Finally, after three days of drizzle, Wednesday
September 29,
2010 was forecast to be a sunny and warm day. While sending my husband to do some outlet shopping in Lee, I continued about 10 minutes further west to the historic town of
Stockbridge. Another very picturesque town, Stockbridge is known as the home of the
Norman Rockwell Museum, and of
Chesterwood, a historic mansion that used to be the summer estate and studio of
Daniel Chester French, a famous
American sculptor.
I had planned a visit to the
Red Lion Inn, one of the few
American inns that has been in continuous use since the
18th century.
Carol Bosco Baumann took me on a tour of this historic property which is also owned by the Kilpatrick family who bought this property in
1968 and saved it from demolition. The inn is a huge historic building that dates back to 1897 and features more than
100 guest rooms, each one uniquely appointed with antiques, artwork and china. There are several adjacent guest houses that can be rented as well. Some of the long hallways in the main inn are a little slanted, and together with the historically inspired décor, this adds to the authentic feel of the Red Lion Inn as a
Victorian-era property. Carol even told me a few ghost stories about the good-natured spirits that are still said to inhabit some of the rooms at the Red Lion Inn.
After snapping some photos on Stockbridge's picturesque main street I picked up my husband and we drove to another historic hospitality establishment: the
Cranwell Resort, Spa and
Golf Club. In the late
1880s, during the
Gilded Age, the Berkshires were a popular resort destination for many of the wealthy industrialists and financiers of the era.
Families like the
Vanderbilts,
Rockefellers and Carnegies built lavish mansions that were simply called "cottages", although they had dozens of bedrooms and luxurious amenities.
One of these cottages, actually a gorgeous chateau-like stone mansion, is today's Cranwell Resort, and over the years it has played host to notable guests like
Harriet Beecher Stowe, the
Vanderbilt family and
President William McKinley. Construction on today's mansion was completed in 1894.
Norma Probst from the resort gave me a tour through this venerable property which also features cottage suites and town homes in addition to the luxuriously appointed suites in the mansion. Cranwell Resort is the only Small
Luxury Hotels of the
World resort in
Massachusetts and a member of the
Historic Hotels of America. After the hotel tour we played a round of golf on the 18-hole championship golf course that was built in 1926 by golf course designers
Wayne Styles and
John Van
Kleek. We could not have picked a better day for an enjoyable round of golf in the beautiful rolling hills of the Berkshires
.
In the evening we settled in for dinner in the nearby town of
Lenox, location of
Tanglewood, the
Boston Symphony Orchestra's summer home. Many ultra-rich families built summer estates here during the Gilded
Aged from
1880 to
1920 and real estate prices skyrocketed in the area. Many of these mansions have today been converted into vacation condominiums, yoga centers, theatre companies or museums. Lenox boasts numerous upscale eateries and galleries.
- published: 02 Nov 2010
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