Lady Evelyn Hotel

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Lady Evelyn Hotel
Lady Evelyn Hotel.jpg
The Lady Evelyn Hotel in 1907
General information
TypeHotel
LocationDeer Island, Lake Temagami
Town or cityTemagami, Ontario
CountryCanada
Coordinates47°09′44.89″N 80°07′43.36″W / 47.1624694°N 80.1287111°W / 47.1624694; -80.1287111Coordinates: 47°09′44.89″N 80°07′43.36″W / 47.1624694°N 80.1287111°W / 47.1624694; -80.1287111
Completed1904
Destroyed1912

The Lady Evelyn Hotel was a hotel on the northeast point of Deer Island in the North Arm of Lake Temagami in Temagami, Ontario, Canada.[1][2] The 3+12-story, 108-bed building was the largest of three hotels operated on Lake Temagami by the Temagami Steamboat and Hotel Company.[1][3] The company established the Lady Evelyn Hotel in 1904 under the management of Dan O'Connor and the financial backing of W. G. Gooderham and Alex and David Faskin.[1][2] Supplies and passengers to the Lady Evelyn Hotel were delivered by steamboat (e.g. Belle of Temagami) from the lakeside landing at the Temagami station.[2]

In 1906, the Canadian Summer Resort Guide declared that the Lady Evelyn Hotel, Ronnoco Hotel and Temagami Inn were "not the result of a slow gradual growth, but prepared for the best class of guests, with every regard for their comfort and convenience".[2] The three Temagami hotels could accommodate up to 500 guests at daily rates of $2.50 to $3.50 per person, among the highest in Ontario during this period.[2][4] Weekly rates of $16 to $21 were available for the residential or resort-oriented vacations in which the Lady Evelyn Hotel and Temagami Inn specialized. At full occupancy in the height of the season, the three hotels brought in approximately $10,000 per week.[2]

On July 4, 1912, the Lady Evelyn Hotel was completely destroyed by a fire of unknown origin. The estimated loss was over $30,000 and was only partially covered by insurance. A number of guests were at the hotel but there was no loss of life and no details were available as to whether any personal effects of guests were destroyed.[3] The hotel was never rebuilt and is now the site of melted and twisted remains.[5][1]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d Gordon, Diana L.; McAndrews, John H.; Campbell, Ian D. (2013). "A Lake through Time: Archaeological and Palaeo-Environmental Investigations at Lake Temagami, 1985–1994". Ontario Archaeology. Toronto: Ontario Archaeological Society. 93: 109, 110.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Wall, Geoffrey; Marsh, John S. (1982). Recreational Land Use: Perspectives on its Evolution in Canada. Carleton University Press. pp. 163, 164. ISBN 0-88629-003-1.
  3. ^ a b "Temagami Hotel Burned". The Gazette. Montreal, Quebec. 1912.
  4. ^ "Hotels and Boarding Houses: Parry Sound and Georgian Bay Dist". The Charms of Canada. Canadian Pacific Railway Company. 1908.
  5. ^ "Steamers on Lake Temagami: The Belle – biggest of them all 1906–18". Ottertooth. Retrieved 27 June 2019.
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