The Peoria Marriott Pere Marquette , is a historic 14-story hotel in downtown Peoria, Illinois , United States . Built in 1926, the building is Peoria's only surviving example of an upscale 1920s hotel. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.
29-797: Marquette Hotel may refer to: Pere Marquette Hotel , Peoria, Illinois, listed on the NRHP in Illinois Marquette Hotel (Minneapolis, Minnesota) , located in the IDS Center on Marquette Avenue Marquette Hotel (Cape Girardeau, Missouri) , listed on the NRHP in Missouri Marquette Hotel (Springfield, Missouri) , listed on the NRHP in Greene County, Missouri Marquette Hotel (St. Louis, Missouri) , listed on
58-537: A business. Unlike in the U.S., entrants may be required to purchase a product in order to enter a trade promotion in Australia. Companies or promoters may require a trade promotion lottery permit if the winner(s) are to be chosen via an element of chance, i.e. a competition draw. No permits are required for competitions that do not involve an element of chance in determining the winner or winners. Common examples include competitions where entrants are required to submit
87-708: A commercial product — is likely to be labelled as a "prize draw" or "competition" in the UK. In the UK, prize competitions and prize draws are free of statutory control under the Gambling Act 2005 , but should follow the CAP Code . In the United States, sweepstake sponsors are very careful to disassociate themselves from any suggestion that players must pay to enter, or pay to win, since this would constitute gambling. Sweepstakes typically involve enticements to enter
116-526: A consumer promotion with prizes that range from substantial wins such as cars or large sums of money to smaller prizes that are currently popular with consumers. There should be no monetary cost to the entrant (although some sweepstakes require entrants to subscribe to a promotional mailing list, potentially exposing the entrant to an increase in junk mail , spam email , or telemarketing calls) and sweepstakes winners should also not be required to pay any kind of fee to receive their prizes. As an example of
145-481: A contest of skill in order to overcome requirements that would classify sweepstakes as a form of gambling under their country's legal definition. There are similar laws in Brazil. In Australia, a sweepstake is known as a competition , however the technical name for a consumer competition is a trade promotion lottery. A trade promotion lottery is a free entry lottery conducted to promote goods or services supplied by
174-569: A full-service, upscale Marriott hotel. The hotel closed December 2, 2011 to begin these renovations and reopened in June 2013. A 2020 indictment alleged that Matthews and Monte J. Brannan on charges of money laundering and mail fraud, including using investor funds to enrich themselves from 2008 to 2018. The trial began in October 2023; both developers were jointly charged with five counts of mail fraud and 13 counts of money laundering. The hotel
203-468: A photo or an answer to a question in 25 words or less. Many compers (those who enjoy entering competitions) attend annual national conventions. In 2012 over 100 people from the online competitions website lottos.com.au met on the Gold Coast, Queensland to discuss competitions. Sweepstakes with an entry fee are considered in the UK to be lotteries under the Gambling Act 2005 . Most sweepstakes in
232-430: A promotion for a product, usually either a telephone card or Internet access. Sweepstakes casinos use a similar model, offering promotional real money winning opportunities by playing casino-style games online. Sweepstakes must be carefully planned to comply with local laws and curtail forms of entrant fraud and abuse. Before home computers were popular, a common method of entry was a mailed, plain 3" × 5" index card with
261-761: A state policy on sweepstakes promotions, Tennessee residents are prohibited by a policy of the Tennessee Alcoholic Beverage Commission (and not a state law) from entering sweepstakes online sponsored by manufacturers of wines and liquors; however, Tennessee residents may enter many of these same sweepstakes promotions by entries delivered by the US Postal Service. Another example is that Tennessee state law prohibits sweepstakes agencies and sponsors from requiring sweepstakes prize winners to submit to "in perpetuity" publicity releases. Most corporate-sponsored sweepstakes promoted in
290-648: The Madison Theatre building and a half-block from Peoria City Hall ; both buildings are also on the National Register. The original first floor included a grand lobby and three large meeting rooms. The Cotillion Room, the hotel's original ballroom, features a high domed ceiling, French window mirrors, and decorative plasterwork. The LaSalle Room and the Cheminee Lounge both originally featured high ceilings with crystal chandeliers, though
319-689: The NRHP in St. Louis, Missouri Marquette Hotel (Memphis, Tennessee), an early name of the Lorraine Motel where Martin Luther King was assassinated, now the National Civil Rights Museum Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Marquette Hotel . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to
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#1732780980028348-687: The Père Marquette joined the Hilton Hotel chain as the Peoria Hilton . Further renovation and restoration were undertaken in 1981. The hotel later left the Hilton chain and reverted to its original name. On August 12, 1982, the hotel was added to the National Register of Historic Places. The Peoria City Council approved the final agreement with developer Gary Matthews to close the hotel for an extensive renovation and expansion into
377-520: The U.S.), which are usually based on major sporting events such as the Grand National and the World Cup . Entrants pay an equal stake for each horse/team they draw out of the hat before the event. The winner then takes the pot. For horse racing events, the pot may be split between the horses that win, place, and show. What an American would call a "sweepstakes" — a random prize draw promoting
406-488: The UK are small-scale. They are classed as work lotteries , residents' lotteries , or private society lotteries, and do not require a licence, provided that all the money staked is paid out as prize money. The popularity of the term "sweepstakes" may derive from the Irish Sweepstakes , which were very popular from the 1930s to the 1980s. There is a tradition of office sweepstakes (known as office pools in
