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Woodcut of the Oeonta showing the new iron bridge at Inlet basin (Sunset) and the hotel's
boat house;
detail from hotel letterhead, 1908
The Hotel Oneonta
The Hotel Oneonta was a benchmark of
the Lake’s Golden Era. No public building at Harvey’s Lake—before or since—matched
the Oneonta for its grandeur or status. The hotel, situated between Oneonta
Hill and the shoreline, the hotel’s towering gables, elegant verandas and boat
house dominated the Sunset area of the Lake.
Like most public houses at the Lake,
the hotel was seasonal, open from late May to late September, with the
Independence Day celebrations as its annual highpoint. Days in advance of the holiday,
preparations began in Wyoming Valley homes for the annual “basket picnic” at
the Lake. Crowds would assemble on Wilkes-Barre’s Public Square to catch the
trolleys that ran to the Lake from 4:00 A.M. until 11:00 P.M.
Family members struggled among the
crowds to stay together as they boarded “double-headers” for the half-hour, 20-mile-an-hour ride. Tumbling out of the trolley at the Oneonta station with
brigades of swinging baskets, they strolled down Oneonta Hill in awe of the
huge hotel overlooking the Lake. Couples took advantage of a promenade walk
along the Oneonta veranda. Families headed for the steamboat landing to be
cramped aboard the Kingston or to wait for a chance to ride on the
double-decked Natoma for a sun-splashed dash across the Lake to the
Picnic Grounds.
The hotel was built by the Harvey’s
Lake Hotel and Land Company, incorporated on April 20, 1897, to take advantage
of the increasing tourist traffic—and burgeoning prosperity—of the Wyoming
Valley. The investment was made possible by the trolley line linking the Lake to the Valley towns, which provided the Lake tourist trade with a regular stream of visitors.
The President of the company was Christian Stegmaier; scion of the local
brewery family (a major development and philanthropic force in the region). Other
major stockholders were Peter Forve, John Graham, P. R. Raife, John B.
Reynolds, Pierce Butler, Edward Gunster and A. A. Holbrook. The company
purchased three parcels of land, including the site of the Lake Grove House.
P. R. Raife, a well-known builder in Wilkes-Barre, was the general contractor
for the new hotel, and McCormick and French were the architects.
Construction began in October 1897
on a site just behind the Lake Grove House, which housed the Oneonta laborers
during the construction. The new hotel was 200 feet from the edge of the Lake
and occupied a plot 196 feet wide and 105 feet deep. A formal inspection by the
owners was held on April 14, 1898. At this time it was called the Hotel
Graham, after one of the principal stockholders.
In the center of the hotel, a six
foot wide main stairway reached from the basement to the fourth floor. The
basement contained a barroom, café, barber shop, pastry kitchen, wine cellar,
laundry room, lavatories, billiard room and bicycle room. At the top of the
stairway, a large skylight diffused light through its sixteen square foot well.

Hotel Oneonta main hall and lobby. (FCP Collection)
The main entrance led to a hall
thirteen feet wide and forty-four feet long. The hall passed through the
center of the building. To the left, a large lobby, with paneled wainscoting
and an open six and one-half foot fireplace, held the registration and office
area. To the left of the office area, an archway led to a large parlor with
another fireplace. At the end of the parlor a ten foot wide hall led to a
thirty by fifty-five foot dance hall with two sets of large double doors
opening to the side porch, a glorious promenade for evening dancing guests.
To the right of the main lobby a
33' by 60' dining room lined with plate glass windows
overlooked the Lake. An adjoining area served as the nurses' and children’s
dining room.
Seventy rooms filled the second and
third floors with two sets of public baths on each floor. Many of the rooms
were suites with private baths and fireplaces. The fourth story was used for
storage. The eclectic exterior featured gables and towers in English
half-timber with a distinctive veranda and balcony. The porch was sixteen feet
wide and 343 feet long. The building was wired for electric lights and a fire
alarm system. A power house, one hundred feet to the left of the hotel, was
built to serve the hotel and the surrounding area. In March 1898 the owners of
the hotel also incorporated the Harvey’s Lake Light, Heat and Power Company to
supply the hotel’s power system. Electric current was sold to cottagers in a
two mile area near the hotel. An electrical system to serve the rest of the
Lake was twenty years away. Steam heating and a sewage treatment system were
additional features of the new hotel.
