San Antonio Express-News

Gonzales hotel banks on drawing in tourists

Alcalde, where Bonnie and Clyde stayed, joins Oyochain

- By Randy Diamond STAFF WRITER

Not many Texas hoteliers can say truthfully that Bonnie and Clyde hid from the law in one of their rooms, or that Elvis Presley once paid a visit to the property. Don Page can.

He’s the owner of the historic Alcalde Hotel in Gonzales, 73 miles east of San Antonio.

For as storied as his hotel’s past is, however, the reality today is that its business mostly depends on oil field workers. That means trying to survive the oil and gas industry’s boom-and-bust cycle.

Right now, it’s bust, with the price of West Texas Intermedia­te crude at a little more than $40 per barrel Thursday and thousands of layoffs across the region’s Eagle Ford Shale play.

Page is looking to fill his 18 rooms with tourists to offset the volatility of the energy industry. So he turned to a chain operator.

On Thursday, Page and OYO executives announced the Alcalde Hotel had become the first historic hotel in the U.S. to sign a franchise agreement with OYO, the world’s second largest hotel chain.

The Alcalde Hotel was built in 1926.

The agreement gives Page access to the chain’s worldwide reservatio­n system — and what the owner envisions will be tourists from the around the world who might want to visit Gonzales for its rich history.

“The first shot at Texas independen­ce happened 2 miles outside of town. The cannon that the Mexican army came to take sits in our museum,” he said, referring to the Gonzales Memorial Museum.

Not to mention the Bonnie and Clyde and Elvis connection­s.

Famed outlaws Bonnie and Clyde stayed in the hotel in Janu

ary 1934, a few months before they were gunned down by law enforcemen­t officers.

According to legend, the couple jumped from one of the hotel’s second-floor windows to avoid arrest.

The hotel’s Bonnie and Clyde room features wanted posters of the couple on the wall and the names Bonnie and Clyde embroidere­d on the pillow cases.

In August 1955, Elvis checked into a room at the hotel to take a nap and later hung out in the lobby the day of his concert in Gonzales, Page said. But he didn’t spend the night.

Thursday’s announceme­nt at the hotel featured a singing Elvis impersonat­or.

Page managed the hotel for two years and then bought it in March, just before the pandemic shut down travel and bedeviled the oil industry. It cost him tens of thousands of dollars in bookings.

“It wasn’t the best timing,” he said.

While unknown to many Americans, OYO operates more than 43,000 properties and1mil

lion rooms. It enters into agreements with existing hotels, many of them budget properties. It was founded in India in 2013 by Ritesh Agarwal, who was just 19 at the time.

The company has grown in the

U.S. from one hotel in Dallas in January 2019 to 300 nationwide, including nine in San Antonio, said Raoul Hingle, its U.S. developmen­t head.

Page said OYO offered him the best deal of any hotel chain, with

no upfront costs to become a franchisee and payments of just 9 percent of hotel revenues.

He said other hotel chains “wanted almost $40,000 upfront and 14 to 16 percent of your revenue.”

Hingle said OYO has started signing deal with more upscale properties, such as the Alcalde Hotel, a resort in Myrtle Beach, S.C., and an inn in Lincoln City, Ore. OYO also owns the former Hooter’s Casino Hotel in Las Vegas, now called the OYO Las Vegas Hotel and Casino.

Hingle said OYO’S expansion plans include more hotels in San Antonio, with the possibilit­y of acquiring one on the River Walk.

The company, backed by Japanese financial institutio­n SoftBank’s Vision Fund and several venture capital firms, was valued at $10 billion in July 2019.

He said the coronaviru­s has slowed OYO’S acquisitio­n of U.S. hotels to eight a month.

“If it wasn’t for the pandemic, we would be double or triple that,” he said.

Daisy Scheske Freeman, executive director of the Gonzales Chamber of Commerce & Agricultur­e, said tourism has been down 60 percent in 2020 because of the pandemic.

She added that more publicity for the Alcalde Hotel only can help attract more visitors to the city, with its history and 10 antique shops.

“We have a said. lot to offer,” she

 ?? Photos by Bob Owen / Staff photograph­er ?? The historic Alcalde Hotel in Gonzales also has played host to Elvis Presley, who napped there and hung out in the lobby before a performanc­e in 1955.
Photos by Bob Owen / Staff photograph­er The historic Alcalde Hotel in Gonzales also has played host to Elvis Presley, who napped there and hung out in the lobby before a performanc­e in 1955.
 ??  ?? Don Page Jr., current owner, with Deidra Voigt, former owner of the Alcalde Hotel. Voigt’s grandparen­ts built the facility, which is the first historical franchise for the OYO chain.
Don Page Jr., current owner, with Deidra Voigt, former owner of the Alcalde Hotel. Voigt’s grandparen­ts built the facility, which is the first historical franchise for the OYO chain.
 ?? Bob Owen / Staff photograph­er ?? Michael Mcmullen, aka Elvis, poses for photos in the Alcalde Hotel room where Elvis Presley actually spent time before doing a show in Gonzales back in 1955.
Bob Owen / Staff photograph­er Michael Mcmullen, aka Elvis, poses for photos in the Alcalde Hotel room where Elvis Presley actually spent time before doing a show in Gonzales back in 1955.

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