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The Mystery
of Eagle Nest Lodge |
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Eagle
Nest Lodge Vintage
Postcard
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The
History of Eagle Nest Lodge
From a kind reader by
the name of
Ann
Tyer Walker, we were able to get a lot of history of the old lodge. One day while Ann, from Santa Rosa,
California,
was browsing the internet in 2004, she stumbled across our story and
began to unlock the mystery of the
Eagle
Nest Lodge. Ann is the daughter of the man who built and ran the lodge for
almost two decades. Ann, who only lived at the lodge until the age of
two, gave us what little information that she knew, while her husband
Doug scanned and sent us dozens of photographs. Then
the real sleuthing began. Ann followed up with her cousin
Shelton Tyer, Jr. from Ardmore,
Oklahoma
who actually worked at the old lodge in the 1930s. Now, at the age of
86, Shelton remembers the hard work his Uncle Bill made him do while
at the
Eagle
Nest Lodge.
In July, 2005, we
heard directly from the Evelyn Gant, Walter Gant's daughter-in-law, as
well as Dale Gant, the grandson of Walter Gant. Now the facts
are completely in and the mystery is solved.
It all
began with a gentleman by the name of Walter Gant, an oil man from
Oklahoma. Walter Gant owned the property on the lake and had been involved with
Ann's father, William B. "Bill" Tyer, from Ardmore,
Oklahoma
in other business ventures. When Gant decided to build the lodge
on the prime real estate overlooking the lake, he hired Ann's father
to oversee the building and running of the business.
When Tyer arrived in
Eagle
Nest in 1927, he lived in a cabin on the property and began hiring
construction people. As the construction of the lodge began, he
oversaw the many details of building what would soon become
Eagle
Nest's first luxury resort. The marvelous old doors at the
lodge were completely made by hand in
Oklahoma City by Walter's father and carried to Eagle Nest in a
Cord touring care, one door at a time.
When it was completed the
Eagle
Nest Lodge included the main building that featured a large lounge
where guests could sit and relax on one side of a three-sided
fireplace, or have a drink at a large round wooden bar on another side
of the stone hearth. Across from the lounge was a restaurant and
coffee shop where home cooking was served up to the many guests of the
lodge.
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William B. "Bill" Tyer in 1927, photo courtesy
Ann Tyer Walker.
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Upstairs,
the main building provided 12 rooms for weary travelers. Next to the
main building was the Casa Loma (House on the Hill), which provided even
more rooms for the lodge, considered large for its time. In front of
the lodge was a large ornamental fish pond and near the lodge --
stables and a corral. Beyond the Casa Loma Building was the
Caretaker's House where Mr. Tyer lived. Featuring fishing and
hunting expeditions, as well as horse-back riding, the guests had many
amenities to entertain them.
As the
popularity of the
Eagle
Nest Lodge
increased, the lodge added a guest annex across from the lodge that
provided five studio units with their own bathrooms, kitchenettes and what
appears now to be garages or stables beneath the rooms, on the lower
level. Along the back of the annex, sat a wide deck where the guests
could sit and leisurely view the lake before them.
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They also
connected the main building to the Casa Loma via a walkway/lounge they
called the Loafer's Lounge.
Soon after the lodge opened, Bill Tyer's nephew Shelton Tyer, Jr. from
Ardmore,
Oklahoma,
began to spend summers with his uncle. "Uncle Buddy," as the family
called him, soon put young Shelton to work "earning his keep." Though Shelton has nothing but fond memories of his uncle and the
Eagle
Nest Lodge, he
laughs
when he talks about how hard his uncle made him work, as the young man was
not used to such strenuous labor.
Working from sun-up to sun-down doing all
manner of chores, from bell hopping, to washing dishes, to wrangling the
horses, "Uncle Buddy" kept him busy.
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Of his uncle, Shelton says that, though Bill
Tyer had him working hard, he was also a great teacher, making sure that
the chores were performed correctly. Shelton also has great memories of
horseback riding, fishing and hiking while spending summers at the lodge.
