When Antoine Dutot opened the Kittatinny Hotel--the first
tourist hotel in the Poconos--in 1829, little did he know that he
was a pioneer in what would become one of the largest and most
diverse tourist and recreation areas on the East Coast. Although
his initial venture failed, the tourist industry of the Poconos has
been a long-term success, evolving and adapting to change. Better
in the Poconos tells the story of Pennsylvania's premier
vacationland from its earliest days to the present.
The flourishing tourist and resort industry in the Poconos can
be attributed, in part, to the area's splendid mountains, streams,
and forests. But the timeless appeal of nature was matched, and
even surpassed, by the resorts' ability to redefine themselves. In
the mid-nineteenth century, William Cullen Bryant depicted the
Pocono region as a hunter's delight, describing abundant game and
sublime landscapes. The Victorian era, however, brought genteel
carriage rides and croquet; later, specialized ethnic resorts
catered to the minority populations of Philadelphia and New York;
and in the 1940s and 1950s, the Poconos earned its reputation as a
honeymoon paradise. This evolution continues today: the land of
romance has given way to the ski resorts and water slides enjoyed
by today's vacationing families.
Poconos resort owners and innkeepers have long recognized the
cutthroat competition inherent in the vacation business. Early on,
they realized that they were vying not only with each other but
also with other resorts--first in the Catskills and on the New
Jersey shore, and then in Florida, in the Caribbean, and even in
Europe. Better in the Poconos illustrates the strategies by which
resorts in northeastern Pennsylvania responded to these market
forces. They were compelled to provide superior service and
amenities as well as novel amusements and activities for their
guests. In the latter half of the twentieth century, for example,
"super-resorts" started to supplant the old hotels: the new resorts
could offer year-round activities, thanks to the invention of
artificial snow. Similarly, honeymoon hotels declined as couples
resorts--retreats that boasted such innovations as the heart-shaped
bathtub and the Jacuzzi in the shape of a tall champagne
glass--emerged on the Poconos scene.
Better in the Poconos recreates that scene and the people who
brought it to life--not only the innkeepers, souvenir sellers,
laborers, and service workers, but also the community leaders and
visionaries who promoted the vacation economy and sought to guide
it. The proper Victorians, the devoted sportsmen, the young
newlyweds, the families and singles, the staid ladies of the
Women's Christian Temperance Union (and the sinners whose vices
they wished to temper), the members of the Ku Klux Klan, the rich
Quakers, the Jewish socialists, and the immigrants--all these, and
more, make up the humanly rich mosaic of the Poconos.
General
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