When Vance
Hughes and Larry Evans climbed through an unlocked window of the dilapidated
Jekyll Island Club in 1983 they were probably looking more for mischief than a
life calling but the seedy grandeur of the hotel captivated them. The neglected
hotel estate on a barrier island near Brunswick ,
Georgia was in
ruins. With no financing and a budget of
$20 million, resuscitating the hotel seemed impossible. Miraculously they accomplished it in style;
recreating the opulence envisioned by the founders. From our small but
luxurious room in the main lodge, history was right outside the window.
The island was
purchased as a hunting retreat in 1886 and began attracting members like J.P
Morgan, Joseph Pulitzer, Marshall Field and Singer Sewing Machine’s Gilbert
Bourne. Membership required a unanimous
vote and a huge yearly fee. The founders
built the main lodge first which was described by a reporter as an “English
castle with its square-shaped windows and its lofty tower.” It was their
“Winter Newport”, an escape from the North’s brutal winters and a place to
recreate and strengthen business alliances.
They hunted, played poker and built some of the best bicycling trails on
the east coast. The wives were relegated
to the parlor while the men gathered in cigar smoke filled rooms planning the
country’s future, shoving pushpins into maps mounted on the silk
wallpaper. The Federal Reserve was
famously planned during a weekend retreat in a room just below ours.
I’d
probably have joined forces with the suffragists. Some were members by virtue of their husbands
but they wanted leadership roles. J.P. Morgan finally agreed to allow that
despite his opinion that “woman suffrage would only help to complete the ruin
of the country already hurt by universal manhood suffrage.” Some of the women
were crack shots, good golfers and avid bicyclists. They competed against men in races and
events, upsetting the social order by sometimes winning. In 1893 Helen Bullitt
Furness bagged one of the island’s dangerous boar who had eluded even the
professional hunters. Their Ladies Rough Riding Obstacle Bicycle Society
spurred the development of the island’s 20 miles of excellent trails. Clearly times were changing.
The
aristocratic hold on the island started to crack with the stock market crash in
1929. As World War II began, German
submarines were trolling off the coast and yachts were being commandeered by
the Navy. Children didn’t value their
inherited club membership as much and wouldn’t pay dues. Several schemes to save the hotel failed and
it closed for good in 1971; until that fateful night when the two high-school
buddies got wild and dared to go inside the haunting building.
Today, 80%
of Jekyll Island ’s
5,700 acres is owned by the State of Georgia and remains an undeveloped maritime
forest. There are a few high rise hotels
on the beach where the hotel has a pavilion and is constructing seaside
cottages. The hotel emerges like an elegant lady from behind a green
curtain. Wildlife is abundant. Hughes and Evans struggled to find financing
before partnering with David Curtis and Leon Weiner. After hearing an enthusiastic pitch, they
came from Connecticut
and “We did one of those things you’re not supposed to do,” Curtis said, “which
is to fall in love with real estate.” Jekyll Island
has a way of doing that: enchanting with
its history, natural beauty and the graciousness that has been carefully
preserved for centuries.
Sidebar:
Jekyll Island Club Hotel:
www.jekyllclub.com
.
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