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(rshsdepot) Harvey House - Florence, KS
- Subject: (rshsdepot) Harvey House - Florence, KS
- From: I95BERNIEW_@_aol.com
- Date: Tue, 18 Mar 2008 08:09:20 EDT
From The Arkansas City Traveler.
Bernie Wagenblast
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Harvey House brings back memories of railroad days
By FOSS FARRAR
Traveler Staff Writer
_reporter_@_arkcity.net_ (mailto:reporter@arkcity.net)
FLORENCE -- The Doyle Mercantile store in this town on the Cottonwood River
is named for an Irishman known as the first settler here.
Visitors from Arkansas City on Saturday stopped at the store on their way to
the historic Harvey House restaurant and museum, the prized tourist site in
the town.
Store owner Judy Mills told the 12 members of the Arkansas City Historical
Society the story of Patrick Doyle, who was born in Carlow, Ireland, and
emigrated to America in 1848 when he was 32 years old.
Like many other Harvey Houses that opened along the old Santa Fe Railroad
line, the former Harvey House restaurant in Florence served weary rail travelers
at turn of the last century.
Mills is president of the Florence Historical Society and often gives tours
of the old Harvey House restaurant and museum. But on Saturday, she was
tending the store.
She and her husband now live in the elegant limestone house just south of
town that Doyle, known as first settler in Marion County, built in 1882.
The Harvey House experience took the Ark City day-trippers back in time.
Some were reminded of the former Harvey House in Ark City, that also operated in
the early 1900s.
In 1850, Fred Harvey came to this country from England at age 16 and got the
only job he could find, on the railroad, said our Harvey House hostess,
Sarah Cope.
Harvey came up with the somewhat revolutionary idea of having women serve
fine meals to weary railroad travelers along the Santa Fe line. He opened the
first Harvey eating house in Topeka in the early 1870s. Later, he opened the
first Harvey House hotel in Florence, Cope said.
As she served a dinner of roast beef and mashed potatoes to the Ark City
guests, Cope was dressed as a Harvey Girl of old, wearing one of several uniform
styles they wore.
She noted that before Fred Harvey acquired the Harvey House in Florence, it
had been a hotel built in 1875.
Today the Harvey House in Florence is only a third as large as it once was.
Years ago, the building was divided into three sections, each of which were
moved to different areas of town. The other two sections eventually were lost,
she said.
"Harvey girls worked 12 hours a day," Cope said. "They were 18 to 30 years
old and could not be married or have children. And they had to have a good
moral life."
Historians and journalists called Fred Harvey "civilizer" of the American
West, according to "The Harvey girls: Women who Opened the West," a book by
Lesley Poling-Kempes.
The Harvey House in Florence operated there until 1900. Later it became a
boarding house.
In 1970 the local historical society acquired it and began serving meals
there, Mills said.
Five years ago, the society started extensive renovation of the house,
re-doing carpeting and walls to give it a "vintage" setting for diners, Mills said.
The Ark City visitors said they enjoyed being served a home-cooked meal of
roast beef and mashed potatoes, with sugared fruit and peach cobbler for
dessert.
"I loved it; it was a wonderful day," said Terry Eaton, vice president of
the Ark City Historical Society.
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The Railroad Station Historical Society maintains a database of existing
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End of RSHSDepot Digest V1 #1695
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The Railroad Station Historical Society maintains a database of existing
railroad structures at: http://www.rrshs.org