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Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Talke a Virtual Tour (and Schedule a Real One)



Come inside and let us show you around. Not only is The Historic York Inn / Smyser Bair House decorated in the Victorian style with antique furnishings and original fixtures, but each guest room is named for a person or place important to the history of the home.


In the days and weeks to come, come back to http://www.yorkinn.blogspot.com/ as we take you on a tour and history of each and every room in the historic Smyser Bair house. It’s the next best thing to being here in person — which you may also experience. To schedule a live tour in real time, email us at YorkInn@gmail.com and we'll be happy to show you around.


Next up ... the Parlor ...


Wednesday, April 15, 2009

A Brief History of the Historic York Inn / Smyser-Bair House



The Smyser-Bair House was built in the 1830s. Dr. Henry Smyser purchased the home in the early to mid 1800s to use as his home and office.

Dr. Smyser was a surgeon with quite an unusual past. Of German descent, he was born in York Borough on December 8, 1825, the son of Michael and Eliza (Lanius) Smyser. According to Historical Editor John Gibson in 1886, “Dr. Smyser is a representative of one of the first families of York County.”

Henry Smyser began the study of medicine in 1844, during which time he also practiced. He graduated from the University of Pennsylvania at Philadelphia in 1847.

A man with a thirst for adventure, Henry Smyser joined the Rocky Mountain migration and went on an expedition to California where he and his fellow adventurers struck it rich in the gold rush. He spent two years in California as one of the original “forty-niners.”

As a young surgeon, Dr. Smyser ventured to Russia, signed up as a Surgeon Major and served in the Russian military during the Crimean War. For his service to Russia, he was invited to the Czar’s Palace where he was one of the few Americans in history to set foot in The Amber Room – a chamber entirely of Amber with more than 100,000 pieces of amber inlay.

The Amber Room was originally commissioned by King Frederick of Prussia in 1701 and later presented to Peter the Great to commemorate the Russo-Prussian Alliance of 1716. Czar Peter the Great had the Amber Room reconstructed in his Winter Palace in St. Petersburg, Russia in 1717. Then, in 1755, the room was taken apart and reassembled in the Catherine Palace in nearby town of Tsarkoe Selo (now the town of Pushkin). Later, The Amber Room was dismantled and hidden before the German invasion during World War II. Its whereabouts have never been publicly revealed since then. Shrouded in mystery, some believe the amber was destroyed or scattered during the war; others believe the entire room to still be hidden, perhaps lost.

There at the Catherine Palace, outside St. Petersburg, Russia, Dr. Henry Smyser stood in the Amber Room and was decorated by Czar Alexander II with the medal of St. Stanislaus for his distinguished service. He also received a second medal, commemorative of the war. After being presented with the medals in the famous Amber Room, Dr. Smyser was invited to join the Czar at the Summer Palace on the gulf in nearby Petergof. This was in 1856.

Dr. Smyser wrote of his meeting with the Czar in the Amber Room and the events to follow, “On Sunday the 13, we had the honor of an interview with his Imperial Majesty. The Emperor spoke to us on his entrance into the room.” At the Summer Palace, he “witnessed the arrival of ministers, chamberlains, generals, dukes, grand dukes, duchesses, counts, and all that follow in the line of royalty, glistening with stars, orders of diamonds, gold lace and embroidery to a very ridiculous extent although many of the court uniforms are exceedingly pretty.”

Obviously, the Russian Czar’s palaces left an impression on the young Dr. Henry Smyser, because it was a year later that he purchased his own little palace: The Smyser-Bair House.

His fortune made in California’s Gold Rush, his service paid in the Crimea War, his palace purchased, it was time for Dr. Henry Smyser to get married. In 1860, he married Emma E. Reiman, daughter of John Reiman.

But instead of living happily ever after, Henry Smyser returned to war.

In 1862, Dr. Smyser enlisted in the Civil War, then known as the War of the Rebellion. He treated soldiers injured in the nearby Battle of Gettysburg at a makeshift tent-hospital in Penn Park, just down the street from his home.

As a prominent man of high society, Dr. Henry Smyser would have been a man to meet for important visitors to York. It is likely that many of the high-profile individuals visiting York would pay a visit to Dr. Smyser at his home or office (one and the same). Rumor has it that General Robert E. Lee once visited the home. Charles Dickens said that the best steak he ever ate was in York, just a block away, and it’s likely that he paid a visit to Dr. Smyser.

Henry and Emma Smyser had two children: Ella Nora and John Reiman Smyser. John moved to Philadelphia, where he became a pharmacist. Ella remained in York and married Robert C. Bair, a lawyer and the son of a local judge.

With son John Smyser resettled as a druggist in Philadelphia, the house passed on to daughter Ella and her husband, Robert C. Bair. Robert served on government committees and was involved in politics, though never a politician himself. He worked as a lawyer, and also taught Sunday School at the Lutheran church right across the parking lot from the house, still in operation today. In fact, many of Mr. Bair’s Sunday School lesson books dating back to the early 1900s remain on display in the house today, with Bair’s signature and portrait, notes, and lists of his students from year to year. He served as Director of the Historical Society of York County.

