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The Hermitage Club at Haystack Mountain is a private, member owned club, which provides
alpine skiing Alpine skiing, or downhill skiing, is the pastime of sliding down snow-covered slopes on skis with fixed-heel bindings, unlike other types of skiing ( cross-country, Telemark, or ski jumping), which use skis with free-heel bindings. Whether for ...
on Haystack Mountain in Wilmington,
Vermont Vermont () is a state in the northeast New England region of the United States. Vermont is bordered by the states of Massachusetts to the south, New Hampshire to the east, and New York to the west, and the Canadian province of Quebec to ...
to its members.


The ski area

The ski area comprises three major sections: the lower mountain, upper mountain, and The Witches. The lower mountain is entirely beginner terrain. The upper mountain has intermediate and advanced terrain. The Witches is advanced terrain except for an intermediate run down the west (or “back”) side. The ski area’s largest lift, The Barnstormer, is a Doppelmayr six-person, detachable lift, with a protective bubble. The Barnstormer serves the upper mountain, and takes skiers from the clubhouse to the summit of Haystack Mountain. The Tage lift, a
Skytrac Leitner-Poma of America, known simply as Leitner-Poma, is a United States aerial lift manufacturer based in Grand Junction, Colorado. It is the American subsidiary of French-based Poma, which is owned by the Italian company HTI Group. The North Am ...
quad, on the north side of the ski area, brings skiers from the Hermitage Inn to the upper mountain. The Stags Leap lift, also a Skytrac quad, serves the lower mountain and connects the lower mountain to the upper mountain, with an optional mid-point exit at the top of the lower mountain. The Witches lift, a
CTEC The Microsoft Certified Technical Education Centre (Microsoft CTEC) channel provides training for computer professions in the use of Microsoft products. The term Microsoft Certified Technical Education Centre was introduced by Microsoft in early ...
triple, serves The Witches area of the mountain. Members have access to an 80,000 square ft clubhouse with a bar, restaurant, game room, bowling alley, and movie theatre. The clubhouse also includes a spa, gym, and lockers for members to keep ski equipment. There is a 2,700 square foot mid-mountain cabin, with a 900 square foot wrap-around porch, and a restaurant and bar.


History

Alpine skiing on Haystack Mountain has been offered through a range of different approaches. * 964 - 2005'' Public ski area ** 964 - 1981'' Independently operated (Haystack Corp / AMI) ** 981 - 1985'' Closed ** 985 - 1991'' Independently operated (The Haystack Group) ** 991 - 2005'' Operated by
Mount Snow Mount Snow (previously known as Mount Pisgah) is a mountain and ski resort in southern Vermont located in the Green Mountains. It is Vermont's southernmost big mountain, and therefore, closest to many Northeast metropolitan areas. In Septemb ...
(leased 1991 - 1994, purchased in 1994) * 005 - present'' Private ski club ** 005 - 2011'' Closed (privately owned, but never opened) ** 011 - 2018'' Operated under Jim Barnes' ownership ** 018 - 2020'' Closed (chapter 7 bankruptcy proceedings) ** 020 - present'' Member owned and operated