In June 1898 the hotel was renamed
the Oneonta, an Indian name meaning a “place of rest.” Within a week the
landscapers at the hotel found an Indian canoe buried on the grounds. It was
carefully removed and cleaned for exhibition. On July 7, 1898, the Hotel
Oneonta was opened for guests.
The hotel was the equal of any
summer hotel in the state and signaled an incredible two decades of resort fame
for the Lake. Soon after the opening, a barn and stable along with picnic
grounds were planned for the rear of the hotel.
A line of sailboats was available
for guests. A twenty foot flag was raised in front of the hotel and red shale
paths were laid around the hotel grounds. The trolley brought crowds to the
Oneonta for Saturday night dances, and the hotel guests enjoyed concerts during
luncheon and dinner hours. In 1899 a large boathouse was built for the Oneonta,
and its landing became the principal stop for the steamboats. In 1903 tennis
courts were added to the lawn. Masses were held at the hotel on Sundays
drawing summer guests as well as servants and maids from the summer homes.
In the early afternoon a brief lull
reigned before the steamboats renewed their incessant runs from the Picnic
Grounds to the Oneonta landing as thousands of holiday guests flocked to meet
the return trolleys to the Valley. Then, as cooler breezes signaled the early
evening, the trolleys to the Lake were full again with new crowds arriving for
the evening dances at the Oneonta or the Picnic Grounds.
Colorized "romantic" 1917 postcard shows the Oneonta walkways, lawn tennis court and boat landing. (FCP Collection)
The Oneonta always provided musical
entertainment with summer meals. String ensembles were popular with the dinner
crowd, with better area orchestras for dancing in the ballroom. A popular
tune, “Johnson’s Rag,” was written at the Oneonta by two musicians, Guy Hall
and Henry Kleinkoff. Tradition held the song was inspired by a cheerful waiter
at the Oneonta who had a wide smile and dancing feet. The ever-popular
“Moonlight and Roses” was composed by Joe O’Connor, who played piano at the
Oneonta before becoming a priest.
After 1901 the Oneonta had a
succession of managers, including John A. Redington, until James F. Poland
assumed the position in 1909. He held the position for ten years, longer than
any previous manager. Poland owned early hotels in the city, the Windsor and
later the Hart. Poland’s hotels were popular with vaudeville entertainers who
played the area. The popular character actor, Edward Everett Horton, played
summer stock in Wilkes-Barre and was a frequent guest at the Oneonta.
The Oneonta’s most famous guest was
the former President, Theodore Roosevelt, who had dinner at the Lake hotel on
August 22, 1912 while on a visit to the Valley. As the Lake’s most celebrated
time was ending, James Poland died on Christmas Eve 1918, and in six weeks the
Oneonta would be lost to fire.
Destruction of Hotel Oneonta
On Sunday, February 2, 1919, Mrs.
James Poland and a few friends were visiting the Oneonta. In the early
evening, at about 6:00 P.M. she left the hotel and was about to drive home when
her party saw a blaze in the basement area. Within minutes the entire hotel
was in flames. Farmers were aroused from the area to respond to the fire.
Holes were cut in the ice, and a bucket brigade was formed to save neighboring
buildings.
The illuminated sky began to draw crowds from miles around, and the
roads were filled with cars as the hotel became a destructive furnace. A high
wind showered sparks the ignited trees and cottage roofs. Several times flames
caught the hotel’s power house and ice house, but they were extinguished. The
fire burned for more than three hours with no injuries to anyone, but nothing
remained of the landmark hotel after the fire except a brick chimney,
fireplace, vault and foundation. For some time, the Oneonta company had been
in default on the mortgage to the hotel. The Polands had not planned to manage
the hotel in the summer of 1919, and Prohibition was on its way. The cause of
the fire was never determined, and the $45,000.00 fire insurance was inadequate
to rebuild it. In August 1919 the Wyoming Valley Trust Company, which held the
mortgage, foreclosed on the estate and sold it to John P. Schmidt, Peter Forve
and P. R. Raife, who laid out the area in building lots.
Copyright 2008 F. Charles Petrillo
Copyright 2006-2008 F. Charles Petrillo |