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The
following is from the web site :
www.mapcenter.org/community/bcv-history.html
Bear
Creek Village evolved in the nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries as a company town designed to
support the industrial activities occurring there and
the lifestyle of a successful business leader, Albert
Lewis. During the industrial era, Lewis permitted
several members of the regional elite to establish
summer residences, a process of development that
increased after the industrial era of the village
ended.
Since
the industrial enterprises of Albert Lewis were
located in a rather remote area, it was necessary to
provide living accommodations for workers and the
various services required of Albert Lewis and his
family. This was a pattern consistent with early
industrial development throughout northeastern
Pennsylvania, the remainder of the state, and the
nation. Lewis constructed single houses and boarding
houses for the immigrant workers he hired, many
reminiscent of the style typically constructed for
anthracite coal workers. In particular, the early
company housing types found at Bear Creek
(#9)
reveal a heavy emphasis on the communal boarding of
workers, and several early company boarding houses are
believed to remain. The preponderance of communal
housing indicates the nature of the workforce for
Lewis' original ice harvesting and lumbering
operations.
The
village had its own electric power plant for the
industrial operations and the village community.
Electric power was free to village residents. In 1903,
Lewis incorporated the Bear Creek Water Company
(#9)
to supply water to the community. The village had a
general store, and, in 1911, Lewis built a Catholic
church for the workers. St. Elizabeth's Catholic
Church, formally dedicated on September 7, 1911 by Rt.
Rev. Bishop Hoban of the Scranton diocese, was a
mission of St. Leo's Parish in Ashley. In 1913, a
one-room schoolhouse was built along White Haven Road
for the education of the village's children,
reflecting the changing nature of Lewis' workforce and
community.
In
comparison to the other communities that grew up
around this regional enterprise, such as Mountain
Springs or Alderson, Bear Creek Village retains a high
degree of integrity from this period of its
development. While certain structures, such as the ice
plants, the ice company office, and the boarding
house, have been destroyed, the resources which remain
- the lake and dam themselves, the workers' houses,
store, and chapel, the railroad depot
(#4)
- provide ample opportunity to understand
turn-of-the-century life at Bear Creek Village.
Albert
Lewis' original house, the "White House,"
was enlarged in 1891 in preparation for his second
marriage. It stood on the west side of the lake and
was destroyed by fire in the 1950's. At this time,
Lewis also constructed a boathouse (to hold a
thirty-three foot steamboat transported to Bear Creek
by rail), a carriage house, and a bowling alley for
the recreation of his guests and summer residents. A
large picnic ground and pavilion were also
constructed. By 1895, Lewis' growing family
(#2)
required more space; as a result, he had Wilkes-Barre
contractors Monks and Shepard construct a large new
home, known as the Mokawa Inn
(#1).
This mansion was sided with hemlock bark shingles,
which were also used on many of the Lewis estate's
other structures.
It was
at Mokawa Inn that Lewis entertained Teddy Roosevelt
(#12)
in 1910 and 1914. William H. Taft
(#13)
enjoyed the Lewis hospitality in June of 1919. On
November 7, 1922, a fire
(#7
& )
(#8)
destroyed the central portion and south wing of the
Mokawa Inn. Lewis retained Wilkes-Barre architects
Donald F. Innes and Charles L. Levy to reconstruct the
home as a Tudor Revival mansion. Lewis lived in the
home for only six months before his death in 1923.
Near
Albert Lewis' home, perched on a high knoll, stood the
stately home of Daniel Stull, a Lewis business
associate, who operated the village's general store.
This home was passed on to Arthur L. Stull, who became
a partner in the ice business with Lewis. Stull sold
the house to the prominent Reynolds family of
Wilkes-Barre in 1892. Several other large seasonal
residences, constructed by Lewis friends from
Wilkes-Barre's elite, stood nearby along Bear Creek
Boulevard on land leased from Lewis.
In
addition to the Lewis home, Bear Creek Village
possesses other remarkable monuments to Albert Lewis'
interests, patronage and taste. Foremost among these
are Grace Chapel, a superb example of a high-style
rural Episcopal chapel that was built by Lewis in
memory of his first wife; and the monuments in the
adjoining Lewis family cemetery, many designed by the
Tiffany Studios of New York City. Taken together with
the bowling alley, the boathouse, and other service
buildings, these resources present a remarkably
complete picture of the world that Albert Lewis
created for himself and his family.
