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Elm Tree Cabins & Motel on Schroon Lake, Hwy 9, Adirondack Park, NY VTG Postcard For Sale


Elm Tree Cabins & Motel on Schroon Lake, Hwy 9, Adirondack Park, NY VTG Postcard
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Elm Tree Cabins & Motel on Schroon Lake, Hwy 9, Adirondack Park, NY VTG Postcard:
$8.99

3885B ELM TREE CABINS & MOTEL

Schroon Lake, New York - Five Minutes to Village

Deluxe housekeeping cabins - Efficiency Apts. and Motel rooms by day or week - Sandy beach - Boats - Fishing - TV in rooms

A SUPERCHROME Color Product by Bill Bard Associates, Monticello, NY

Genuine Natural Color Made by Dexter Press, Inc., West Nyack, NY

Published by Steffel Studio, Schroon Lake, New York

Schroon Lake, Adirondack Park, I-87 / US Hwy 9, Essex County, New York


\"Schroon is a town in the Adirondack Park, in Essex County, New York, United States. The population was 1,880 at the 2020 census. The largest community in the town is the hamlet of Schroon Lake, located at the northern end of the lake of the same name.


The Town of Schroon is in the southern part of Essex County and is north of Albany. The town contains two lakes: the northern two-thirds of 9-mile-long (14 km) Schroon Lake, and 5-mile-long (8 km) Paradox Lake. The two lakes are connected by the Schroon River, a southward-flowing tributary of the Hudson River.


The Town of Schroon was first settled by Europeans in 1804 from part of the Town of Crown Point, north of the current Schroon Lake hamlet, as part of France\'s colonial holdings south of Quebec. The town was partitioned to form the newer Town of Minerva in 1817. In 1840, part of Schroon was returned to Crown Point. As with other towns of Essex County, the early economy was heavily involved in lumber production. The origination of the name \"Schroon\" is not precisely known. Some believe it to be derived from a Native American word for \"large lake\". Others believe it devolved from French soldiers who inhabited the region during the French & Indian Wars. The soldiers were enamored with Madame Scarron (a popular paramour of French King Louis XIV and prior to that the wife of noted French poet/playwright Paul Scarron).


In the late 1800s the Village of Schroon became a destination for wealthy families from the NY Metropolitan area. Their trip started in New York City by rail to the town of Riverside, then a stagecoach to Pottersville, and finally aboard a steamer that traveled up the lake to the Village. By 1915, after the introduction of automobiles, people from the cities were flocking to the Schroon Lake region. Capitalizing on this booming tourist trade, grand resorts such as Taylor\'s on Schroon (later Scaroon Manor), the Leland House and the Brown Swan – along with a number of Adirondack Style Lodges – made Schroon Lake a premier summer vacation spot.


Prior to the construction of the Adirondack Northway (Interstate 87), US Route 9 was the major north–south highway between Albany and Montreal, which made Schroon Lake a convenient stopping point for travelers to purchase gas, lodging, and meals.


The Scaroon Manor resort, which closed in 1962, was the site for the 1957 filming of the Warner Brothers movie Marjorie Morningstar, which starred Gene Kelly, Natalie Wood. Carolyn Jones and Ed Wynn. Also featured in the film was Camp Red Wing (though not mentioned by name) on the east side of the lake, from which Wood and Jones depart by canoe at night for their escape to the musical South Winds (Scaroon Manor). Open to the public for many years, the old Scaroon Manor site is now a NY State Campground.


The \"Scaroons\" is/are mentioned twice in The Last of the Mohicans by James Fenimore Cooper, as a place seen by Hawkeye (Natty Bumppo), Chingachgook and Uncas after they had departed Horicon (the name used by Cooper for Lake George) while traveling northward chasing Magua and his two captives, Cora and Alice Munro. It is unclear from the context in the book whether Cooper is referring to the lake or a chain of mountains, the latter being a more likely interpretation.


According to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of 141.4 square miles (366.2 km2), of which 132.7 square miles (343.6 km2) is land and 8.7 square miles (22.6 km2), or 6.17%, is water.


The southern line of Schroon is the border of Warren County. Schroon Lake (the water body) lies in both Essex and Warren counties.


