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The Great Camps of the
Adirondack Mountains refers to the grandiose family compounds of cabins that were built in the latter half of the nineteenth century on lakes in the
Adirondacks such as
Spitfire Lake and
Rainbow Lake. The camps were summer homes for the wealthy, where they could relax, host or attend parties, and enjoy the
wilderness
Wilderness or wildlands (usually in the plural), are natural environments on Earth that have not been significantly modified by human activity or any nonurbanized land not under extensive agricultural cultivation. The term has traditionally re ...
. In time, however, this was accomplished without leaving the comforts of civilization behind; some great camps even contained a bowling alley or movie theatre.
:"Consciously sited in remote locations, characterized by the use of logs and indigenous stone, shingled roofs with broad overhangs and porches, and simply-proportioned window and door openings, these building complexes are among our most original examples of
vernacular architecture."
The style of the Great Camps was influenced by the
British Arts and Crafts Movement and the related
American Craftsman
American Craftsman is an American domestic architectural style, inspired by the Arts and Crafts movement, which included interior design, landscape design, applied arts, and decorative arts, beginning in the last years of the 19th century. Its ...
style as well as by
Swiss
Swiss may refer to:
* the adjectival form of Switzerland
* Swiss people
Places
* Swiss, Missouri
* Swiss, North Carolina
*Swiss, West Virginia
* Swiss, Wisconsin
Other uses
*Swiss-system tournament, in various games and sports
*Swiss Internation ...
chalet design.
William West Durant, an early developer of the camps, was familiar with all three styles and adapted them to local materials and the skills of the craftsmen.
History
The Adirondack region was one of the last areas of the northeastern
United States to be explored by settlers; the headwaters of the
Hudson River near
Lake Tear of the Clouds on the slopes of
Mount Marcy
Mount Marcy ( Mohawk: ''Tewawe’éstha'') is the highest point in New York, with an elevation of . It is located in the Town of Keene in Essex County. The mountain is in the heart of the Adirondack High Peaks region of the High Peaks Wildern ...
were not discovered until more than fifty years after the discovery of the headwaters of the
Columbia River
The Columbia River (Upper Chinook: ' or '; Sahaptin: ''Nch’i-Wàna'' or ''Nchi wana''; Sinixt dialect'' '') is the largest river in the Pacific Northwest region of North America. The river rises in the Rocky Mountains of British Columbia, C ...
in the
Canadian Rockies
The Canadian Rockies (french: Rocheuses canadiennes) or Canadian Rocky Mountains, comprising both the Alberta Rockies and the British Columbian Rockies, is the Canadian segment of the North American Rocky Mountains. It is the easternmost part ...
. Although a few sportsmen had shown some interest earlier, the publication of
William H. H. Murray
William Henry Harrison Murray (1840–1904), also known as Adirondack Murray, was an American clergyman and author of an influential series of articles and books which popularized the Adirondack Mountains in Upstate New York. He became known as th ...
's ''Adventures in the Wilderness; Or Camp-Life in the Adirondacks'' in 1869 started a flood of tourists to the area, leading to a rash of hotel building and the development of stage coach lines.
Thomas Clark Durant
Thomas Clark Durant (February 6, 1820 – October 5, 1885) was an American physician, businessman, and financier. He was vice-president of the Union Pacific Railroad (UP) in 1869 when it met with the Central Pacific railroad at Promontory S ...
, who had helped to build the
Union Pacific railroad, acquired a large tract of central Adirondack land and built the
Adirondack Railway from fashionable
Saratoga Springs to
North Creek, New York. By 1875 there were more than two hundred hotels in the Adirondacks, some of them with several hundred rooms; the most famous was
Paul Smith's Hotel.
The early Great Camps started life as simple tent camps, often on land initially leased from hotel owners, as hotel guests sought a more authentic wilderness experience. The tent camps evolved into tent platforms or lean-tos and then into compounds of rustic cabins. Even in the early stages, some of these camps became quite elaborate. In 1883 one of the first families on
Upper St. Regis Lake, that of the wealthy merchant
Anson Phelps Stokes, would arrive in a "special parlour horse car direct from 42nd street to Ausable for $100." One party consisted of ten family members and an equal number of servants, "three horses, two dogs, one carriage, five large boxes of tents, three cases of wine, two packages of stovepipe, two stoves, one bale of china, one iron pot, four washstands, one barrel of hardware, four bundles of poles, seventeen cots and seventeen mattresses, four canvas packages, one buckboard,
.. twenty-five trunks, thirteen small boxes, one boat, one hamper", all of which was then transferred to wagons for the 36 mile ride to Paul Smiths, and thence by boat to their island campsite.