Shelton lived in the "bunkhouse" on the lower
level of the Guest Annex, which they called the "Apartment Building" at
the time. It is this area that appears that it was later used as
garages or stables. Upstairs there were five apartments for
additional guests. One of his many jobs was to keep the heater going
in the Guest Annex building. Besides serving as a bunkhouse, other
areas of the lower level were utilized for storage for ice, coal and
various supplies for the lodge.
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The Guest Annex, built later, at first
appeared to us to have stables underneath. Instead, we found out
that the lower level initially served as a bunkhouse. Photo courtesy
Ann Tyer Walker.
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In the early 1930's Bill Tyer met a woman
named Hazel Kay who had come out from Colorado City,
Texas
one summer to visit her sister in Ute Park. Through the grapevine, Tyer had heard that Hazel was in the area, and when a waitress quit
suddenly, he contacted Hazel's sister to see if Hazel might be interested
in working for a couple of weeks. As an additional incentive, Bill
told Hazel that working at the lodge would be a good place to meet
single wealthy oilmen from
Oklahoma. Hazel accepted and filled in for a couple of weeks as a waitress. In
fact, she enjoyed working at the lodge so much, that she hired on again
the next summer. Long story short, Hazel didn't fall in love with a
rich oilman from
Oklahoma
-- she fell in love with Bill Tyer. In April, 1934 the couple drove
to Belen, New
Mexico to get married. After their return to the lodge, the
newlyweds operated the resort together for many years. Entertaining
the many guests of the lodge, they were also often visited by the lodge's
owner,
Walter Gant and his wife Evah, for fishing and hunting expeditions.
In August of 1940, Walter Gant's son Jack,
along with his wife Evelyn ran the lodge when Bill Tyer had surgery and
Hazel wanted to join him. At that time, the guests included Dr.
Gilbert Hovey Grosvenor, editor of the National Geographic Magazine,
and his wife Elsie Bell Grosvenor. Elsie was the daughter of
Alexander Graham Bell, the inventor of the telephone. The couple
became friends with the Grosvenors and stayed with them in their home in
Bethesda, Maryland when Jack was stationed there during World War II.
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When Bill Tyer recovered from his surgery, he and Hazel resumed the
running of the lodge. Two years later when Bill was 58 and
his wife
Hazel was 38, they gave birth to their only child, Ann, in 1942.
Though Bill and Hazel had a fine time
living and working at the lodge, just two years after Ann's birth they
returned to Bill's home in Ardmore,
Oklahoma
to be closer to his family. Though Hazel loved it at the lodge, she
felt the area was too remote and the winters too severe to live there with
a toddler
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Bill and Ann Tyer in 1942, photo courtesy Ann
Tyer
Walker. |
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At
the time the Tyers returned to
Oklahoma,
the nation was immersed in World War II. Rationing of gas, tires and
food was the norm and vacation travelers were far and few between in the
midst of the war effort. When the Tyers returned to
Oklahoma,
the beautiful lodge closed down never to be opened as a commercial resort
again.
The
lodge was then utilized by Walter, his wife Evah, and their four children
as a vacation resort for many years. Though all of the family
continued to visit, Walter's grandson, Dale has told us he stayed at the
lodge every summer for two months from 1951 until 1961 when he went off to
college. When Eva died in 1953, Walter remarried a woman named Mamie
and the couple continued to utilize the lodge as a vacation home, along
with the rest of the family members. As Walter Gant's children and
grandchildren enjoyed the lodge and its scenic amenities, no strong drink
or gambling was condoned. In fact, according to family members, the
lodge was never utilized as a gambling casino, despite the many rumors to
the contrary.
During these years, Walter's son Jack and his wife Evelyn became friends
with other prominent family members of the Moreno Valley including Tal and
Jannine Neal and the Gallaghers.
From the 1950s until his death in the late 1970s, another one of Walter's
sons lived at the lodge off and on. Afterwards, another of Walter's
grandsons lived there for several years. Before long, the lodge soon
fell into disrepair. The property and the surrounding land was put
up for sale; however due to the condition of the lodge and potential
renovation or demolition costs, the property sat vacant for years.
As
the old buildings sat idle, continuing to deteriorate, vandals and
vagrants made use of the place, further reducing its beauty and damaging
the structures.
Continued
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From the Rocky Mountain General Store
Old
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