The Adirondack Northway (Interstate 87) passes through the center of the town of Schroon. Access is from Exits 27 and 28. US Route 9 runs parallel to the Interstate. New York State Route 74, an east–west highway, intersects US-9 and the Interstate at Exit 28, west of Severance.


Schroon is approximately 240 miles (390 km) by highway north of New York City, 130 miles (210 km) south of Montreal, and 66 miles (106 km) southwest of Burlington, Vermont.

Schroon has an airfield with a 3,000-foot (910 m) runway that is capable of landing small- and medium-size private airplanes.


The Schroon River flows into the town across the northern town line and flows out across the southern town line towards the Hudson River.


In the town, there are many state hiking trails, some leading to the Hoffman Notch Wilderness area.\" - Wikipedia


\"What is the Adirondack Park?Created in eastern upstate New York in 1892 as one of the first Forever Wild Forest Preserves in the nation, the Adirondack Park is a unique wilderness area and National Historic Landmark. At 6 million acres, it is the largest publicly protected area in the contiguous United States. The state of New York owns approximately 2.6 million acres, while the remaining 3.4 million acres are devoted to forestry, agriculture and open space recreation. The Adirondack Park is not a National Park - there\'s no fee to enter and the park doesn\'t close at night, nor is it a state park, a common misconception. It\'s also the largest National Historic Landmark in the United States, covering an area larger than Yellowstone, Yosemite, Grand Canyon, Glacier, and the Great Smokies National Parks combined.\" - County is a county in the U.S. state of New York. As of the 2020 census, the population was 37,381.[2] Its county seat is the hamlet of Elizabethtown.[3] Its name is from the English county of Essex. Essex is one of only 2 counties that are entirely within the Adirondack Park, the other being Hamilton County. The county is part of the North Country region of the state.\" - Wikipedia

\"The Adirondack Park is a park in northeastern New York protecting the Adirondack Mountains. The park was established in 1892 for \"the free use of all the people for their health and pleasure\", and for watershed protection.[2] At 6.1 million acres (2.5×106 ha), it is the largest park in the contiguous United States.

Notable among parks in the United States, about 52 percent of the land is privately owned inholdings. The remaining 48 percent is publicly owned by the state as part of the Forest Preserve. Use of public and private lands in the park is regulated by the Adirondack Park Agency.


The Adirondack Park contains 46 High Peaks, 2,800 lakes and ponds, 30,000 miles (48,000 km) of rivers and streams, and an estimated 200,000 acres (81,000 ha) of old-growth forests.[5][page needed] It is home to 105 towns and villages, as well as numerous farms, businesses, and a timber-harvesting industry. The park has a population of 130,000 permanent and 200,000 seasonal residents, and sees over 12.4 million annual visitors. The inclusion of human communities makes the park one of the most successful experiments in conserving previously developed lands in the industrialized world.


The Adirondack Forest Preserve was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1963.


Before the 19th century, the wilderness was viewed as desolate and forofferding. As Romanticism developed in the United States, the view of wilderness became more positive, as seen in the writings of James Fenimore Cooper, John Muir, Henry David Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson.


The 1849 publication of Joel Tyler Headley\'s Adirondack; or, Life in the Woods triggered the development of hotels and stage coach lines. William Henry Harrison Murray\'s 1869 wilderness guidebook depicted the area as a place of relaxation and pleasure rather than a natural obstacle.


Financier and railroad promoter Thomas Clark Durant acquired a large tract of central Adirondack land and built a railroad from Saratoga Springs to North Creek. By 1875, there were more than two hundred hotels in the Adirondacks including Paul Smith\'s Hotel. About this time, the Great Camps were developed.


Following the Civil War, Reconstruction Era economic expansion led to an increase in logging and deforestation, especially in the southern Adirondacks.


In 1870 Verplanck Colvin made the first recorded ascent of Seward Mountain during which he saw the extensive damage done by lumbermen. He wrote a report which was read at the Albany Institute and printed by the New York State Museum of Natural History. In 1872 he was named to the newly created post of Superintendent of the Adirondack Survey and given a $1000 budget by the state legislature to institute a survey of the Adirondacks.


