What this site is — and isn’t.
An independent tribute to a closed hotel, built from public archives. Not the hotel, and not affiliated with anyone.
Why this exists
For four decades the Williamsburg Hospitality House was part of how visitors experienced Williamsburg — thousands of stays, weddings, conferences and reunions passed through 415 Richmond Road. When the hotel closed in 2013, that story deserved better than to fade away. This site preserves what the hotel said about itself, alongside the public record of its story.
Where the information comes from
- The hotel’s own website, 1999–2011, as preserved by the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine — including its About, Amenities and 415 Grill pages.
- William & Mary News: “William & Mary agrees to purchase Williamsburg Hospitality House” (March 2013).
- W&M Special Collections Knowledgebase — Hospitality House.
- W&M TribeTrek — One Tribe Place.
Accuracy, honestly
We were not there, and we do not have the hotel’s records. Dates, counts and descriptions are only as good as the archived pages and public sources they come from — sources sometimes disagree (the room count, for one, and the opening year), and where they do, we say so rather than pick a side quietly. If you spot an error, or you have first-hand memories, menus, photographs or paperwork from the Hospitality House, please write in — corrections and contributions are the point of a site like this.
Trademarks & affiliation
All names and marks — including Williamsburg Hospitality House, One Tribe Place, William & Mary, Colonial Williamsburg and 1859 Historic Hotels — belong to their owners and are used here for historical identification only. This site is independent, unofficial, non-commercial in spirit, and run by enthusiasts of Williamsburg-area hospitality history.