From collection Eastern Illustrating & Publishing Company Collection
Searsport House
This view of the town's only major hotel, The Searsport House, is taken from Main Street. According to the booklet "150th Anniversary Searsport, Maine 1845-1995" the hotel's history began "..."as a dwelling built in 1931...sold in a few years to John Beals who opened it as an inn called Beals' Tavern. Successive owners altered and enlarged the structure" (eventually into a four story clapboard building with a Mansard roof.) "...In 1873 the proprietor, W.H. Matthews, was able to declare proudly on his advertising card that Searsport is the place for 'persons desiring a few days or weeks quiet by the seashore, surrounded by the most magnificent scenery in the World, together with shady and level drives, [and] fine chances for sailing and fishing.' ...The Searsport House burned to the ground on October 21, 1892, destroying the home of Dr. Simonton next door and damaging nearby buildings. Rebuilt by 1895, the old hotel survived until 1943 when it was torn down." The image shows the hotel in its post-1892 fire Queen Anne Victorian phase. The photograph shows its still newly built, eye-catching porches and corner tower, decorated with turned balusters and variegated shingles. The roof is painted with a contrasting white stripe, which would have made the hotel noticeable from the Steamship Landing a few blocks away. Such an establishment would have appealed to tourists arriving in the area by steamship or rail, but with the advent of the automobile in the early 20th century, driving tourists and families had the means and flexibililty to travel farther afield and stay in local tourist homes and eventually tourist cabins which sprang up aplenty along Route 1 in the 1920s and later after WWII. The Depression also surely contributed to the decline in the hotel's business. The image is of the Searsport Inn, also known as "The Searsport House," a major local establsihment which catered to the burgeoning tourism industry beginning in the 1870s. It stood on the corner of Main and Water Streets in Searsport, Me. The Queen Anne style hotel seen here is the replacement of the earlier, Second Empire style inn which burned in October 1892. The hotel was demolished in 1943. Several guests can be seen relaxing on chairs on the front porch. The year range given above is an estimate from observations of the car models. A sign beside the street advertises a "Chicken Steam...Shore Dinner." See also LB2007.1.110096