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hotelinformeks
Wysłany: Pon 20:39, 02 Kwi 2007
Temat postu: News:tour hotels
Albion Howard Boothby and his wife Jennie moved to Prospect (then called Deskins) from Maine in the early 1870s. In the mid 1880s they moved their young family to Ashland, but after six years they returned to their home on Mill Creek and to the town now known as Prospect.
By this time Crater Lake was a popular attraction, and tourists from Medford spent two full days reaching the lake by wagons and carriages. The Prospect area made an excellent halfway point for these travelers, and many of them stayed with Albion and Jennie. The Boothbys soon realized their house was not large enough to serve all the travelers who came, and they decided to build a "roadhouse," or hotel. The hotel was named the Boothby House, and welcomed not only travelers but also locals who knew of Jennie's talents as a cook. The Boothby House became a center of the community, hosting dances, parties and town events.
In 1897 the Boothbys moved to Klamath Falls and sold the hotel. It was run by Mrs. George Hollenbeak and her daughter Pearl, under the ownership of Ray Electrical Company. In 1912, Jim Grieve bought the hotel and added a gas station and store, and built cabins behind the hotel. Boothby House was rechristened Grieve's Prospect Hotel. Under Jim's direction (and thanks to his wife Mary's cooking) the hotel thrived once again.
In 1909 President Theodore Roosevelt had declared Crater Lake to be one of the wonders of the world, and the hotel's guest books of the time show travelers from as far away as Italy, France, Germany, Hungary and Russia. Many of the United States' most prominent citizens also stayed at the hotel, including William Jennings Bryan, Zane Grey, John Muir, Jack London, Gifford Pinchot, President Roosevelt and President Herbert Hoover.
Jim Grieve died in 1932, and Mary continued to run the hotel with the help of Dewey Hill. As road conditions improved and automobiles replaced wagons, fewer guests needed to stop in Prospect on their way to Crater Lake. The Depression and the second World War also took their toll on the hotel and the community.
Mary Grieve died in 1952. Ownership went to the Grieves' son but Dewey Hill continued to run the hotel. During the next twenty years the hotel began to deteriorate. After Dewey's death in 1978, the Grieves' grandson James learned that it would cost nearly a million dollars to bring the hotel "up to code." He had no funds for restoration, and after sixty-seven years of Grieve ownership, the hotel was put on the market.
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