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Classic Wisconsin lodges

In the northwoods, golden oldies recall a vanished era.

Bent's Camp is in Land O' Lakes, Wis.

© Beth Gauper

In the 1906 restaurant of Bent's Camp, walls are covered with birchbark secured by cedar strips.

In the north woods, only the passage of time creates a classic.

There's nothing like the feel of a vintage lodge. Whatever it comes from — the burnished logs hewed by ax, the hearths made of stones picked from local fields, the faint fragrance of aged pine and cedar — it can't be ordered from the local furniture store.

Jim Kerkow and Craig Mason know, because they own a furnishings business and they love old lodges. They were building a cabin near Hayward, Wis., and staying at nearby Spider Lake Lodge when its owner pointed out the obvious.

"She said, 'You'll never be able to re-create this place, so why not just make this your own?' " Kerkow said.

They bought the old log lodge, built in 1923 by an auto mechanic from Chicago and an Ojibwe carpenter, and they fixed it up. But they were careful not to extinguish the personality it had acquired from years as a lake resort, hosting parties of vacationers.

Once, the north woods of Wisconsin were full of lodges. The first were built as fishing camps, after loggers left in the 1890s, and guests were affluent sportsmen who arrived by rail.

Then roads were built in the 1920s, automobiles became more affordable and families began to arrive in droves.

The next four decades were the golden age of lake resorts.

In the '20s and '30s, many northern Wisconsin resorts were patronized by gangsters from Chicago, whose flamboyant behavior provided locals with a rich vein of lore.

In the late '40s and '50s, the burgeoning middle class made resorts with housekeeping cabins popular. But their numbers are shrinking fast as lakeshore property values go through the roof and aging resort owners sell to people who tear down the cottages to build one "cabin."

Today, only a few classic lodges survive to give us a glimpse of a golden era.

Northeast Wisconsin still has some classic lodges, and one January, I visited a trio of them. In the farthest corner of the state, I stopped by the Hazen Inn, which started life as a gentleman's hunting and fishing camp in 1900, with three chinked-timber cabins. A log lodge was built in 1901, with additions in 1911 and in the '20s and '40s, when it was Long Lake Lodge.

By 1993, it was falling apart and had been vacant for two years. Then, Iowans Joel and Janet McClure saw it, fell in love with it and bought it for a B&B.

"Then, we started with the vast repairs," Joel McClure said. "At first, we were just putting out fires. We replaced over 50 windows; their frames were totally rotted."

Today, the log walls and beamed ceilings are warmly lit by Arts and Crafts lamps. Leather sofas surround the original granite fireplace, and a blond Kodiak grizzly stands near an archway adorned with grapevines. Upstairs, rooms are filled with classic knotty-pine decor.

Not far away, near the Michigan border west of Land O' Lakes, Bent's Camp began life in 1896 as a camp for sportsmen, brought over from the railroad landing in a wooden scow called the Tar Baby.

A log restaurant was built in 1906, with interior walls covered by thick squares of birch bark held in place by cedar strips.

Today, it's one of the north woods' most treasured spots. In the bar, old photos illustrate the resort's early history and a fire crackles in the stone fireplace; diners sit in a room lined with paned windows overlooking Mamie Lake or in the wood-paneled big room under the gaze of a giant stag head.

Five miles east of Eagle River, on Carpenter Lake, the Inn at Pinewood was built in 1934 as a hunting and fishing lodge. It became a youth camp in 1969, a college-prep academy in 1974 and a B&B in 1991. Today, each era contributes to its highly distinctive look.

On its sprawling main floor, part of it made of old barn planks, is a hodgepodge of curiosities: a big white wolf, an old trap and a lynx with a grouse in its mouth, from the camp era; a vintage electronic shuffleboard game, dart board and giant chess set, from youth days; and a mannequin wearing a lace wedding dress, a Geiger counter with original manual and an old sleigh, from the B&B era - the current owners, Bill and Jane Weber, are avid collectors of antiques.

