Jump to content

User:Deisenbe/sandbox/Hilltop

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Golf, bass fishing, music and other amusements. Hill Top House, Harpers Ferry, WV, 1920s

The Hill Top House Hotel is located in Harpers Ferry, West Virginia. It occupies a spectacular location, with panoramic views of the Potomac and Shenandoah valleys.[1]

The original hotel was built in 1888 and operated until his death by Thomas S. Lovett, an African-American graduate of Harpers Ferry's Storer College, at the time the only college in the state of West Virginia that accepted students of all skin colors. His policy at his hotel was to do the same, to accept guests of all skin colors. The hotel, the college, John Brown's Fort, and the Island Park Resort and Amusement Park combined to make Harpers Ferry a center of African-American tourism and a frequent excursion from Baltimore and Washington, D.C.

With two structures lost to fire, but insured and rebuilt, the hotel operated until 2007, when it had deteriorated beyond reasonable repair. The rebuilding and reopening of the hotel, on a more luxurious scale, became a local issue. As of June 2023, its reopening in 2025 is predicted.

The original hotel (1888–2007)

[edit]

An African-American hotel

[edit]

The hotel was built in 1888 by Thomas S. Lovett, an African-American entrepreneur who had graduated from Storer College, at the time the only college in West Virginia that would accept students of any skin color. Lovett followed the same policy in his hotel.

As one of the few larger hotels anywhere open to African Americans, located in a place of historic significance, where the end of slavery began, and a short train ride from Washington, D.C., the hotel became a center of African-American tourism. Excursions from Washington and Baltimore to Harpers Ferry were frequent.

Three iterations of the hotel

[edit]
Hill Top House Hotel, Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, 1892-93. The proprietor, Thomas Lovett, stands alone at right.

The original frame structure, described as "the one real new building" put up in Harpers Ferry since the Civil War,[2] was destroyed by fire in 1912,

Second version of the Hill Top House Hotel, 1914

It was replaced by a larger partly stone building. This hotel, described in the report as "well known", was destroyed by electrical fire in June of 1919.[3]

Many pieces of the 1912 structure were used in the rebuilding. In 2006 it was still an activa favorite of travellers.[4] However, the condition of the hotel had deteriorated, to the point that it was forced to close in 2008.

Guests at the hotel

[edit]

The hotel has been a part of the Harpers Ferry landscape and contributed to the area's allure and history. Luminaries who visited the Hill Top House Hotel include former Presidents Woodrow Wilson, Calvin Coolidge and Bill Clinton, as well as Vice President Al Gore, Mark Twain, Carl Sandburg, Alexander Graham Bell, Pearl S. Buck, W.E.B. Dubois, and many others.[5]

The Hotel was part of a key moment of Civil Rights history. When the influential 2nd Conference of the Niagara Movement convened at Storer College in 1906, the Hill Top was the host hotel, and its existence contributed to making the conference possible at all.

The new hotel (2025?)

[edit]

"Link to artist's conception of the final project.". The condition of the hotel made its redevelopment using the existing buildings impossible, and they were taken down, saving and reusing the stones and tile from the original building. Rather than just a hotel, the project has become a conference center. It occupies the same footprint as the original hotel. The cost of the project has grown to $150,000,000. A cooking school is planned, with dining overseen by James Beard. As of 2023, it is projected to open in 2025.[6]

According to Karen Schaufeld, “We’ll be putting it back up in approximately the same footprint of the original hotel and the dance pavilion that were there in 1914." As much as could be saved was preserved from the hotel site, which Karen Schaufeld said will be used in the new structure.[6]

The reconstruction of the hotel became a divisive local issue and came to the attention of the West Virginia Legislature.[7] Some locals oppose the hotel, conference center, and cooking school as overdevelopment for such a small village as is Harpers Ferry.[8]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]