Hotel West / West's Hotel / Old Hotel / Sugar Grove Hotel / Uncle Tom's Cabin Rebuilt

07252020214407.jpg
07252020214408.jpg
West's Hotel.jpg
Hotel West - 1884 Front.jpg
Hotel West - 1884 Back.jpg
07252020214319 - Reduced.jpg
07252020214423.jpg
07252020214425.jpg
p18trf.jpg
p18trb.jpg
p89t.jpg

Dublin Core

Title

Hotel West / West's Hotel / Old Hotel / Sugar Grove Hotel / Uncle Tom's Cabin Rebuilt

Subject

[no text]

Description

After the first Uncle Tom's Cabin burned down in 1879, new residential housing, West's Hotel, was built in 1880 on the same site at the northwest corner of Main St. and the Railroad Tracks.

Identifier

[no text]

Date

Handwritten on the top:

Uncle Tom's Cabin
Rebuilt 1880

The ornate building that served as a boarding house for student scholars called Uncle Tom's Cabin burned downed in 1879, only 3 years after it was built. It was a great loss as Thomas Judd “Uncle Tom” had no insurance. However, he then built a new hotel on the same site. Since there was no insurance on the original boarding house, the community came together with labor and materials, and rebuilt it using the stacked lumber method for the outside walls. The hotel was later purchased by W.M. West and came to be known as Hotel West.
During the first half of the 1900s, Kitty Lorah owned the building. Sundays found automobiles with license plates from as far away as Wisconsin and Iowa parked in front of the hotel where Kitty served family style meals, all of which were cooked on two gigantic cast iron cook stoves in the basement kitchen. Her dining room was filled with families on Sundays and railroad personnel at noon during the week. Kitty continued to operate her restaurant and manage the apartments in the hotel, well into her later years. She could be found seated outside early on summer mornings, shelling a bushel of peas or stinging a like amount of beans, which were headed for her huge kettles and the dinner plates of diners.
After many years of housing students, guests, and residents, the Old Hotel West was torn down in 1999. It became the site of Veterans Park on the west side of Main Street just north of the railroad tracks.
Source: "Sin-Qua-Sip: A History of Sugar Grove Township, Kane County, Illinois" by Patsy Mighell Paxton.

Creator

Lucy

Language

[no text]

Rights

[no text]

Format

[no text]

Relation

[no text]

Source

[no text]

Publisher

[no text]

Contributor

[no text]

Type

[no text]

Coverage

[no text]

Still Image Item Type Metadata

Original Format

[no text]

Physical Dimensions

[no text]