The
restoration of the turn-of-the-century J.J. Sullivan
Hotel and Tweeds Restaurant & Buffalo Bar located
in Riverhead, has been completed. The J.J. Sullivan
Hotel, a quaint 14-room hotel with turn-of-the-century
rooms restored, has occupied this site since 1896.
The rooms are above the bar & restaurant,
which is a long narrow room with its large magnificent
original mahogany bar that is reported to date back
to the 1893 Chicago Columbian Worlds Fair. Filled with
artifacts from Riverhead’s heyday, the restaurant
is handsomely furnished with comfortable armchairs,
Victorian style lighting fixtures hanging from the original
tin ceiling, and a working oak fireplace mantel from
a mansion in Charleston, South Carolina. It is reminiscent
of the Victorian style restaurants of a hundred years
ago.
Because Riverhead is the County Seat,
the hotel and bar were frequented by important politicians,
especially from New York City, such as Charles Murphy,
head of Tammany Hall, and Boss Tweed. J.J. Sullivan
held Tammany card #1 and died tending bar in 1947. The
restaurant and hotel played an important role in the
political intrigue for over 100 years. The owner’s
research says that the hotel was known as the Tammany
Hall of the County Seat.
This excellent photograph clearly shows
the word “Hotel” over the door to the left,
which accesses the stairs to the rooms above. The door
at the right with its canopy is the entrance to the
restaurant and bar. Of special interest is the façade
of rusticated concrete blocks and the undulating gable.
The restoration of this building in the very heart of
Riverhead’s historic central business district
is a great boost for the town.
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