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Lake Hotels
The last 25 years of the 19th century saw the great popularity
of resort hotel vacations. Even though tucked away in a remote
corner of New York state, Chautauqua Lake became a center
for vacationers and during that time a great number of hotels,
large and small, were built along the lake shore.
The reasons behind such development locally were an accurate
reflection of the national picture of the time. The great
surge of railroad building that took place after the Civil
War carried mainline connections of the Erie, Pennsylvania
and New York Central systems into Chautauqua County. The local
feeder lines that were built brought visitors from afar to
the lakeshore point of their choice. The railroad line first
called the Chautauqua Lake Railroad, from Jamestown to Mayville,
was in place along the east side of the lake by 1888. Connections
along the west side of the lake were slower to develop. Chautauqua
Traction, a trolley line built by the Jamestown Street Railway
Company, did not reach Mayville until 1904. Consequently,
that part of the lake saw less hotel development. Lakewood
was the exception. It had an early station stop on the Erie
Railroad, and by1893 the Jamestown Street Railway Company
had extended its lines to the small settlement. Lakewood grew
almost entirely as a center for the resort business. For almost
three decades, until the turn of the century, Lakewood had
a widespread reputation as one of the premier western New
York resorts.
John
Cowing whose family owned a large tract of land along the
west side of the lower lake, built one of the first hotels
in that area in1870. Although the spot, called Lakeview, was
relatively uninhabited, the Allegheny and Great Western Railroad
had established a depot there a few years earlier. When Mr.
Cowing built the hotel he also built a wharf long enough to
allow large steamers to dock. That facility was the first
such accommodation on the west side of the lake between Jamestown
and Mayville. With the access by both water and land, Lakeview
began to develop into a small village. In 1872 the Cowing
House was renamed the Lakeview House. In 1880 the village
was officially names Lakewood.
The Lakeview House remained a center of the increasing lake
resort business until the late 1880's. In 1889 the aging building
was razed to be replaced by another hotel of grander proportions,
the Sterlingworth. The Sterlingworth Hotel was the second
hotel to stand on the site of the present Lakewood Park. The
earlier hotel, the Lakeview House, was purchased and razed
in 1889 by Ernest Frisbee after he sold his interest in the
neighboring Kent House. He built the much grander and more
modern Sterlingworth. Only the inner courtyard and a few strong
walls of the earlier structure were retained. The
new building's castle-like appearance was enhanced by a lofty
crenellated lower which rose above the main entrance, and
six smaller rounded towers which were placed at intervals
above the irregular roofline. The hotel sloped downhill from
Terrace Avenue to the lakeshore and extended 120 feet along
the lakefront. The long dock in front of the hotel was a regular
stop for the large steamboats for many years.
Click here for Sterlingworth floor
Plan
The Sterlingworth's first season, 1889, was one of unparalleled
prosperity. However, in succeeding years it became increasingly
difficult to pay for the expensive hotel operations with the
income from the short summer seasons typical of Chautauqua
Lake. In 1895 Mr. Frisbee was forced to sell the hotel at
a judgment sale. The sale price of $30,000 fell short of the
total mortgaged amount of $200,000.
On the afternoon of July 9, 1903, a fire started in the dining
room of the Waldemere reportedly from the flame of a plumber's
lamp. It was efficiently extinguished by the Lakewood firemen.
However, during the following night flames broke out from
the roof of the building, spreading so rapidly and with such
intensity that it was impossible to save the building. The
first of the two hotels in Lakewood called Kent House was
built in1875 near the beginning of the era of resort vacationing.
It stood just east of the Lakeview House at the site of the
present Chautauqua Lake Yacht Club. The main building covered
138 feet along Terrace Avenue with a 60 foot arm extending
northward toward the lake. The following year it was enlarged
to provide accommodations for 500 guests.
However, at 6:00 am on October 17, 1887, shortly after the season
closed, a kerosene lamp exploded in the hotel kitchen. The
fire soon engulfed the whole building. Construction on the
second Kent House began in January 1888, only a few months
after the disastrous fire that completely destroyed the first
hotel by the same name. At a cost of $100,000, the owner,
Mr. Ernest J. Frisbee, built an even grander structure on
the same site.
Click here for the Kent House floor
Plan
The main entrance, topped by an observatory and an ornamental
tower 125 feet high, opened from a wing that had a 144 foot
frontage on Terrace Avenue. At either end of this main portion,
two wings extended134 feet toward the lake. They were artfully
finished off with circular towers capped with cupolas. The
roof was made of Vermont slate. Standing five stories high,
the hotel had a total floor space of 15,000 square feet. A
glass-enclosed court between the two wings faced the lake
and from this an open-air promenade led to the long dock.
By 1909 the large unused hotel was in the hands of the Brooklyn
Trust Company. Having no prospects for a sale or for operating
the hotel, the out-of-town combine auctioned off the entire
contents, inventoried at $35,000. It was called the largest
public sale of hotel furnishings ever held in western New
York.
The Kent House was boarded up late that year and stood deteriorating
for six more years. In its prominent location along the Lakewood
shore it was an eyesore and a sad reminder of grander times.
In 1916 J.M. Van Ness and A.N. Broadhead bought the building
for $3,000 and it was demolished. Some idea of the building's
size was revealed in the list of materials salvaged when it
was razed: 600,000 square feet of lumber; 1,131 doors; 1,000
cords of kindling wood; 4 carloads of 2x4 and 9x6 studs; and
large amounts of brick and slate. It has been noted that much
of this salvage was purchased by individuals who used it to
build new homes, many of which remain today in the Lakewood
and Celoron areas.
Financial problems that plagued hotel owners and led to eventual
loss or closing, were built into the huge structures. Their
design, their size, and the required life-style of the elegant
resorts, all part of their appeal, were also part of their
failure. Huge mortgages incurred to meet construction costs
were a constant burden. Foreclosures and bankruptcy sales
were common. Whether the hotels suffered from good or poor
seasons, the great wooden structures with extensive hardwood
interiors were at all times potential victims of fire. More
than half of the large hotels from this picturesque era disappeared
in this manner. Some of the fires occurred spontaneously or
accidentally. Arson was the established cause of at least
two of the blazes. It is interesting to note, also, that many
hotels destroyed by fire in the later years, were for the
most part already out of business.
Finally, the popularity of the great hotels was destroyed
by the coming of the automobile. Americans gained the ability
to travel independently and to vary their vacation times and
activities. Touring and sight-seeing by car became popular.
A few weeks in a rented cottage by the shore, or in a private
summer home took the place of the season at the resort hotel.
Those grand but aging structures that did not go up in flames
saw their patronage fade and gradually closed their doors.
A few lingered along the lake shore, sad and disintegrating
reminders of happier days, until they were finally demolished.
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