Public ski area 964-2005


Independently operated 964-1991/h3>

Haystack Mountain Ski Area was first opened to the public in December 1964, by the Haystack Corporation. The area provided access to 76 acres of trails and slopes. The mountain had 4 T-bars servicing the lower mountain novice area with a three story base lodge, called “The Stack,” at the top of the novice area. The Stack was, “designed in the jet-set style of the day, with an elaborate ski shop, cafeteria, dining room, cocktail lounge and a wine and cheese shop.” The ski area’s president, Herbert Hart, was quoted as saying, “All the brains of the area were pooled to come up with an answer on how they could have a wine shop and bar under the same roof. You aren’t supposed to have both. The solution was simple. The cork is pulled from the wine bottles as they are sold. The wine is consumed on the premises.” The upper mountain had a 2,700 foot double chairlift which took skiers halfway to the summit. Three buses -- Root, Toot, and Wisle -- took skiers between The Stack and bottom of the upper mountain chair lift. Jack Manton was the general manager, and Bruce Gavett was in charge of the ski school with Bob McCafferty as his assistant. Bill Colombo was the manager of engineering. During the 1965 ski season, the Haystack Corp. added a 5,600 ft long chairlift that took skiers all the way to the peak, opening up new trails, and bringing the trail count to 18. A nursery for young children ages 3 to 7 was also added. Dick McLernon, the area’s PR director, said in 1965 the area had broken all previous records for December gross income, “Business started increasing the day after Christmas and became better each day. Wednesday was our biggest day, but even so it was only about 65 per cent of our record day last March when we had more than 10,000 people here. A good weekday crowd here is about 3,000 and the weekend crowd averages between eight and ten thousand.” At the time the area offered a family weekend ticket for $38, and a $30 weekend package which included two lessons a day. A 60s ski area map, archived by New England Ski History project, shows the lower mountain trails as Haymaker, Pitchfork, Skid Row, Fanny Hill, Cascade, and Tunnel. The upper mountain trails as Flying Dutchman, Hayseed, Shaft, Needle,, Last Straw, Rocker, 007, Haywire, Outcast, Upper Dutchman, Avalanche, Last Chance, The Stump Jumper, and The Oh Noooooo. In May 1966, E. H. Lord-Wood Associates of Hartford, CT presented the master plan design and rendering for the ski area at a local town meeting. The Brattleboro Reformer described the plan as, “encompassing the entire Haystack development in a central village, includes a hotel, theater, shops, lodges, motels, clubs and various year round recreational facilities. In July 1966, Jack Manton was replaced as the area’s GM by William Palumbo. Manton returned to his real estate business in New Jersey but continued in his role as vice president and development manager of Haystack Before the 1966 ski season opened, an 1,800 foot transfer lift was added to transport skiers from the lodge to lifts at the base of the upper mountain. The cocktail lounge in the base lodge was expanded as well. In 1968, Haystack was recognized for their work teaching the handicap to ski, and as one of the first ski areas to teach the blind to ski. As the Brattleboro Reformer tells it, a Sunday school teacher asked Gavett if she could bring her class to ski Haystack, but noted one of the boys in the class, Chris Peppel, was blind. Gavett was undeterred and had his ski instructors prepare by skiing the mountain blindfolded. Peppel was able to ski the entire mountain with an instructor as a guide. As their expertise in this area grew, they hired Jim Gardner, an amputee, as a ski instructor. As a result, Haystack had seven blind, four deaf, and five amputee skiers regularly skiing the mountain. Gardner lauded Gavett for his selfless work in this area. Throughout Gavett’s time at Haystack he was recognized many times for his success with making skiing accessible to everyone, regardless of ability. In 1969, William Thomas (W. T.) Cullen joined the ranks of Haystack Corp. Cullen had been president of Chimney Hill Corp., the , 700-lot vacation home development adjacent Haystack Mountain. Cullen believed Haystack’s success was hampered by the lack of overnight accommodations and restaurants near Haystack, especially as compared with Mt. Snow. Under Cullen’s leadership, the corporation completed an 18-hole golf course in 1971, and sold $11M in property between 1970 and 1973. In 1971, Palumbo resigned as Haystack GM to work full time for Mueller Skilift Corp. He had been distributing and installing lifts for Mueller on a part-time basis while at Haystack. Gavett was promoted to GM to replace him. In the late 60s, Vermont started paying closer attention to the rapid expansion of land use in the state. This eventually led to the passage of
Act 250 Act 250, Vermont's Land Use and Development Act, 10 V.S.A. § 6001 et seq., is a law passed in 1970 by the Vermont legislature designed to mitigate the effects of development through an application process that addresses the environmental and commu ...
, putting a microscope on Haystack’s growth plans. While many lots had been sold, both Haystack and the Chimney Hill developments' sewers and water lines had not yet been completed. Plans previously approved by the town were called into question. This was made more complex when existing sewer work was halted because Haystack’s primary lender and mortgage holder, Associated Mortgage Investors (AMI), entered bankruptcy proceedings. Several lawsuits followed, including one accusing the Haystack Corporation of misrepresenting the development’s progress. This led to AMI taking over operations of Haystack in 1974, eventually putting it into bankruptcy in 1976. The ski area continued operations through bankruptcy and receivership. In 1979, the Tri-Mountain Leisure Group (TLG) leased and then operated Haystack Ski Area. TLG also owned Roundtop ski area in northern VT. TLG operated it through the 1980/1981 season, but with Roundtop also struggling, and no credible offers on the table for Haystack Ski Area, AMI was forced to shut it down. The area remained closed until 1985 when Don Tarinelli and a group of investors formed The Haystack Group and bought the area and its assets for $850,000. Don Tarinelli was the former president of the Stratton Mountain Ski Area and had retired to nearby Jamaica, VT. The Haystack group spent an estimated $7 million updating and repairing the ski area. They replaced two double chairs with new triple lifts, and invested more than $1 million in snowmaking infrastructure. The Haystack Group also expanded the ski area’s footprint by adding a CTEC triple lift to the eastern side of the mountain -- an area they called the Witches. This new section added three new advanced trails named Gandolf, Merlin, and Cauldron. The Haystack Group also started a new condominium community near Chimney Hill called Spyglass Village. While these improvements upgraded the ski experience, the ski resort couldn’t attract enough skiers to overcome the debt from the large infrastructure investments, and so filed for
Chapter 11 Chapter 11 of the United States Bankruptcy Code (Title 11 of the United States Code) permits reorganization under the bankruptcy laws of the United States. Such reorganization, known as Chapter 11 bankruptcy, is available to every business, wheth ...
bankruptcy protection in September 1991. 44,000 skiers visited Haystack during 1990-1991 ski season -- the last it would be an independently operated public ski area.