As the region's hotels became more civilized and elaborate (Paul Smith's started without indoor plumbing), so too did the camps. But the use of rustic, native materials and craftsmen remained, as did a tendency to use separate buildings for separate functions, from dining to sleeping cabins, bowling alleys to dance pavilions, all connected by covered walkways as features of a distinctive
Adirondack Architecture.
The largest and most luxurious camps were generally built on large landholdings; Adirondack land was cheap and the buyers were extraordinarily wealthy. Many of them were
Jewish families excluded from the traditional Adirondack resorts. For example, the rules of the
Lake Placid Club specifically excluded anyone "against whom there is any reasonable physical, moral, social or race objection ... This invariable rule is rigidly enforced: it is found impracticable to make exceptions to Jews or others excluded...." Wealthy Jews such as
Otto Kahn, Alfred Lewisohn,
Daniel Guggenheim
Daniel Guggenheim (July 9, 1856 – September 28, 1930) was an American mining magnate and philanthropist, and a son of Meyer and Barbara Guggenheim. By 1910 he directed the world's most important group of mining interests. He was forced out ...
, and Evelyn Lehman Ehrich and Harriet Lehman (daughters of one of the founders of brokerage firm
Lehman Brothers) purchased land and constructed Great Camps when they found it impossible to join the established Adirondack clubs.
The Great Camp tradition has analogues in the western United States, especially in the Rocky Mountains. Closely tied to the dude ranch tradition, elaborate private lodges and cabins owned by groups of wealthy Easterners were constructed in the wilderness. Often families originated from New York or Chicago and traveled by train to spend long periods in summer in the high country. Some lodges in the West were built by railroad interests, who were able to pick the best land while surveying potential railroad routes.
Preservation
The term "great camp" was used as early as 1916, although it was not until the late twentieth century, when preservation of these historic properties became a widely shared concern, that the term was given academic currency. By 1921, in ''A History of the Adirondacks'', Alfred Lee Donaldson was writing that "Among Adirondack terms calling for exact definition is the word 'camp.'... If you chance to know a millionaire, you may be housed in a cobblestone castle, tread on Persian rugs, bathe in a marble tub, and retire by electric light--and still your host may call his mountain home a 'camp.'"
The realization that the camps were vulnerable came when, in 1975,
Syracuse University
Syracuse University (informally 'Cuse or SU) is a Private university, private research university in Syracuse, New York. Established in 1870 with roots in the Methodist Episcopal Church, the university has been nonsectarian since 1920. Locate ...
announced plans to sell
Sagamore Camp, which had been a gift to the university from Margaret Emerson. As Craig Gilborn, Director of the
Adirondack Museum put it "If a college or university, regarded as the best societal steward of cultural properties, could now treat them as part of an investment portfolio, then the camps were in real jeopardy."
[''Ibid.''] Particularly worrisome was the fact that, under the
Forever Wild
New York's Forest Preserve, comprises almost all the lands owned by the state of New York within the Adirondack and Catskill parks. It is managed by the state Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC).
, the Forest Preserve covers nearly ...
provision of the
New York State Constitution, if the camp were acquired by the state as part of the
Forest Preserve, the buildings would have to be destroyed.
Sagamore was listed on the
National Register of Historic Places in 1976. In the early 1980s staff of the Adirondack Museum recognized the Great Camps as a historic resource of the region and undertook some documentation. Gilborn, on learning that Sagamore Camp was threatened with demolition, contacted Paul Malo at Syracuse University, knowing the professor to be an architectural historian interested in regional landmarks. Professor Malo induced the
Preservation League of New York State to become active in saving Camp Sagamore. Professor Malo represented the organization in negotiating with the State of New York to spare the Sagamore buildings. As president of the organization he subsequently led the Preservation League's campaign to amend the New York State Constitution in order to save the service complex buildings at Camp Sagamore, adding them to the landmark complex. The Preservation League also conducted an extensive survey of the region, identifying more than thirty properties that might be considered "Great Camps of the Adirondacks."
At the same time, Harvey Kaiser, a vice-president of Syracuse University, interviewed owners and others familiar with these historic properties, photographing the buildings in their settings. He wrote and illustrated an important 1982 book, "''Great Camps of the Adirondacks''," which popularized the term, stimulating wider public concern for preservation of these landmark buildings.
Shortly after demolition of the historic buildings at Sagamore Camp was averted, nearby Camp Uncas was similarly threatened. The same couple who saved Sagamore Camp, Howard Kirschenbaum and Barbara Glaser, negotiated with the State of New York, acquiring these buildings to save them.
Howard Kirschenbaum then founded
Adirondack Architectural Heritage Adirondack Architectural Heritage (AARCH) is a private nonprofit, membership organization dedicated to the preservation of the historic architecture of New York State’s Adirondack Park. Their offices are located in the historic Ausable Horse Nail ...
