Where Was the Birthplace of the American Vacation?
First in rustic tents and later in elaborate resorts, city dwellers took to the Adirondacks to explore the joys of the wilderness
- By Tony Perrottet
- Photographs by Bridget Besaw
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2013, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
“It looks like pure wilderness,” said Kovacs. “But even back in Murray’s day, a lot of the forest was being logged, clear-cut and burned. In the early 1900s, a logging railroad even went right by this river. The biggest trees would have been 300 to 400 years old, and grown as high as 150 feet. Even though the logging stopped a century ago, it will take a couple of hundred years more to get back to its original state”—assuming that recent weather extremes, which are affecting the forest, do not take their toll, he adds.
To some, that history of recovery is itself a kind of triumph. “Yes, the vast majority of the Adirondacks was cut over,” says Engelhart. “But the fact that we can treat it as wilderness is itself a human creation. We’re not leaving a wild area alone—we’re recreating a wild area by leaving it alone. To me, that’s equally, if not more, beautiful as an idea than if it had always been wild. It shows how we’ve changed as a people. We agree that wilderness is not something to be exploited, but something to be valued.”
***
There are no physical memorials to Murray in the Adirondacks, so as a final pilgrimage, I sought out his favorite spot. Today, a vintage-style ferry, the W.W. Durant, plies the sparkling waters of Raquette Lake, past strings of forested islands, including one named Osprey, which has a small jetty and a residence shrouded by trees. At the height of his celebrity in the early 1870s, Murray returned to this islet for weeks every summer to pitch his tent and entertain a multitude of friends and admirers. One enthusiastic guest, sportswriter Charles Hallock, was particularly taken by the author’s “comely wife,” who could be seen around the campsite wearing a hunting cap and a “mountain suit of red and crimson plaid. How jaunty she looked!” Another described the islet as “a scene from fairy land,” with Murray “perfectly aglow with enthusiasm over the wilderness and its attendant sports.” He was also enchanted by Murray’s wife, whom he described as ‘The Lady of the Lake.’”
William H.H. Murray’s subsequent descent into obscurity was as sudden as his rise to celebrity. Tensions with his conservative Boston church led to his resignation in 1874. (He thought more should be done for the city’s poor.) Five years later, after investing too deeply in horse breeding and spreading his assets thinly, his finances and his marriage both collapsed, and Murray left New England for the anonymity of rural Texas. He failed in several business ventures, started an oyster restaurant in Montreal, and made a cameo appearance in Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show. In 1886, he revived his skills as an orator, narrating for New England audiences a heartwarming series of short stories about the Adirondacks that featured a heroic trapper named John Norton. (They are little read today, since he “mired himself in a kind of nostalgia and sentimentality,” one critic notes.) He made enough to repurchase his family home in Guilford, Connecticut, where he died in 1904 at age 64.
Murray’s writings were slowly forgotten except among specialist historians. For a few years, his beloved Osprey Island was commonly referred to as Murray’s Island, but it eventually returned to its original name. Privately owned, it remains off-limits to the public today. His best memorial is, of course, the Adirondack Park—which, with its complex system of ownership and regulation, is rather like Murray the man, eccentric and imperfect. Despite his midlife wanderings, Murray remained a tireless advocate for the park, insisting on the value of public access. In 1902, two years before he died, he wrote in the outdoor magazine Field and Stream that even New York State was only holding the wild lands of the Adirondack in trust for future generations. “God made them and made them to stand for what money cannot buy,” he declared.
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Comments (3)
The Adirondacks was indeed one of America’s first great vacation destinations, and W. H. H. Murray played a significant role in telling the country about the magnificent wilderness of northern New York. It seems disingenuous of Mr. Perrottet not to acknowledge the meticulous and thorough scholarship of the late Warder Cadbury, on whose Introduction to the Adirondack Museum reprint of Murray’s Adventures in the Wilderness, his article almost wholly depends.
Posted by Philip Terrie on April 22,2013 | 01:10 PM
A wonderful article, but don't forget Vermont! Remnants of rustic wilderness vacations remain in pockets here too! Roaring Branch Camps in Arlington Vermont was built at the turn of the 20th century by hand from logs harvested on the site, with fireplaces built from local river stones. The cabins themselves were available for weekly rental until summer of 2012. Over the last twenty five years some of the original 17 cabins were replaced with "moderns" that while still made of logs, can be inhabited through the off season when the woods are at their best. Small resorts such as this still embody the ethic that a vacation is a time to slow down, breath deep, let the kids loose to explore the woods, and feel the exhilaration of a tube ride down a real river.
Posted by Ursula Wolz on April 12,2013 | 10:01 AM
The premise of this article---that the Adirondacks were the birthing ground of the American wilderness vacation and "the then-outrageous idea that an excursion into raw nature could actually be pleasurable"---is a pretty serious overstatement. There were rustic inns and resorts operating during the summers in the White Mountains of New Hampshire dating back to the 1830s. See the Watermans' "Forest and Crag" or Bennett's "The White Mountains: Alps of New England" for ample evidence. (Coincidentally, the Whites, too, were once promoted as the "Switzerland of America" and a full 40 years before Murray's viral self promotion efforts.)
Posted by Trevor Room on April 9,2013 | 11:29 PM