Mount Snow operated 991-2005

Shortly after the bankruptcy filing, the court granted Haystack's motion to allow nearby
Mount Snow Mount Snow (previously known as Mount Pisgah) is a mountain and ski resort in southern Vermont located in the Green Mountains. It is Vermont's southernmost big mountain, and therefore, closest to many Northeast metropolitan areas. In Septemb ...
to lease its properties for three years at $312,000 / year, with the option to purchase the resort for $2.5 million. Haystack's largest creditor, The Marble Bank, was owed more than $4M, and called the plan, "woefully inadequate," suggesting the sale price undervalued Haystack. While deliberation on the bankruptcy reorganization terms continued in court, the lease moved forward. Mt. Snow took over the operation of Haystack, renaming the resort, "Haystack at Mount Snow." The two mountains were promoted together, with trail counts and snow reports often combined. During the three year lease, Mount Snow went through a contentious permitting process for an 2.8 mile, 18" water pipeline from Haystack's Mirror Lake snowmaking reservoir to Mount Snow. Even Governor
Howard Dean Howard Brush Dean III (born November 17, 1948) is an American physician, author, lobbyist, and retired politician who served as the 79th governor of Vermont from 1991 to 2003 and chair of the Democratic National Committee (DNC) from 2005 to 200 ...
weighed in on the controversy, angering some. On October 1, 1993, Mount Snow received the permit necessary for the pipeline. Oct 21, 1993, the judge dismissed Haystack's bankruptcy case citing incomplete financial disclosures as evidence that the assets should not continue to be run under current management. So working directly with the bank, on June 22, 1994, S-K-I Ltd. acquired Haystack for $4.35M. In 1996 S-K-I Ltd. merged with LBO Resort Enterprises, forming the
American Skiing Company American Skiing Company was one of the largest operators of alpine ski, snowboard and golf resorts in the United States. Its resorts included Sunday River and Sugarloaf, in Maine, The Canyons in Utah, Killington, Mount Snow, Haystack, Heavenl ...
. The American Skiing Company (ASC) would soon hit financial troubles, resulting in the scaling back of operations at Haystack. By the end of its ownership of Haystack, ASC limited operations to weekend and holiday periods.


Private mountain ski resort 005 - present


The Haystack Club, Robert Foisie 005-2011

On June 27, 2005, a group of investors led by Robert Foisie, purchased the Haystack Ski Area from ASC for $5 million. Foisie planned to develop a private member-only resort that included ski, golf, and other amenities. The project was marketed under the name, The Haystack Club. Foisie planned to invest $450 million into the resort, adding full snowmaking capabilities, new lifts, and ample real estate offerings. David Dillion, the president of the Vermont Ski Areas Association, was hired as the president of the new venture. A gatehouse was added at the entry to the resort and the existing base lodge was gutted. The club planned for 900 members, with 200 members as the initial goal. Only 50-60 were sold -- the price of membership was never disclosed. In early 2007, the project was put on hold and employees laid-off. There is no evidence the ski area ever opened. In September 2007, the group applied for an Act 250 master plan permit, which could give potential partners additional detail on the vision. The project now included Bob Rubin as an executive VP. The plan included two 80+ unit condominiums, a 162 unit hotel with restaurant, and 118 townhomes. The results of the permit application were not available.