Grace
Chapel, in particular, is an extremely well done essay
in the Queen Anne style. Its highly talented designer
is unknown, and it is possible that Lewis or P. R.
Raife, the Wilkes-Barre contractor who built the
chapel, may have obtained the design from a
patternbook. In any event, the fact that a building of
this quality would emerge in a place like Bear Creek
in 1884 speaks volumes about Albert Lewis and the
aspirations he held for his proprietary village. As
Lewis' country seat, and the center of his
multifaceted business operations, Bear Creek Village
provides an glimpse into the complexities and
subtleties of nineteenth-century capitalism as
practiced by this significant Pennsylvania
industrialist.
Two
significant religious buildings and a contributing
site, the Lewis family cemetery, are set in the woods
to the southwest of the dam. Grace Chapel (1884) is a
shingled high-style Queen Anne building with a
T-shaped plan. The nave and chancel are encompassed
within the chapel's rectangular main wing; the
chapel's interior, which is finished in beadboard, is
illuminated by arched art glass windows on the north
and south walls and a hipped dormer with three large
multipaned windows on the east wall. An entry porch
and tower, topped by a bell-roofed belfry and spiral,
project from the sanctuary wing. The Lewis family
cemetery sits across Chapel Road from Grace Chapel.
Surrounded by a stone wall, the cemetery contains the
graces of Albert Lewis and other prominent members of
the Lewis family. The graves are marked by monuments
or crosses designed by Tiffany Studios, New York.
Further
south along Chapel Road, the former
St.
Elizabeth's Catholic Chapel (#5)(1911)
is a vacant clapboard building. A tower with open
belfry, centered on the north gable end, houses the
main entrance. Simple rectangular windows, embellished
with applied pedimental hood moldings, light the
chapel's interior.
Another
fascinating aspect of the Bear Creek Village district
is the way in which it illustrates the free
intermingling of recreation and industry - an aspect
of nineteenth-century life that has not continued to
the present day. The pursuit of rest and outdoor
recreation was a focal point of cottage life at Bear
Creek, occurring alongside Lewis' ice-cutting and
lumbering operations. The remaining cottages along
Bear Creek Boulevard document the coexistence of an
elite summer colony and a company town;
architecturally, they are representative of the
rambling residences, influenced by the Stick and
Shingle styles, which typified Victorian summer resort
architecture in the region.
As Bear
Creek Village's industrial role declined, its
development as a lakeside retreat accelerated. The
residential compounds designed for Albert Lewis and
his son, Hugh, by Wilkes-Barre architects Donald Innes
and Charles Levy illustrate the architectural
manifestation of that shift.
The
firm of Innes and Levy dominated residential design in
the Wyoming Valley during the 1920's and 1930's,
designing dozens of town and country houses for the
continuity's elite. They were particularly gifted at
the Tudor Revival, and several of their essays in that
style are significant resources within downtown
Wilkes-Barre's River Street National Historic
District. When Albert Lewis' mansion burned in 1922,
Lewis engaged the firm to rebuild it. Innes and Levy
were pleased enough with the results to feature the
Albert Lewis house in their monograph, published in
1933.
It was
Innes and Levy's residence for Hugh Lewis, however,
which set the tone for residential development at Bear
Creek during the next several decades. Seemingly
influenced both by Adirondacks camp architecture and
rural French examples, the architects developed a
vocabulary of uncoursed rubblestone walls, logs, steel
casement windows, and roughcut clapboards, which they
used in conjunction with massing and motifs taken from
the French countryside.
The
design for the Hugh Lewis compound is echoed in the
1930's and 1940's residences at 37 and 39 Cove Road,
99 West Lake Road, and 585 and 605 East Lake Road.
Some, such as the adjoining homes along Cove Road, are
almost certainly by Innes and Levy. Taken together,
they define a nascent "Bear Creek style"
which came to typify the community's architectural
development during the middle of the twentieth
century. This stylistic direction sets Bear Creek
apart from other Victorian summer colonies turned
suburbs in the Wilkes-Barre area, such as Glen Summit
or Harvey's Lake.
The
district's twentieth-century architectural resources
are not limited to essays in the Bear Creek
vernacular. The high-style Ernest Rohr residence (ca.
1939), for example, is one of the few examples of Art
Moderne residential architecture in the region. As
Bear Creek Village's new role as a year-round suburban
community for Wilkes-Barre - a place apart from the
bustle of the valley below - solidified, the district
has continued to serve as a testing ground for new
architectural design - a role which has continued to
the present day. |