The same weekend I stayed at the Inn at Pinewood, Tricia Olson of Pella, Wis., was there with her husband, Kenton.

Olson, who spent childhood summers with her grandparents at a lake resort near Vergas, Minn., loves the old resorts and has built a collection of nearly 1,000 vintage postcards of lodges and cottages. When she can, she visits them.

"It's amazing, with the technology and tools today, that we can't build the gorgeous places they built years and years ago," she says. "A lot of these places don't even exist any more. So many have been turned into condos, or they tear the cottages down and build big houses on the land. You look at the shores of a lake, and now you see these big fancy houses. But they're not unique."

But the lodges are, and there's nothing as cozy as an old, well-loved lodge in winter.

Trip Tips: Classic Wisconsin lodges

Spider Lake Lodge B&B near Hayward, Wis.: Built in 1923, the resort is not far from Al Capone's 1925 retreat near Couderay; in Chicago, owner Ted Moody worked as a mechanic at a garage that serviced Capone's cars. With no TVs and no cell-phone service, the handsomely restored lodge's atmosphere is intentionally quiet. A full breakfast is served. Seven rooms go for $139 to $179. Call (800) 653-9472 or visit www.spiderlakelodge.com.

Inn at Pinewood B&B near Eagle River, Wis.: This B&B on the shore of private Carpenter Lake, started in 1934, is a very good spot for a group because the main level has many areas where people can congregate. Eight rooms go for $104-$154, and a three-bedroom home next door is $265-$290. Call (715) 477-2377 or visit www.inn-at-pinewood.com.

Hazen Inn near Phelps, Wis.: This inn also is a good place for groups. In the winter, it would be best to reserve the lodge as a group; it's patronized by snowmobilers as well as skiers. Six lodge rooms go for $95-$135, including a full breakfast, and a lodge suite is $125-$175. Four timber cabins go for $325-$345 for two nights in winter. Call (800) 335-6904 or visit www.hazeninn.com.

Bent's Camp near Land O' Lakes, Wis.: This is a great destination even for a beer, but try to make time for a meal at the Lodge Restaurant. It serves burgers and such, but order one of the specials, $17-$25. There are two cabins open in winter, patronized by snowmobilers, $100-$150. Call (715) 547-3487 or visit www.bentscamp.com.

Garmisch USA near Cable, Wis.: The past of this 1927 resort in northwest Wisconsin is rooted in notoreity, though not gangsters. It was built by wealthy Chicago businessman Jacob Loeb after the 1924 trial of his teenaged nephew, Richard Loeb, who was convicted with friend Nathan Leopold of murdering a young boy for the thrill of it. It was Jacob Loeb who paid celebrated lawyer Clarence Darrow to save his nephew from the electric chair, which he did.

In 1955, a young Chicago skier bought the lodge and renamed it for the famous Bavarian ski resort. Today, it has a medieval hunting lodge motif, with suits of armor and strings of muskie, foxes, stags, bobcats and ducks mounted in the two-story great room, next to the equally atmospheric restaurant. The restaurant and many rooms have great views of Lake Namekagon.

Seven lodge rooms, six with fireplaces, and a suite go for $75-$215. Other rooms and cottages go for $85-$2,560. Call 1-800-794-2204, www.garmischresort.com.

Seven Pines Lodge near Lewis, Wis.: This atmospheric 1903 lodge in western Wisconsin is a remnant from the days when Calvin Coolidge roamed the north woods. One of his many stops was Seven Pines, built on a tract of virgin white pine by millionaire grain broker Charles Lewis and named for its largest trees.

In the lodge, five rooms, three with shared bathroom, go for $125-$170. The 1903 gatehouse, with whirlpool and fireplace, is $225, and four suites in the newer Log Bungalow are $185. The Carriage House has two suites, $169. Call 715-653-2323, www.sevenpineslodge.com.

Last updated on July 6, 2008

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