Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel franchise - Standing on Stowe Mountain

Standing on Stowe Mountain

Take a bus 15 minutes to reach the top of Steptoe Butte, and you can enjoy the most spectacular scenery in eastern Washington. When the weather is clear, visitors can see almost the whole of palos and other places. From the north of Spokane Mountain, you can see that Columbia's Big Bend Valley is in the west and the Idaho Rocky Mountains are in the east. The natural beauty of this place has led to the construction of one of the most famous and interesting accommodation places in this area.

1880, James "Cashup" Davis of palos homestead walked to the top of Bart for the first time, where he saw a vast landscape and considered building a grand hotel. /kloc-in the spring of 0/888, an original road was built and rotated around the circumference of the round head. Horses drag thousands of feet of wood and construction equipment along this rugged mountain road every day. The two-story building in Davis was completed on July 4th, 1888, and is open to guests. Cashup Hotel can accommodate 50 tourists, and even has an observation deck on the second floor, where the telescope can give guests a magnificent view of palos.

The Davis hotel project will prove short-lived. This novelty disappeared after a few years of popularity, and even travelers who were tired of traveling found the location of the cash hotel too inconvenient. Another problem is the lack of water at the horse's head-the cavalry pulls water from the horse's head every day. James davis died in 1896 at the age of 8 1. Hotel closed permanently 1902. 19 1 1 year,

Due to an accidental fire caused by some careless young boys smoking, the building was destroyed and the rest of the building was subsequently demolished. From 65438 to 0946, Virgil McCrosky, a local conservationist, donated the land to Washington State for protection. Steptoe State Park is now located in the same place where the Cash Hotel once overlooked palos with its magnificent glory.