Posts Tagged ‘1928’

The Herring, “swellest little hotel in Iowa,” 1928

February 28, 2020

LINCOLN HIGHWAY NEWS IS A BLOG BY BRIAN BUTKO

In The Better Country, published 1928, Dallas Lore Sharp and his wife Daphne crossed the country hoping to find if there was “a better country” out there somewhere. Both in their 50s with 4 boys in college, they traveled slowly, musing on the topic daily. One of his favorite overnight stops was a small town in Iowa:

We had covered two hundred and seventy miles since morning, and they were bringing us, weary enough, into the city of Belle Plaine, halfway between Chicago and Omaha — and to The Herring, “the swellest little hotel in Iowa.”

Their hotel man was most welcoming: “‘You’re in the home of the literati,’ said mine host…. I’ve entertained other great men, you see.”

I braced up visibly, and asked about something to eat.

“We don’t serve meals,” he replied with fervor, “but I have the best radio set in this town, if not in the entire State. Be my guests at the concert to-night, I beg you.”

      After dinner at a café, they returned to the parlor “to attend the concert of the air.” Unfortunately the hotel was “too full of ‘bones’” that caused static, spoiling everything over Belle Plaine that night except The Bedtime Story, which was about two baby woodchucks who got lost in the woods. That gentle tale, combined with drone of static, put Sharp to dozing instantly.

1922 Hotel.jpg

The Herring was built in 1900 with additions in 1912 and 1922. It was listed in the National Register in 2008—read the application at npgallery.nps.gov. However, the building is deteriorating and in danger. Recent plans for restoration and revival can be found at herringhotelpope, which is also the source for this old postcard, but with no action to address its issues, the hotel was recently taken over bu the city, per jimmagdefrau.com

Lincoln Highway marker hit, missing from York

March 18, 2009

LHA director Mindy Crawford alerts us that the concrete Lincoln Highway marker  at Ogontz and E. Market Street in York, Pennsylvania, was hit by a car on February 23. “One of our members has been trying to track down where it went. The only information he could get was from the police and the water company who both said it was laying there when they left! It is, of course, gone now.”

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If you have any information, please contact Mindy, who is also Executive Director Preservation Pennsylvania, at mcrawford@preservationpa.org or (717) 880-6275. Also keep watch at regional antique shops and on eBay. The posts, which have a directional arrow on the side, weere planted in 1928 to mark and commemorate the Lincoln Highway.