Southern Vermont Inn & Restaurant Saxtons River B&B
27 Main Street   Saxtons River, VT   (802) 869-2110   innatsr@vermontel.net
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History

Historic Inn at Saxton's River The "Saxtons River Hotel" was erected in 1817 by Captain Jonathan Barron, and completed by Colonel Carter Whitcomb.

During various years, a hall in this building was occupied by the Masonic Fraternity of the town, and it was here, on June 23, 1828, that the last meeting of the order was held previous to the suspension of meetings for 30 years, caused by the anti-masonic wave that swept across the country.

The hotel has seen many a lively social assembly, and it was the rendezvous of the Rockingham Company of the Twelfth Vermont Regiment in 1861.

It was written of the Hotel: "The travelling public are perfectly familiar with it. There is no fuss and feathers of extra style. Comfort and quiet are sought. It is the type of the old- fashioned, comfortable village hotel."

In 1903, a group in Saxtons River decided the town needed a larger hotel. They tore down the picturesque Inn and livery stable that had served the town so well since 1834 and built what is today the Saxtons River Inn. At the time the town was alive with a woolen mill, a lumber mill, and a variety of prosperous small industries.

The new Inn was the focal point of the town for many years, but times changed. Eventually the woolen mill was gone as well as many of the small businesses. The depression years were not kind to this small town and consequently the Inn struggled for years with a series of owners, each hoping they could make a go of it.

In the sixties the Inn was bought by Major L.L. Angus, an eccentric Englishman. The major had no intention of running an Inn but wanted a building with lots of space and the Inn was well suited as a place to live and work.

Years before,The Major had left his English estate and his family to come to America to study and write about the economic system. He wrote and sold a monthly stock market newsletter, and became famous as "The Bear of Wall Street", having called the market correctly seventeen times. Eventually he decided that his Park Avenue apartment was too expensive and too small. By a twist of fate he landed in Saxtons River and proudly told of the tremendous savings that the move occasioned.

The Inn with its many rooms was perfect for him and he filled each from floor to ceiling with books and pamphlets. He claimed each room was used for a chapter in the major treatise on the economic system that he was writing. Care of the building was not his strong suit.

When the major died, he left the building and its contents to his secretary. It took her six months to empty the building, sell the contents, and put it up for sale. Unfortunately by then the building was in bad shape. The side porches had fallen off, walls were cracking and coming apart, and some ceilings were falling down. The building hadn't been painted in fifteen years and the interior was dark and dirty.

At that time, Bob Campbell, a trustee of Vermont Academy, the well known preparatory school in Saxtons River, became concerned about the lack of lodging for the school and the town. At the same time his daughter, Averill, who had been working in Sugarbush, was looking for a place to start a restaurant. The Campbell family took the challenge and bought the Inn hoping it would solve both problems.

Restoration took nearly a year. The Inn's walls were repaired, and the building was painted inside and out. Averill's ten brothers and sisters all pitched in and helped, as did a number of townspeople. Beth Campbell, Averill's mother, scoured auctions to furnish and decorate the interior of the Inn.

While this was going on a lucky break occurred. Nan Robertson, a feature writer of the New York Times, was looking for a family story. The sister of a local friend told her about a large family in Vermont that was fixing up the broken down Inn. She visited, took pictures, sampled Averill's cooking, and wrote a story that covered two thirds of a page in the New York Times. Later, in condensed form, the story was picked up by the New York Times Syndicate and appeared in over a hundred other newspapers across the country.

The Inn opened for business in the summer of 1973. For the next fifteen years the Campbell's successfully ran the Inn. Guests came from many states and foreign countries. While the publicity in the New York Times had been a Godsend, it was Averill's fabulous cooking and the warm welcoming atmosphere that kept guests coming. The famous copper bar became a gathering for locals and Inn guests alike.

When the Inn was sold in 1988, it was with high hopes and the assurance of the new owners that they would continue the atmosphere of the Inn. Sadly it wasn't to be. Much to the disappointment of the Campbell's, the new owners immedialty changed the name to the Inn at Saxtons River, took out the copper bar, changed the décor and let it be known that they didn't like some of the customers who had been coming to the Inn for years. The feelings were reciprocated and they managed to go broke within two years and the Inn was out of business.

From then to the present, the Inn has had a number of owners, some of whom were successful and some who really didn't understand what a country Inn in a small Vermont town could be. A few years ago the Inn was bought at a foreclosure sale and the new owners, with much enthusiasm, reopened the Inn and started to rebuild the feeling of comfort and welcoming. Near the end of 2008 they decided that personal matters would keep them away from Vermont, and began looking for a buyer to take over.

Historic Inn at Saxton's RiverAfter the Inn sold in 1988, Averill and her husband Bob Thomson ran several restaurants in Vermont and Antigua. Living in Saxtons River she had watched the Inn come to life again, and when she heard it was for sale, one day said to her husband, Bob Thomson, and her father Bob Campbell, "Let's buy the Inn. We miss it."

Sometimes things do happen fast and within an hour they made the decision to do so. A few weeks later they took over as the new owners. The first thing they did was change the name back to the Saxtons River Inn. The old sign (an antique now) that came down in 1988 is now hanging out front again. Bob Thomson is the innkeeper and Averill is in charge of the kitchen and dining room. Warmth and hospitality welcome all. Once again this historic Inn with its many lives is a center of activity in this small Vermont village on the National Register.

 

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