Showing posts with label adirondack hotel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label adirondack hotel. Show all posts

Thursday, December 07, 2006

Memories of Cohasset

I remember taking walks to Cohasset during my childhood, after dinner, to buy candy from the little store in that charming inn on Fourth Lake. Now, Cohasset has become what so many other of the old, great hotels of the Adirondacks have become - private homes. The old hotel was demolished, killed, really. Now there are a bunch of small and unremarkable houses on the point where the majestic old hotel once stood.

An article from the Syracuse newspaper from June 1929:

COHASSET ON FOURTH LAKE, BEAUTY SPOT
Consists of Hotel and Group of Small Cottages

Old Forge, June 1 - High on a wooded knoll overlooking the beautiful south shore of Fourth Lake stands Cohasset. Surrounded by towering pines and birches, the cool depths of the forest are brought to the very verandas. Below the grove surrounding the hotel, a wide sand beach circles the point jutting out into the lake, offering a romp or lounging place where one is enchanted by the sparkle of the crystal water in the sunlight.

Cohasset consists of a main hotel and a number of modern cottages all placed within communicating distance and connected by enticing paths through the woods and along the shore of the lake. The lower floor of the main building is flanked by broad verandas whereon one may find quiet seclusion in a shaded nook or join the happy family of guests bound together through the mutual enjoyment of the inspiring natural beauties.

Cottage life at Cohasset offers an ideal vacation for a family with children or a group wishing to stay by themselves. The buildings are clean and attractive, with big open fireplaces and the conveniences of the main hotel.

Cohasset is reached by two trains daily from Utica and two trains daily from Montreal to Thendara, then taking either a train or a taxicab to Old Forge, which makes connections with the steamboat up the lake. Motorists may go by State road from Utica to Old Forge with a good shore road leading from there to the camp, seven miles distance.

Saturday, November 18, 2006

Raquette Lake Hotel, 1890's


If we Could Turn Back Time

The stately old Bald Mountain House sat on Third Lake by the entrance to the channel between Fourth Lake and Third Lake on the Fulton Chain. It was one of those big Adirondack hotels that sprung up in the park during and around the Great Camp era, supplying lodging to wealthy visitors from downstate and around the world. Now, it is with great sadness that we tell you that not only is this great old hotel gone, but it was years ago replaced by what we call "Tobacco Road" -- a collection of hideous trailers and mobile homes crammed into each other. It is truly an eyesore. If we could just turn back time. . .