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(rshsdepot) Harvey House (Seligman, AZ)
- Subject: (rshsdepot) Harvey House (Seligman, AZ)
- From: I95BERNIEW_@_aol.com
- Date: Tue, 15 Apr 2008 07:24:21 EDT
From The Daily Courier.
Original story and photos:
Bernie Wagenblast
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Havasu House then... and now
SELIGMAN - The sounds of clinking china cups and laughing ladies have been
gone for years at the Havasu Harvey House in Seligman. And soon, possibly
today, the Havasu House itself will be gone.
"My grandparents met there in 1916," Don Gray said. "My grandmother was a
Harvey Girl and my grandfather owned a garage in town. They met and married in
1916 and my mom was born in 1917."
The Havasu Harvey House - built around 1905 and closed in 1955 - sits a
stone's throw from the Burlington Northern Santa Fe railroad tracks and one of
the few remaining original stretches of historic Route 66. The BNSF owns the
Havasu and its surrounding land.
When word leaked out about five years ago that the BNSF planned to demolish
the hotel, Seligman residents mobilized to stop its demolition. When that
failed, they tried to raise enough money to buy and move the building.
Railroad officials offered the hotel for free to anyone who would move it
from their land.
"We've been working for almost a decade to donate the hotel but have been
unsuccessful," said BNSF spokeswoman Lena Kent. "From a safety perspective, it
is in the best interest to take it down. So, it will be coming down within the
next two weeks."
Gray said he understands the safety concerns - BNSF officials let him go
inside the hotel two weeks ago to photograph its interior.
"It is in bad shape. But for me, it's a part of my family history," he said.
In 1916, when Gray's grandfather, Charles Greenlaw Jr., met his future
bride, the former Tillie Raugh, Charles owned a garage in Seligman. Tillie was a
Harvey Girl making around $17.50 per month including room and board.
The Harvey House was the brainchild of Fred Harvey. He opened his first
"depot restaurant" under contract to the Santa Fe Railway in 1876 at Topeka, Kan.
His empire eventually included 84 Harvey Houses near train stations and
tourist stops throughout the country.
Two of the most famous Harvey Houses continue to thrive - El Tovar at the
Grand Canyon and La Posada in Winslow. Visionary architect Mary Jane Coulter
designed many of the Harvey Houses, but she did not design the Havasu House in
Seligman.
"Once upon a time, the Havasu had grand gardens at its southwest corner,
which may be one reason why the ground floor of all but the trackside façade
bears no trim, while the second floor trim simply repeats the half-timbering on
the main, south façade," wrote Seligman historian and resident Mary Clurman on
seligmanharveyhouse.blog.
Angel Delgadillo was born in Seligman in 1927. He spent most of his adult
life cutting hair in his father's now-famous Seligman barbershop.
"It was just a beautiful hotel in a beautiful era," he said. "For us boys,
it was exciting to see the passenger trains pull in and watch the people get
off and stretch their legs or go inside and eat.
"We would fantasize about all the parts of the world these people were
traveling from. We would go down and mingle with them and pretend we were
passengers traveling around the world with them."
Angel's daughter, Mirna, grew up in the shadow of the Havasu House.
"When they tear it down, we are going to lose a gem of history for Seligman
and for our country's heritage," she said. "It is a very sad, sad day to lose
it.
"One of my aunts was a Harvey Girl and met her husband there. That hotel has
a very special place in my heart and the heart of Seligman."
The Havasu Harvey House is the last remaining Harvey House in Yavapai County.
Contact the reporter at _bcolbert_@_prescottaz.com_
(mailto:bcolbert_@_prescottaz.com)
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=================================
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