail activity and was no longer the preferred place to stay for visitors from out of town. The hotel remained dormant for about 20 years, still standing but in a steady process of decay. In the early 2000s, a local family headed by John Snyder purchased the building and started the slow process of returning it to a functioning, operational hotel, and the Snyders restored the hotel to its former glory.
The building now (2026) has a mix of 76 luxury apartments and 102 hotel rooms. With the world-class BOK Center just a few blocks away, the Mayo Hotel is once again hosting visiting entertainers and celebrities who are in town to perform. The remodeled hotel has a restored ballroom and lobby; a 1925-themed restaurant – 1925 at the Mayo; and on what is now a 19th floor, the Penthouse Rooftop Bar; and other amenities.
White body platter with a Greek Key border pattern in dark green. At the top of the platter, the Mayo's green stylized MAYO logo is centered on the top rim under the border pattern. The logo bleeds from the rim slightly down the verge. This logo was used across most of the Mayo's branded items, including silverware, uniforms, stationary, and matchbooks.
For more info:
Mayo Hotel by Scammell China
Mayo Hotel 3 by Scammell China
Mayo Hotel 4 by Shenango China
Mayo Hotel 5 by Shenango China
Sources:
The Mayo Hotel – history of the hotel
Tulsa Historical Society: Cass A. Mayo & John D. Mayo – article on the Mayo brothers
Tulsa Preservation Commission: Mayo Hotel – listing on historic buildings
Daily Oklahoman, March 25, 1923 – story on downtown Tulsa construction
Wikipedia – information on hotel
Cardcow.com– postcard
Contributors:
Kevin Gray, author and platter photos
Larry R. Paul, research
Paul Trosko, ID
Dick Bond, research
Ed Phillips, editor