, a regional preservation organization that undertook a long, eventually successful campaign to save the historic buildings of the
Santanoni Preserve.
In July 1986, a multiple property submission for registration of 10 great camps on the National Register was completed. It was certified in September 1986 by the State Historic Preservation Officer.
The 10 camps covered were:
*
Camp Eagle Island
Eagle Island Camp, also known as Camp Eagle Island or simply EIC, is a youth summer camp and former Girl Scout camp located on Eagle Island on Upper Saranac Lake in New York's Adirondack region. The site is listed on the National Register of His ...
*
Camp Pine Knot
*
Camp Topridge
*
Camp Uncas
*
Camp Wild Air
*
Echo Camp
*
Moss Ledge
*
Prospect Point Camp
*
Sagamore Lodge
Great Camp Sagamore is one of several historic Great Camps located in the Adirondack Mountains of northern New York State.
History
Great Camp Sagamore was constructed by William West Durant on Sagamore Lake between 1895-1897. Prior to Sagamo ...
(a boundary increase to the Sagamore Camp), and
*
Santanoni Preserve
These were subsequently added to the National Register in 1986 and 1987.
Flat Rock Camp
Flat Rock Camp is an Adirondack Great Camp in Willsboro, New York. It is located on Willsboro Point on Lake Champlain.
History
In 1885, Augustus G. Paine, Jr. (1866–1947) moved to Willsboro to manage a local pulp mill, and began buying lan ...
was added in 2006.
Both
Sagamore Camp and
Santanoni Preserve have since become
National Historic Landmarks, in 2000, as have
Camp Uncas,
Camp Pine Knot at
Raquette Lake and Girl Scout
Camp Eagle Island
Eagle Island Camp, also known as Camp Eagle Island or simply EIC, is a youth summer camp and former Girl Scout camp located on Eagle Island on Upper Saranac Lake in New York's Adirondack region. The site is listed on the National Register of His ...
on
Upper Saranac Lake, in 2004.
Since the early preservation crises, appreciation of the Great Camps of the Adirondacks has increased, so that fewer seem to be in jeopardy at this time (2006), though the properties are large and costly to maintain.
See also
*
Adirondack Architecture
*
Joe Bryere
*
Carnegie Camp North Point
The Carnegie Camp North Point is on the northern shore of Raquette Lake in the Adirondack Park in New York. It is one of the original Great Camps of the Adirondacks located on Raquette Lake the home to many summer camps of the wealthy built du ...
*
Knollwood Club
*
Pine Tree Point
Pine Tree Point is an Adirondack Great Camp on Upper St. Regis Lake.
History
Pine Tree Point was the camp of Frederick William Vanderbilt, a director of the New York Central Railroad for 61 years. Vanderbilt maintained residences in New York Cit ...
*
White Pine Camp
White Pine Camp is an Adirondack Great Camp on Osgood Pond in Paul Smiths, New York. It served as the Summer White House for US President Calvin Coolidge from July 7 through September 18, 1926.
The camp, built on for New York businessman Arch ...
Notes
Other references
*Donaldson, Alfred Lee, ''A History of the Adirondacks''. New York: The Century Co., 1921.
* Engel, Robert; Howard Kirschenbaum; Paul Malo. ''Santanoni: From Japanese Temple to Life at an Adirondack Great Camp''. Keesville, NY: Adirondack Architectural Heritage, 2000.
* Gilborn, Craig. ''Adirondack Camps: Homes Away from Home, 1850-1950''. Blue Mountain Lake, NY: Adirondack Museum; Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 2000.
* Gilborn, Craig. ''Durant: Fortunes and Woodland Camps of a Family in the Adirondacks''. Utica, NY: North Country Books, 1981.
* Hooker, Mildred Phelps Stokes, ''Camp Chronicles'', Blue Mountain Lake, NY: Adirondack Museum, 1964. .
* Kaiser, Harvey. ''Great Camps of the Adirondacks.'' Boston: David R. Godine, 1982
Google preview* Kirschenbaum, Howard. ''Story of Sagamore''. Utica, NY: North Country Books, 2001.
* Morgan, Bret. ''Rustic: Country Houses, Rural Dwellings, Wooded Retreats''. New York, NY: Rizzoli International Publications, 2009.
* Schneider, Paul. ''The Adirondacks: a History of America's First Wilderness''. New York: Henry Holt & Company, 1997.
External links
Haynes, Wesley. Adirondack Great Camp Theme StudyAdirondack Architectural Heritage*
* [https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C00E4DD123EF930A15753C1A961958260&sec=&pagewanted=all ''New York Times'', "Out-Twigging the Neighbors; In the Adirondacks, Great Camps Are Sprouting Again"]
PBS "Adirondack Great Camps"
{{coord missing, New York (state)
Residential buildings in New York (state)
Rustic architecture in New York (state)