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Near the
southwest corner of Lebanon County, nestled into the South Mountains of
Pennsylvania, is a small community that for many years has become a very
special place to people from all areas of our country.
Mt. Gretna was
conceived and hued out of this woodland region during the period of 1882-1885.
In an effort to locate railroad stations between Cornwall and Colebrook. Mr.
Robert Coleman, owner of the Cornwall ore empire and its railroad lines, took
an interest in this place and caused the development of this area for a picnic
grove which rapidly developed into a summer community.
In 1885 it was
decided that the Pennsylvania National Guard would use 120 acres of this area
as its summer encampment site. This proved to be so satisfactory that it was
1935 before this area was abandoned for the more suitable Indiantown Gap area.
By 1885 Mt. Gretna was destined to be a lasting tribute to its
founders. Steadily improvements were made. The lake was produced by damming the
Conewago Creek. The railroad station was completed, eventually boasting of a
six-track siding. The park was expanded and many written accounts attest to its
popularity.
Through the efforts of Mr. Robert Coleman, a Narrow-gauge
rail line was laid from the park, located in back of the present miniature golf
course. This line ran up the mountain to Governor Dick tower. Governor Dick was
a popular lookout, overlooking four counties.
This area is still a
favorite hiking spot and is particularly beautiful in the fall. A cement tower
located there allows one to survey 2000 square miles. Many words could be used
to describe Mt. Gretna during the latter part of the 19th century, but for the
sake of authenticity and to capture the charm of the day, several passages have
been chosen from a brochure printed by the Cornwall and Lebanon Railroad at the
turn of the century.
Mount Gretna, a spur of the South Mountain range,
with its over 5,000 acres of open park, nearly midway between Conewago and
Lebanon, is the pride of the Cornwall and Lebanon R.R. For nigh on to a score
of years, the section over which it spreads has been noted as one of
Pennsylvania's choicest. Its altitude, primitiveness, healthfulness, beauty,
and accessibility have spread its renown. It is now visited annually by
pleasure, education and health seekers from every portion of the United States,
and its popularity is rapidly increasing.
The flora of Mount Gretna is
exceedingly rich and varied; a noted botanist has said that he knows of no
section in the Middle States where a greater variety and rarer specimens of
plants and flowers can be found than upon these mountains, in the very heart of
which is this beautiful park. Down a pleasure trodden path, or circling by the
Narrow Gauge R.R. grade, upon a rolling and wooded plateau lying between
summits of mountain ranges, is the rustic station, Mt. Gretna.
From it
a wide telfordized avenue opens through ornate iron gateways into the Park. It
is free to all comers, and lavishly complete in all that fives pleasure,
convenience, and comfort to picnicker and rambler. Immense dancing and skating
pavilions, commodious toilet rooms, kitchens without charge, fuel without cost,
fountains, walled springs of the purest water, baggage rooms, a bureau of
information, telfordized avenues, rustic seats, innumerable tables where family
parties may lunch content, lovers walks and retreats, all creditable to the
liberality and taste of the C & L R.R. A large airy dinning room and
restaurant invites guests. The ice cream, melon and soda water booths are cozy
and artistic. A long toboggan, wavelike, stand high up in the air. Swings
abound. A stream driven flying menagerie whirls in giddy flight. A shooting
gallery, a bowling alley, a ball ground with covered stand are ready for muscle
and skill.
At night electricity shames the moon, and gives to the
grounds a light second only to that of the sun. Winding along and up the
mountain runs the Narrow Gauge R.R. to carry open carloads of visitors through
mountain scenery. And three hundred yards away, fed by as pretty a stream as
ever gave home to trout is Lake Conewago, with shallow depths for those who
would bathe and scores of boats waiting for those who would row. Picnic
parties, family groups, and Sunday Schools come to this unrivalled place,
because of its beauty, easy access, good name and order. At the same time other
activities were taking place in Mount Gretna which have proved to be further
reaching than the hustle and bustle of the immediate time.
Summer
programs which expanded into a community way of life were undertaken by two
separate organizations, the Mt. gretna Campmeeting Association and The
Pennsylvania Chautauqua. Both have endured the rigors of time and are today
very active in attaining the goals set forth in their charters. The Mt. Gretna
Campmeeting Association, consisting of 30 acres purchased from Mr. Robert
Coleman, held its first Mt. Gretna conference in August of 1892. From this
beginning a community with deep religious conviction sprang. In early days it
consisted of an inner circle, sometimes called a temple, with a pulpit and
rough board seats surrounded by tents to house the participants. Accommodations
were sparse. The will to follow their convictions was the driving force. This
rudimentary beginning expanded to a community of cottages with the primary
goals of religious retreat in mind.
