About The Mayflower Hotel

Situated in the heart of the Washington D.C. business district, The Mayflower offers an historic aura with an abundance of modern conveniences. |
Immediately after its opening in 1925, the Mayflower Hotel was known as the "Grande Dame of Washington, D.C.," boasting more gold than any other building in the country except for the Library of Congress.
Just four blocks from the White House, this grand, historic hotel remains not only a place to make history but to absorb it; throughout the last 80 years the hotel has hosted events that have changed the course of human affairs.
An "inaugural address" in the truest sense of the term, the hotel has hosted every U.S. Presidential inaugural ball since Calvin Coolidge. FDR used the Mayflower as a retreat to work on his 1933 inaugural address, Harry Truman resided here for the first 90 days of his presidential term and FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover lunched at the Mayflower nearly every day he was in town. A long list of celebrities and international royalty have also made the Mayflower their DC home, but the true star of the hotel is the building itself.

The Grande Promenade of The Mayflower Hotel, as pictured during last year's annual conference, Compliance Week 2007. |
Renovation work in the early 1990s led to the discovery of a 25-foot skylight blacked out at the beginning of World War II and two large murals by artist Edward Lanning were uncovered—but such historic detailing shouldn't cast the impression that the property itself is antiquated.
The Mayflower has seamlessly evolved over the years, offering all the modern amenities expected by any worldly traveler, along with a revered DC address at the true heart of the nation’s capital.
Compliance Week has held its annual conference at The Mayflower every year since 2006, and has hosted other events there as well, including its 2007 Primer on International Financial Reporting Standards.
The Mayflower Hotel is located on 1127 Connecticut Ave., NW. For further information call 202-347-3000 or visit the Mayflower's Web site.
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