435-822: The United States limit entry to US citizens, although some allow entry by legal residents of both the United States and Canada. Among the most popularly known sweepstakes in the United States were the American Family Publishers Sweepstakes (now defunct), Publishers Clearing House sweepstakes, and Reader's Digest Sweepstakes , each of which strongly persuaded entrants to purchase magazine subscriptions by placing stickers on contest entry cardstock while promising multimillion-dollar (annuity) winners who will be "announced on TV". The American Family Publishers sweepstakes used paid advertisements during NBC's The Tonight Show to announce its grand prize winners (for many years, its celebrity spokesman
464-411: The city needed a high-end hotel. Led by Emmet C. May, the business leaders enlisted hotel manager Horace Leland Wiggins to oversee the new hotel. A sweepstakes was held to choose the hotel's name; the winning entry, Hotel Père Marquette , a common name for Father Jacques Marquette , received $ 50. The hotel was completed in 1926 for $ 2.5 million (now $ 43 million after inflation), and its grand opening
493-481: The entrant lives. The U.S. Federal Trade Commission exercises some authority over sweepstakes promotion and sweepstakes scams in the United States. Notably, sweepstakes in Canada, Australia, and several European countries require entrants to answer a skill testing question such as solving an elementary-school-level mathematical puzzle, or answering a simple general knowledge question, making it (in theory, at least)
522-512: The entrant's name and address. Massive computer-printed entries resulted in a new requirement that entries must be "hand-printed". Laser printers that can mimic ink pen writing are also a problem for sponsors. In most sweepstakes, entrants and their relatives must not be related to the sponsor or promoter. Many state lotteries also run second-chance sweepstakes in conjunction with the retail sale of state lottery scratch cards in an effort to increase consumer demand for scratch cards and help control
551-537: The hotel. Trumbauer designed many prominent homes and public buildings on the East Coast, including several upscale hotels; his design for the Père Marquette was inspired by both his earlier hotel designs and other contemporary hotels such as the Waldorf-Astoria . Herbert Edmund Hewitt , a prominent local architect responsible for many of Peoria's major buildings of the period, collaborated with Trumbauer on
580-418: The intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Marquette_Hotel&oldid=1231602454 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Pere Marquette Hotel Philadelphia architect Horace Trumbauer was the lead architect for
609-478: The law by stating only "no purchase necessary to enter", removing the consideration (one of the three legally required elements of gambling ) to stop abuse of sweepstakes. Today, sweepstakes in the United States are used as marketing promotions to reward existing consumers and to draw attention to a product. By definition, the winner is determined by pure random chance rather than skill. Sweepstakes with large grand prizes tend to attract more entries regardless of
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#1732780980028638-725: The most popular has been the McDonald's Monopoly "instant-win" game-piece promotion (To satisfy the "no purchase necessary" requirement, free game pieces are made available on request through the US mail). Soft drink companies also sponsor many sweepstakes, such as the Pepsi Billion Dollar Sweepstakes game and the Pepsi Stuff loyalty rewards program that allowed Pepsi drinkers to accumulate points from packages and cups and redeem them for merchandise. Pepsi Stuff
667-616: The odds of winning. Therefore, the value of smaller prizes usually totals much less than that of the top prize. Firms that rely on sweepstakes for attracting customers, such as Publishers Clearing House and Reader's Digest , have also found that the more involved the entry process, the more entrants. Businesses often obtain marketing information about their customers from sweepstakes entries. Because of their potential for abuse, sweepstakes are heavily regulated in many countries. The US, Canada, and individual US states all have laws covering sweepstakes, so there are special rules depending on where
696-480: The original crystal was removed from the Cheminee Lounge. The lobby and the Cotillion Room both originally had murals by George Matthews Harding ; the lobby mural depicted Père Marquette landing at Peoria, while the Cotillion Room mural showed Sieur de La Salle leaving France. The hotel features 288 guest rooms. Planning for the hotel began in 1924, when several of Peoria's business leaders decided that
725-454: The project. The fourteen-story building is mainly built from brick and stone. Its exterior design mainly emphasizes symmetry and linearity, a common architectural trend at the time. Stone window treatments surround the second-story windows, and a stone cornice with carved Native American and animal faces encircles the top of the building. The hotel is located directly across Main Street from
754-495: Was Ed McMahon ). All three companies eventually paid fines and penalties to a variety of states who initiated legal actions against them. Of those three companies, only Publishers Clearing House continues to use sweepstakes as a promotional device and as recently as 2010 paid $ 3.5 million to settle charges that it had violated the terms of a 2001 multi-state agreement for which it was fined $ 34 million. Sweepstakes are frequently used by fast-food restaurants to boost business. One of
783-430: Was Pepsi 's largest and most successful long-term promotion ever and it ran for many years in the US and in many countries around the world. Other sponsors may require the submission of a UPC of a company product (with provision for receiving a "free" UPC) for entry into the sweepstakes drawing. Sweepstakes parlors , which began to appear in the US around 2005, are establishments that offer chances to win cash prizes as
812-599: Was held in January 1927. 16,000 people came to the grand opening. The building's designers were primarily from the East Coast, and the hotel was heavily influenced by the luxurious hotels that were popular there in the 1920s. It was one of two major high-end hotels in Peoria at the time, along with the Jefferson Hotel, and is now the only one still operating. Renovations took place in 1954, 1961 and again in 1972 when
841-592: Was renovated again in 2022. Sweepstakes In the United States, a sweepstake is a type of contest where a prize or prizes may be awarded to a winner or winners. Sweepstakes began as a form of lottery that were tied to products sold. In response, the FCC and FTC refined U.S. broadcasting laws (creating the anti-lottery laws). Under these laws sweepstakes became strictly "No purchase necessary to enter or win" and "A purchase will not increase your chances of winning", especially since many sweepstakes companies skirted
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