By 1899, the year the Campmeeting
auditorium was built, the grounds were well established. the community was well
on its way to the organization level it enjoys today. At present it consists of
several hundred cottages centered around the large outdoor tabernacle. For
those not familiar with Mt. Gretna, it lies in the southeast quadrant of Mt.
Gretna. Students of history are usually exposed to the Chautauqua movement in
this country. In the year 1874 a summer institute for the teaching of Sunday
school teachers was started at Lake Chautauqua in western New York State. This
endeavor grew in popularity and dimension until in encompassed all the arts and
sciences. This idea spread to many parts of the country and Chautauqua groups
sprang up in rapid succession. One such group was spearheaded by a meeting in
Mt. Gretna Park during the summer of 1891.
A suggestion for a State
Chautauqua was discussed at this meeting. During the course of that summer it
was decided Mt. Gretna was the ideal place for such a Chartauqua organization.
On January 13, 1892, a charter was granted to the Pennsylvania Chautauqua for
the purpose of: "The advancement of literary and scientific attainment among
the people, and the promotion of popular culture in the interest of
Christianity." Robert Coleman sold 80 acres to the Chautauqua for the sum of
$3000.00. Cottages and public buildings sprang up rapidly. In 1898 the circular
auditorium and the Inn were erected.
The Inn, no longer standing, was
at the site of the theatre parking lot. In 1909 the Chautauqua Community
Building was erected. The Chautauqua program was also full tilt. The 1892
season brought a total of 8,798 people. Tents, single rooms or cottages could
be rented. Meals could be purchased by the season or by the meal. Tickets were
necessary for all public events. Advertisements stated that tickets covered at
least sixty first-class entertainments and sixty good lectures. During the
second year in 1893, seventeen different courses were offered. In 1894 a
Buffalo NY newspaper stated that the Pennsylvania Chautauqua has attained the
highest rank among the nearly 100 sister Chautauquas in the country. Financial
problems were always present for the Chautauqua. After World War I the state no
longer subsidized the Chautauqua program. Colleges were offering "credit"
courses on the campuses and thus, little by little the Chautauqua program as
previously described came to a halt.
Energy was turned from the
Chautauqua movement to activities producing a summer community and later a year
round community. But the impact of the Chautauqua movement has never been
forgotten. It is still carried on as one can attest to by looking at the
schedule of events for a typical summer. Today finds the Pennsylvania
Chautauqua an 88 acre wooded area containing approximately 200 homes, numerous
wooded parks, a variety of recreation and cultural facilities and activities, a
community water ad sewage system and most of all an environmental uniqueness
that grows every day.
The Mt. Gretna Heights area, although smaller in
acreage than the Campmeeting or Chautauqua, is also an important part of Mt.
Gretna and its history. The land, 20 acres, was purchased from the Coleman's in
1897 by a private individual and was transferred several times until a
gentleman by the name of A. L. Kauffman purchased it in 1907. Mr. Kauffman
erected an entertainment complex consisting of a hotel, a dance hall-movie
theatre, a store, an amusement park and a swimming pool. The homes in the
Heights grew up around the perimeter of the Kauffman enterprise and are a
lasting tribute. Because of its unique community ties, the Heights also has a
civic organization with an elected board of directors to control its
activities. West of the lake is a small community which call itself Conewago
Hills. It is located on the lands once occupied by the Conewago Hotel.
The Conewago Hotel was built in 1909 on 10 acres of land purchased from
the Coleman estate. This large 100 plus room hotel was built just west of the
lake. The hotel was demolished in 1942 after a number of years of abandonment.
The land was purchased privately and re-sold in lot size parcels. Conewago
Hills, in trying to maintain the inherited beauty of its area, also has a land
organization which guides and guards this unique area. The most recent addition
to the Mt. Gretna community is the area called Timber Hills, north of the
Chautauqua, This area, once occupied by the army, changed hands several times
and is now being developed into a tasteful residential area. And so Mt. Gretna
lives on. Perhaps in many ways it is not as magnificent in its attractions as
it was in past years, but certainly it has maintained a culture and way of life
that has faded from most areas of this country. It may be difficult to pinpoint
its attracting qualities, but the continued interest shown by its ongoing
popularity is a tribute to all who have labored to make it something very
special to many people.
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