Bair was also a talented photographer; the R. C. Bair Photo Album Collection is archived at the York County Historical Trust Library / Archives thanks to a grant from the Pennsylvania Historical Museum Commission. The collection includes three albums with 364 pages and 17 loose photos, totaling 721 photos focused on York from 1906 to 1928. Some of the photos depict Civil war veterans at the Gettysburg battlefield in 1913, some of whom Dr. Smyser may have treated himself.

Robert and Ella Bair had one child: a son named Smyser Henry Bair. This family, along with their servants who lived in the “servant quarters” in two rooms in the upper back of the house, lived in the home for many years.

Smyser Henry Bair married Alma Quickel, a beautiful school teacher. After a few years of living on their own, the married couple moved in with Ella Bair after Robert Bair died. Smyser Bair became president of the Gas Company, replacing their steam heating system with natural gas. The old steam-heating system remains as a relic in the basement today. Smyser and Alma Bair had no children.

Alma Bair was the last descendent of the Smyser-Bair family to live in the Smyser-Bair house at 30 South Beaver Street. She lived there until her death in 1979, and the home was left to the historical society.

In the 1980s, the house was purchased by the King family and restored to its appearance during the Victorian period. Tom, Nancy, Bob, and Hilda King opened the home to the public as The Smyser-Bair House Bed & Breakfast. During the 1980s and 1990s and even into the 2000s, the home operated as a successful bed and breakfast.

In the early 2000s, the home became a private residence again, until it was purchased by the current owners in 2007 with the intent to reopening the home as a bed and breakfast: The Historic York Inn.

The Historic York Inn / Smyser-Bair House boasts a rich history, and we’ve only scratched the surface here. In fact, the home and the Smyser-Bair family have been the subjects of a dissertation, and the home has been featured on national television, in numerous books, magazines, and newspapers, and has seen its share of photo and film shoots. A book on the Historic York Inn / Smyser-Bair house and family is in the works.

In recent years, guests have included people from Russia, Germany, Ireland, Italy, China, and all over the United States. Presidents have made plans to visit. The home was opened up to displaced victims of the recent Katrina hurricane, garnering a letter of appreciation from the Mayor. In 2008, Hilary Clinton even stopped by while campaigning. Not to mention an entertaining visit from The Drifters.

Ask anyone who knows the history of York about the Smyser-Bair House, and they’ll tell you exactly where it is, along with a story or two about its history.

The Historic York Inn / Smyser-Bair is on the Federal Governments’ National Register of Historic Places as well as the York Historic Walking Tour. It has been a preferred place for guests of the Mid-Atlantic Garden Show and was featured on the York Home & Garden Tour. The home was featured on national television in 2007 and again in 2008 for its unique embellishments, luxurious charm, and rich history.

With all of its history, The Historic York Inn / Smyser-Bair House holds a promising future.

Be a part of that future (and become a part of its history) by visiting us. Take a tour or stay the night in the Historic York Inn / Smyser-Bair House Bed & Breakfast and become a part of this home’s lasting legacy. Just email us: YorkInn@gmail.com

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

About the Historic York Inn / Smyser-Bair House


The Historic York Inn / Smyser-Bair House is a Victorian mansion and bed & breakfast located in the heart of the historic district of the nation’s first capitol, York, Pennsylvania. The ornate detail in this historic home will take your breath away.

Decorated with antique furniture and maintaining the look and feel of a Victorian mansion from the 1800s, the home features well-preserved adornments from the past, including gold-leaf, Italian, handcrafted Pier mirrors said to be covered by gold from Dr. Henry Smyser’s own Gold Rush expedition, crystal chandeliers, hand-crafted ceiling medallions and crown molding, stained-glass windows with family crests, an antique, 100 percent porcelain sink and water closet, 9 to 12 foot ceilings throughout the home, hand-cast, iron window heads, stunning mantles and marble fireplace surrounds, a second floor balcony, and a beautiful mural out back where the stable once stood in the brick courtyard.

The home belonged to Dr. Henry Smyser in the early to mid 1800s and was passed from him to his daughter Ella and her husband, Robert C. Bair. It remained in the Smyser-Bair family for 131 years before being left to the historical society, and then transformed into a successful bed and breakfast in the 1980s and 1990s.

Now under new management, The Historic York Inn / Smyser-Bair House has opened its doors to make you feel at home.

We look forward to welcoming you to The Historic York Inn / Smyser-Bair House. For reservations, more information, or to arrange a tour, please email Yorkinn@gmail.com or call 410-980-6746.

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Putin and Obama Convene at Historic York Inn

YORK, Penn.— Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and U.S. President Barak Obama are scheduled to meet today at the Historic York Inn / Smyser Bair House to begin talks on stabilizing the world economy and strengthening relations between the nations of the world.

“When President Obama asked for this meeting, we were surprised he wanted to meet in York,” Putin said. “Later we found out he said New York. But we already had reservations at Historic York Inn and, after seeing the beautiful parlor, didn’t want to change plans.”

Obama agreed on the venue. “My predecessor may have chosen a more ‘Washington-elite’ meeting place, like somewhere in Washington. But look, I believe in change, so we’re meeting in York. That’s change you we can believe in.”

When Russian President Dimitry Medvedev advised Putin that the meeting was set on April Fool’s Day, the meeting was cancelled.