They burned the Eureka Hotel
The Eureka Hotel was burnt down sometime during the evening of 17 October 1854.
It was the Eureka Hotel that burnt down during the Eureka stockade.
The Eureka Hotel was burnt down as a result of the death of James Scobie. James Scobie was a Scottish gold miner who arrived in Australia to dig for gold on the Ballarat goldfields. He died after becoming involved in a fight at the Eureka Hotel, also known as Bentley's Hotel, on 7 October 1854. The hotel owner, Bentley, and his staff were absolved of any wrongdoing in an ensuing inquest. The miners, however, felt this was unjust and met together outside the hotel on 17 October 1854 - a meeting that ended in a riot. During the riot the hotel was burnt to the ground.
Yes
The Crescent Hotel in Eureka Springs, Arkansas.
The Eureka Hotel was burnt down as a result of the death of James Scobie. James Scobie was a Scottish gold miner who arrived in Australia to dig for gold on the Ballarat goldfields. He died after becoming involved in a fight at the Eureka Hotel, also known as Bentley's Hotel, on 7 October 1854. The hotel owner, Bentley, and his staff were absolved of any wrongdoing in an ensuing inquest. The miners, however, felt this was unjust and met together outside the hotel on 17 October 1854 - a meeting that ended in a riot. During the riot the hotel was burnt to the ground.
The Eureka Stockade was erected near the site of the burnt-down Eureka Hotel, close to Bakery Hill, outside Ballarat, Victoria.
In Eureka Springs, Arkansas.
The miners were angry when a man known to be friends with a police was charged with the murder of a miner. A mob of diggers burned down Bentley's Hotel where the murder was taken place.
It was a group of miners protesting against the killing of one of their members at the hotel.
The most haunted hotel in America is said to be the 1886 Crescent Hotel & Spa located in Eureka Springs, Arkansas.