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Glacier2EngineA History of Many Glacier Hotel A History of Many Glacier Hotelby John Hagen Introduction. Many Glacier Hotel is located in the heart of Glacier National Park, on a rocky ledge by the shores of Swiftcurrent Lake. It is surrounded by a scene of almost uncanny natural harmony. Just across the lake is a mountain in the shape of a perfect pyramid Grinnell Point. Each peak and cliff to one side of Grinnell has a partner in just the same position on the other side of the valley. Thus, Mt. Gould balances Mt. Wilbur the Garden Wall balances the Pinnacle Wall Mt. Allen balances Mt. Complete aeronautical information about Glacier Park International Airport Kalispell, MT, USA, including location, runways, taxiways, navaids, radio. Glacier 2 Engine' title='Glacier 2 Engine' />Henkel. This remarkable panorama has few parallels in the world. The Great Northern Railway built all of Glacier Parks hotels through a newly organized subsidiary, the Glacier Park Hotel Company. Louis Hill, the Great Northerns president, chose the Many Glacier valley for the largest of the hotels. Great Northern bridgebuilders rigged the huge logs which serve as roofbeams and lobby columns. A sawmill, erected near the hotel site, fashioned thousands of boards from trees which were cut down inside the park. Several hundred men were employed in construction, from 1. Many, as the structure is affectionately known, was for decades the largest hotel in Montana. It has some 2. 40 guest rooms in its Main and Annex wings. It is built in the style of a Swiss chalet, with overhanging roofs and balconies. It is painted a rich, deep brown, with white and gold trim. The Cross of Helvetia, white on a scarlet shield, is Manys coat of arms, and hangs on the door of every room. Top. The Chalet City. USS Glacier AGB4 later USCGC Glacier WAGWAGB4 was a U. S. Navy, then U. S. Coast Guard icebreaker which served in the first through fifteenth Operation Deep. Combine a scenic helicopter flight over Franz Josef Glacier with a 2hour guided walk on glacial terrain during this exhilarating tour from Franz Josef. Find out why. In 1. Firefighter Training Videos there. Many Glacier Hotel was still on the drawing board, the Great Northern built a cluster of chalets a few hundred yards from the hotel site. These chalets remained part of the Many Glacier complex for many years. There were eight chalets, as well as an office and some auxiliary structures. They were built in an alpine style, in many different shapes and sizes. Heavy rocks were placed on the roofs, in a gridwork of poles, to hold the roofs on amid the terrific winds which blow down Swiftcurrent Valley. Two chalets H and I and the office were clustered beside Swiftcurrent Falls. Nearby was a famous combination dancehall and packhorse depot called The Puff and Blow. The other chalets were ranged above them on the lower flanks of Mt. Altyn. Chalet C was crushed in an avalanche a few years after it was built. The avalanche came from South America a snowfield named for its characteristic shape, which appears each spring on the slopes of Mt. Altyn. The doomed chalet was completely flattened, as if a giants foot had trampled on it and stamped it into the hillside. Most of the other chalets were burned in the disastrous Swiftcurrent Valley Fire of 1. Download Resistance Patch 1.91. H and I, the only surviving chalets, may still be seen near Swiftcurrent Falls, where they house Many Glaciers maintenance personnel. Top. Many Glaciers Original Decor. Many Glaciers Main wing opened to the public on July 4, 1. The Annex was finished for the 1. The buildings appearance in those days was quite different than it is today. The steepled portico was not constructed until the 1. Thus, guests often were drenched with rain when they alighted at the front door. The great stone chimney by the door was much more prominent in the days before the portico. A Swiss handyman used to climb this chimney in his lederhosen and Alpine hat, to amuse the passersby. This practice was banned after it was taken up by gearjammers Glacier Park bus drivers who were less proficient in balance and dexterity. The most striking feature of Manys original decor was the Circular Staircase. Standing in the lobby, near the front of the present gift shop, it led downstairs to the Bamboo Room now renamed the St. Moritz. The staircase included two semicircular flights of stairs, with bevelled handrails. In th, center was a fountain a tall mound of native rocks and ferns, surrounded by a pool full of trout. The hotels decor was a startling combination of styles, reflecting Louis Hills eclectic taste. It included elements of the American West, the Swis Alps, and the Orient. Japanese parasol were set in stumps on the lobby floor. Dozens of Oriental lanterns hung overhead. Bearskins and buffalo skulls were hung at regular intervals on the balcony. All around the lobby were thick, knobby pillars upright cedar logs, with the bark removed. These logs had been brought by train from the West Coast as had a set of anomalous totem poles, unknown to the local Indians. The lobby floor was painted bright van, Windsor chairs, wicker chairs, and canv folding chairs stood about the lobby. In the dining room hung long canvase covered with Blackfeet Indian picture writing. These pictographs told the exploits of the painters, who bore such names as Chief Boy, Shorty Black Bear, Many Tailfeathers, and Stingy. The dining rooms handsome highbeamed roof was fully exposed in the early days the false ceiling had not yet been constructed. Many Glacier was nearly selfsufficient in the years before World War Two. A hydroplant below Swiftcurrent Falls provided the valleys electric power. A laundry staffed by young women called the Laundry Queens washed and ironed the sheets and towels. The kitchen cooled its meat with ice bunkers. The ice was cut in big blocks on Swiftcurrent Lake in the wintertime, and stored ln an icehouse, which still stands on Burchs Bay. The doorway leading into the Employee Cafeteria bore the inscription from the gates of Hell in Dantes Inferno ABANDON HOPE, ALL YE WHO ENTER HERE. Employees and guests alike enjoyed The Plunge, an indoor swimming pool with a lifeguard known as The Duke of Dirtywater. The pool grew murky and forbidding due to infestations of algae, and eventually had to be filled in. Top. Ray Kinley. Much of our knowledge of the history of Many Glacier Hotel is drawn from the recollections of Manys master storyteller, Ray Kinley. Ray came to work in the Swiftcurrent Valley in 1. Three years later, he was hired at the hotel. He continued to work there through 1. In his final summers, Ray was still doing heavy labor as Manys gardener, rowing tourists around on fishing expeditions, and ruling firmly over a dormitory of spirited young employees. These accomplishments were all the more remarkable in that Ray had only one arm. The other had been lost in a railroad accident long ago. Ray owned a collection of 5. He liked to change hats several times a day. Why do you wear that hat a startled employee once asked, encountering Ray in an enormous Sherlock Holmes cap, with a bill at either end. Ray answered tartly, I wear it so the manager wont know if Im coming or going. Ray led an active life in California after his retirement. He delighted in helping the Glacier Park Foundation write this history of Many Glacier. Ray died on May 2, 1. Rays stories of bygone days at Many are incomparably vivid and entertaining. The following tale is one of his best. Top. Foiling the Fliratious Butcheras told by Ray Kinley. In my long years as a fishing guide, I have taken out many celebrities. Two whom I remember were Harriet Parsons daughter of Louella, the Hollywood columnist, and her friend Edie Adams, a star with the Ziegfield Follies. One cold blustery day, I took these two out fishing on Lake Josephine. The ladies brought a bottle of Old Thompson along in the boat, to ward off the chill. One was seated in the bow and one in the stern.