In 1873 he wrote a report arguing that if the Adirondack watershed was allowed to deteriorate, it would threaten the viability of the Erie Canal, which was then vital to New York\'s economy. He was subsequently appointed superintendent of the New York state land survey. In 1873, he recommended the creation of a state forest preserve covering the entire Adirondack region.


In 1884, a state legislative commission chaired by botanist Charles Sprague Sargent recommended establishment of a forest preserve, to be \"forever kept as wild forest lands. \"The New York State Legislature subsequently passed a law in 1885 for the preservation of forests which designated all state lands within certain counties in the Adirondacks and Catskills as Forest Preserve to be forever kept as wild forest lands. This forestry law also established a Forest Commission which was charged with care, custody, control and superintendence of the Forest Preserve.

In 1894, Article VII, Section 7, (renumbered in 1938 as Article XIV, Section 1) of the New York State Constitution was adopted, which reads in part:

The lands of the state, now owned or hereafter acquired, constituting the forest preserve as now fixed by law, shall be forever kept as wild forest lands. They shall not be leased, sold or exchanged, or be taken by any corporation, public or private, nor shall the timber thereon be sold, removed or destroyed.


In 1902, the legislature passed a bill defining the Adirondack Park for the first time in terms of the counties and towns within it. In 1912 the legislature further clarified that the park included the privately owned lands within it as well as the public holdings.


The restrictions on development and lumbering embodied in Article XIV have withstood many challenges from timber interests, hydropower projects and large-scale tourism development interests. Further, the language of the article, and decades of legal experience in its defense, are widely recognized as having laid the foundation for the U.S. National Wilderness Act of 1964. As a result of the legal protections, many pieces of the original forest of the Adirondacks have never been logged and are old-growth forest.


Early in the 1900s, recreational use increased dramatically. The State Conservation Department (now the DEC) responded by building more facilities: boat docks, tent platforms, lean-tos, and telephone and electrical lines. With the building of Interstate 87 in the 1960s, private lands came under great pressure for development. This growing crisis led to the 1971 creation of the Adirondack Park Agency (APA) to develop long-range land-use plans for both the public and private lands within the Blue Line.


In consultation with the DEC, the APA formulated the State Land Master Plan which was adopted into law in 1973. The plan is designed to channel much of the future growth in the Park around existing communities, where roads, utilities, services, and supplies already exist.


In 2008 The Nature Conservancy purchased Follensby Pond – about 14,600 acres (5,900 ha) of private land inside the park boundary – for $16 million. The group plans to sell the land to the state, which will add it to the forest preserve once the remaining leases for recreational hunting and fishing on the property expire.\"

Comparison of the Park in 1900 and 2000Year:19002000Area of the Park2,800,000 acres (1,100,000ha)5,820,313 acres (2,355,397ha)State-owned area1,200,000 acres (490,000ha) (43%)2,595,859 acres (1,050,507ha) (44.6%[14])Travel time, New York City to Old Forge6.5 hours by railroad6 hours by carPermanent park residents100,000130,000Length of public road in the park4,154 miles (6,685km) plus 500 miles (800km) of passenger railroad track6,970 miles (11,220km)Industry92 sawmills, 15 iron mines, 10 pulp/paper mills40 sawmills, 1 pulp/paper mill

Data compiled by theAdirondack Experience,Blue Mountain Lake, New York

- Wikipedia

This vintage postcard features a stunning color photo by Bill Bard Associates of Cole\'s Lakeside Cabins on Schroon Lake, Highway 9, in the Adirondack Park of New York. The postcard is an original and has not been posted. It is a standard size of 5.5 x 3.5 inches and is printed on cardboard and paper.The postcard is a single unit and comes from the era of 1960-1969.
It is a divided back chrome postcard with features that include the Divided Back and Chrome. The subject of the postcard is the Cole\'s Lakeside Cabins on Schroon Lake, Highway 9, in the Adirondack Park of New York. The postcard is perfect for collectors, enthusiasts, and anyone interested in the beautiful landscapes of North America.


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Images © photo12.com-Pierre-Jean Chalençon
A Traveling Exhibition from Russell Etling Company (c) 2011