The Hermitage Club, Jim Barnes 011-2018

In 2011, Jim Barnes, purchased the ski area and the adjacent golf course for $6.5 million. Barnes had purchased the nearby Hermitage Inn in 2007. Barnes rebranded the club, The Hermitage Club at Haystack Mountain, and the golf course, The Hermitage Golf Course. The Hermitage Club first opened for the 2012-2013 ski season. Barnes expanded the amenities provide by the ski area: * In November 2012, a building was added to the base of the upper mountain to be used by the mountain ski patrol and restrooms for members, necessary for it to operate for the 2012-2013 season. *Two buildings were added to the summit to be used as a warming hut and additional ski patrol office. *Approximately 20 single family homes and condos were built and sold between 2011-2014. *Mirror Lake, the water reservoir for snow making, was enhanced to allow for summer recreation in 2014. * Between August 2012 (broke ground) and January 2015 (opening) a clubhouse was built at the base of the upper mountain. It was approximately 80,000 sq. ft. and included facilities for members (gym, spa, video game room for kids, lockers for ski equipment, food services, etc). *The Barnstormer, the lift from the base of the upper mountain, to the peak of the upper mountain, was upgraded to a new high speed six person lift with a protective bubble manufactured by Doppelmayr. The lift uses 22 lift towers, travels 5,236 feet to the summit, and has 88 detachable chairs. The new lift more than halved the time to the summit. The lift was opened on January 2, 2016 and reportedly cost $7.5M. The TV show, The Bachelor, filmed four episodes at the Club that were aired during the
2018 Winter Olympics , nations = 93 , athletes = 2,922 (1,680 men and 1,242 women) , events = 102 in 7 sports (15 disciplines) , opening = , closing = , opened_by = President Moon Jae-in , cauldron = Kim Yun-a , stadium = Pyeongchang Olympic Stadium , winte ...
. In 2015, the Vermont Attorney General's Office and other governmental agencies filed a lawsuit against the club. The group allegedly performed construction activities without land use permits, performed construction activities without a storm water permit, constructed a building without a wastewater and potable water supply permit and disturbed a wetland without approval. Barnes ran into financial difficulties in 2018. In February 2018,
Berkshire Bank Berkshire Bank is a bank headquartered in Boston, Massachusetts. It is a subsidiary of Berkshire Hills Bancorp, a bank holding company. The bank operates 130 branches in New England, New York and the Mid-Atlantic, and is the largest regional ban ...
initiated bankruptcy proceedings as Barnes failed to meet his obligation to make payments on three loans. Following this, in March 2018, the Vermont Department of Taxes shut down the club due to non-payment of taxes. On July 26, 2019, a Vermont judge granted a motion Friday to convert the bankruptcy case to a
Chapter 7 Chapter 7 may refer to: Albums * ''Chapter Seven'' (album), a 2013 album by Damien Leith. *''Chapter VII'', a 1973 album by drummer Buddy Miles George Allen "Buddy" Miles Jr. (September 5, 1947February 26, 2008) was an American composer, drum ...
liquidation allow for a sale of the club's assets to move forward, thus ending Jim Barnes ownership of the club. Civil lawsuits followed, include one accusing Barnes of fraud and seeking to recoup more than $2 million for townhouses that were never built.


The Hermitage Club, member owned 020 - present

On March 20, 2020, a group of 181 former members purchased the club and associated assets at auction for $8.06 million. The purchase included the ski mountain, ski lifts, clubhouse, the Haystack Golf Course, several inns and some undeveloped parcels of land. The member group outmatched multiple competing bids including those from a real estate development firm headquartered in California and a Michigan-based ski resort operator. The member owners formed a non-profit, owning entity, Hermitage Members Group (HMG), which describes itself as, "a member-owned entity established to own and operate the Hermitage Club as a private, four-season, family-friendly ski resort on Haystack Mountain." The club is run by a volunteer board. Bill Benneyan is the executive director and general manager. Benneyan led the club reopening and then day to day operations. HMG sold assets purchased in the auction that were not critical to the ski experience: * Haystack Golf Course was sold to John Cleanthes in June 2020 * Doveberry Inn was sold to Tim Ryan in June 2020 * Snow Goose Inn was sold to Cheryl and Jon Parker in 2020 * Horizon Inn was sold to Jennifer Betit-Engel and Christian Engel in October 2020 * Hermitage Inn was sold to Tim Hall and Mary Lou Ricci in April 2021 * The Hayfever lift, a
Poma Poma, incorporated as Pomagalski S.A., and sometimes referred to as the Poma Group, is a French company which manufactures cable-driven lift systems, including fixed and detachable chairlifts, gondola lifts, funiculars, aerial tramways, people ...
triple, was dismantled and sold to Bousquet Mountain in
Pittsfield, MA Pittsfield is the largest city and the county seat of Berkshire County, Massachusetts, United States. It is the principal city of the Pittsfield, Massachusetts Metropolitan Statistical Area which encompasses all of Berkshire County. Pittsfield ...
. The club re-opened for the 2020/2021 ski season. As of December 2021, membership had grown to over 300 members.


References

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External links


Haystack Page at the New England Lost Ski Area Project
Buildings and structures in Wilmington, Vermont Wilmington, Vermont Ski areas and resorts Ski clubs