Peabody Hotel is not just another luxury hotel in downtown Memphis in
Tennessee, USA. This one has a peculiar attraction – ducks. Every day
at 11 in the morning, a parade of five mallard ducks makes its way from
their penthouse home on the roof of the hotel down to the lobby via the
elevator. Red carpet is rolled out all the way from the elevator door to
the hotel fountain made of a solid block of Italian travertine marble.
The ducks frolic in the waters the entire day. At exactly 5 in the
evening, the ducks are ceremoniously led back to their penthouse.
The
unique tradition started in 1932, when the general manager of the time,
Frank Schutt, had just returned from a weekend hunting trip in
Arkansas. He and his friends thought it would be amusing to leave three
of their live English Call Duck decoys in the hotel fountain. The ducks
became immediately popular with hotel guests, and since then, five
Mallard ducks (one male and four females) have played in the fountain
every day.
In 1940, a Bellman by the name of Edward Pembroke volunteered to care
for the ducks. Pembroke was a circus animal trainer and he taught the
ducks to march into the hotel lobby, which started the famous Peabody
Duck March. He served as the "Duckmaster" until his retirement in 1991.
The
ducks, themselves, have been rotated over the years. In fact, each team
of five ducks only work for three months before they are replaced by
another set. The ducks are raised by a local farmer and are returned to
the farm when they retire.
The custom of keeping ducks in the
lobby fountain may date back even further than the 1930s. Researchers
found a pre-1915 postcard that highlights the ducks playing in the
fountain, and one source claims the custom goes back to the hotel's
opening in 1869.
However, the Peabody itself claims the duck
tradition to have started in 1933. On December 3, 2008 they unveiled a
new "Duck Palace" located on the rooftop, for the 75th anniversary of
the duck tradition. The 24 by 12 foot enclosure features granite
flooring, ceiling fans, a scale replica of the hotel, a fountain
decorated with a pair of bronze ducks, and a large viewing window for
guests to see them in their new home. The Duck Palace cost approximately
$200,000 to construct.
Friday, May 24, 2013
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