MacArthur relieved of command 1951
This nameplate was used in 1951
U.S. marines Land in Lebanon 1958
This nameplate was used in 1958

This website was created and maintained from May 2020 to May 2021 to commemorate the 75th anniversary of Stars and Stripes operations in the Pacific.
It will no longer be updated, but we encourage you to explore the site and view content we felt best illustrated Stars and Stripes' continued support of the Pacific theater since 1945.

From the Archives

Suite in hotel where MacArthur stayed preserves artifacts from his storied career

Suite in hotel where MacArthur stayed preserves artifacts from his storied career

The MacArthur Suite at the Manila Hotel is decorated with photographs, artwork and memorabilia related to the great general's storied career.

The MacArthur Suite at the Manila Hotel is decorated with photographs, artwork and memorabilia related to the great general's storied career.

SETH ROBSON/STARS AND STRIPES | BUY THIS PHOTO

Strolling through the MacArthur Suite at the Manila Hotel on Manila Bay, Philippines, it’s easy to imagine the great general at his desk, puffing on a corncob pipe and pondering some military problem.

The fact that most of the hotel, including Gen. Douglas MacArthur’s office, was destroyed by fire during the Battle of Manila shouldn’t be a problem for imaginative visitors.

The suite is filled with old furniture that MacArthur might or might not have used, and decorated with photographs, artwork and memorabilia related to his storied career.

A guided tour is free, but it pays to book ahead through the hotel’s concierge. The tour starts with a visit to a ground-floor archives room that contains various records of the hotel where MacArthur lived with his family during his tenure as the Military Advisor to the Commonwealth Government of the Philippines from 1935-1941.

You can check out photographs of other famous guests, including Bill and Hillary Clinton, Richard Nixon, Liza Minnelli and Michael Jackson.

The 570-room, five-star hotel opened on July 4, 1912, and was occupied by Japanese troops during World War II. With U.S. forces closing in, the Japanese burned the building, leaving only a shell that was retained when the hotel was rebuilt.

The MacArthur Suite includes several rooms for sleeping and entertaining and panoramic views of Manila Bay. If you want to stay there, the suite can be rented, but it doesn’t come cheap. One night will set you back $8,000, but for that the hotel will throw in a butler to attend to your every need.

MacArthur Suite, Manila Hotel

DIRECTIONS
The Manila Hotel is about a half-mile north of the U.S. Embassy on Manila Bay in the Philippines.

TIMES
Book tours through the hotel’s concierge.

COSTS
Guided tours are free.

FOOD
The hotel has several bars, cafes and restaurants.

INFORMATION
Website: manila-hotel.com.ph/macarthur-suite