
The Grand Rose Hotel - Elizabethtown, Illinois
Posted by:
BruceS
N 37° 26.713 W 088° 18.272
16S E 384605 N 4145062
Quick Description: Historic hotel previously known as the McFarlan's Tavern now operated as a bed & breakfast in Elizabethtown, Illinois.
Location: Illinois, United States
Date Posted: 5/24/2009 6:09:10 PM
Waymark Code: WM6F41
Views: 1
Long Description:
The Rose Hotel was built on a limestone bluff overlooking the
Ohio River. by James and and Elizabeth Mcfarlan (the founders of
Elizabethtown) The view from the hotel is three miles to the
west, downstream on the river and three miles to the east, upstream
on the river.
The original McFarlan's Tavern constructed in 1812 was a
two-story, two-room building constructed of grey brick said to have
been hauled downriver by flatboat from Pittsburgh. The
original building is not the lobby and office of the hotel.
In 1848 an addition to the east was added and with that addition
the name was changed to the McFarlan Hotel it now had rooms for
rent. In 1865 an addition to the west was added and the
2-story veranda was added. The summer house or gazebo out on
limestone point above the river was built in 1882 and it remains in
use.
The hotel did a very lucrative business during the heyday of
river steamboat traffic along the Ohio River.
The hotel was deeded to James Mcfarlan Jr. in 1834 (there was a
line of 5 James Mcfarlan's) and remained in the until it was
acquired in 1891 by Sarah E. Rose, who had worked in the hotel
seven years prior to purchasing it. The hotel was
passed down to her daugher Charlotte Rose Gullet upon Sarah Rose's
death in 1939. The hotel remained in the Gullet family until
1989 when it was purchased by the State of Illinois Historic
Preservation Agency. The hotel closed at this time and
underwent a two-year, $1.5 million state funded restoration.
The hotel is now listed as a state historic site and operates under
a lease as a bed and breakfast called the Grand Rose Hotel. - from
National
Register Nomination Form and Grand Rose Hotel
website.