The grand resort hotels of the White Mountains : a vanishing architectural legacy
Material type:
- 1567920268
- 9781567920260
- 647.94742/201 20
- TX909 .T58 1998
- Also issued online.
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Vol info | Copy number | Status | Barcode | |
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Chamberlin Free Public Library | Nonfiction | 647.94742 TOL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | TX909 .T58 1998 | 1 | Available | 34517000172273 |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 251-259) and index.
Ch. 1. The Precursors: Rosebrooks, Crawfords, Fabyans and the Early Highway Hotels -- Ch. 2. Railroad Development and the Pre-Civil War Hotels -- Ch. 3. The Prosperity of the 1860s and Hotel Expansion -- Ch. 4. The Grand Resort Hotel Concept Is Securely Rooted: The Seventies -- Ch. 5. The Maturation of the Building Type: From the Eighties to World War I -- Ch. 6. The Hotel That Blew Down: The Metallak, the Surviving Record, and the Symbol -- Ch. 7. The Full Evolution of the Building Type: The Second Glen House, the New Profile House, and the Mountain View House -- Ch. 8. Paragons of Style and Elegance: The Mount Washington Hotel at Bretton Woods and The Balsams at Dixville Notch.
"This is the first book to fully explore the architecture, as well as the related economic, social, and cultural history, of the grand resort hotels of New Hampshire's scenic White Mountains. These beautiful buildings, situated in one of America's oldest and most heavily visited vacation and recreation locales, were the first structures in America designed exclusively for the tourist industry. This carefully researched, profusely illustrated volume identifies and explores some thirty outstanding resort complexes, explaining their architectural details, their social histories, and the often surprising stories behind their lovely wooden facades. The book also presents the dramatic evolution of building types, from the first rural highway inns of the Rosebrooks, Crawfords, and Fabyans in the 1820s to the initial railroad hostelries and the grand hotels of the 1850s, an era culminating in the great resort complexes at the end of the nineteenth century."--Jacket.
Also issued online.
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