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Belgrade Lakes Maine & Wings Hill Inn & Restaurant
Where You Can Stay for Dinner
By Norm Goldman
Prior to our visit to Belgrade Lakes, Maine, I had done
some homework pertaining to one of Maine’s best kept secrets and it was quite a
revelation when I discovered that for many years well-known artists and writers
had vacationed at this popular lakeside community including one of America’s
most prominent playwrights, Eugene O’Neill. O’Neill spent the summer of 1926 at
Belgrade Lakes, Maine, where he created his Pulitzer Prize play Strange
Interlude and it was here where he met for the second time the famous actress
Carlotta Monterey who was to become his third wife.
During
the 1920s Belgrade Lakes was a popular rendez-vous for the rich and famous,
where they would travel by carriage and later by train with their steamer trunks
to the Belgrade Depot, then seven miles by touring car to the village. Once they
arrived, they would spend several weeks enjoying the summer’s social scene,
playing golf and tennis, fishing in the surrounding seven lakes, swimming, and
generally indulging in the area’s magnetism that allured them to this gorgeous
vacation spot.
In the 1950s playwright Ernest Thompson arrived on the
scene and wrote his award winning play “On Golden Pond” at his family’s cottage
on Great Pond and he even included in his play the mail boat that is one of the
few remaining delivering mail to the cottages along the shore line. Even today,
you can still ride along during the summer months on the scenic pontoon mail
boat that has been touring the thirty-five mile route around Great Pond since
1900 and dropping mail into over one hundred mail boxes.
Quite interesting Belgrade was named after the more
well-known city and present capital of Serbia. John V. Davis, who was a world
traveler and resident of the area where Belgrade Maine is situated, visited
Europe in the 1700’s. In all probability he either visited Belgrade or heard
about its return to Christianity in 1774, after an absence of several hundred
years, under Moslem rule.
When a petition was drafted to create the new town in Maine
it was this same John V. Davis who suggested the name of Belgrade be adopted, as
he was probably still intensely impressed by the Belgrade he had known.
Today,
Belgrade Lakes hasn’t lost any of its allure and you can still enjoy all of the
activities and more that early visitors experienced. Moreover, if you are
searching for a rustic charmer that is one of those unique romantic places that
seems to naturally co-exist with its surroundings then look no further than
Wings Hill Inn & Restaurant owned by innkeepers Chris and Tracey Anderson.
Although, you won’t find here all the appointments that
some urban resorts offer, you will nonetheless be able to commune with
mother-nature and bask in the simple delights of serenity, relaxation, sounds of
loons and waterfalls, and a spectacular view of the sun setting on Long Pond.
The Andersons indicated to me that it is important to them that the inn be
welcoming and relaxing. They had visited beautiful elegant inns that made them
feel a bit nervous to touch the furnishings, and that was the last thing they
wanted, especially in such as pretty, natural setting as Belgrade Lakes.
The historic roots of the property that house the inn dates
back to around 1800 and until 1988, it was a private home.
Present owners, Chris and Tracey Anderson purchased the inn
in 2000, after working several years as innkeepers in Ogunquit, Maine. Chris
candidly indicated to me that the property was not high up on their list when
they first set out to start out on their own. In fact, as she exclaimed, “it’s
in the middle of nowhere!” In October of 2000, when the foliage was at its
spectacular best, the Andersons drove up to the inn and they were in awe by the
lake to their left, and the inn, with its rolling, tree-line lawn and 100 foot
wrap-around porch on their right. They immediately knew this was home and it
certainly resulted in the right fit.
The
architecture of the inn is a restored circa 1800 post and beam farmhouse,
carriage house and stable. The section comprising the farmhouse has a one
hundred foot wrap-around, screened porch where, and as weather permits, a
three-course breakfast is served as well as the evening feast. Each of the inn’s
six rooms is tastefully decorated in muted, natural tones with a great deal of
taupe and soft, pale greens and roses. All rooms come with private baths.
The common room, known as “the great room,” has an open
hearth and fieldstone fireplace with oversized and overstuffed, comfortable
furniture. It is here where you will find candy dishes, games and puzzles,
paperbacks, snacks and beverages.
What is unique about this young husband and wife team is
that not only did they have extensive experience as innkeepers before committing
themselves to own their own property, but they are also talented chefs as they
both graduated of the prestigious Culinary Institute of America in Hyde Park,
NY, where they first met, and as they mentioned to me, their relationship
developed at “first bite.”
Chris’s culinary skills are exemplified in the five-course
superb candlelight dinners offered to their inn guests as well as to outsiders
that are served inside the inn’s three dinning areas or on the wrap-around
screened porch overlooking the beautiful lawn where you can also view the sun
set over the water. His superb cooking abilities and creative dishes bring out
the best in his ingredients.
Technically, the inn is located in Rome and as this tiny
village is “dry” the inn is not permitted to serve alcohol. However, guests are
welcome to bring their own wine and wine-glasses and corkage are supplied
without charge.
Tracey involves herself with the three-course complimentary
breakfast that is served every morning consisting of a beverage, fruit and a hot
entrée-either an omelet with all of the trimmings or your choice of hot and cold
cereals. Guests are even greeted with a welcome menu that indicates who are the
new arrivals and who will be bidding their farewells. In the afternoon, there is
delicious tea and cookies served in “the great room.”
Although civilization seems far away, the inn is an
excellent base to explore historic Augusta, Maine’s capital city that is only a
twenty-five minute drive away. Also nearby is the National Historic District of
downtown Hallowell on the banks of the Kennebec River. The ski hills of
Sugarloaf Mountain are about an hour away.
As for romance, there are several choice spots to enjoy a
wonderful romantic picnic such as on Blueberry Hill directly across the lake
from the inn that overlooks the village and lakes. There is also the summit of
“The Mountain” featuring trails that view the lakes on both sides. Another great
romantic pastime is kayaking on Great Pond, especially during the morning hours
or on Long Pond at sunset. The Andersons have indicated that they do host small
weddings of up to twenty guests and their grounds are just perfect for an
intimate exchanging of vows.
Incidentally, if you are wondering if the famous still pay
visits to Belgrade Lakes, the Andersons mentioned to me that Paul Newman and
Joanne Woodward were in the area to shoot the movie “Empire Falls.” Apparently,
one of his assistants, who dined at the inn purchased a gift certificate for the
Newmans and booked a dinner reservation for them. Unfortunately, at the last
minute there had been a change in plans for the film schedule and Paul and
Joanne had to cancel. The most disappointed person was Chris’s mother who
happened to be traveling to the inn for a prescheduled trip that day. Who knows,
if you should be visiting this exquisite getaway venue one day, you may bump
into your favorite celebrity!
Additional Information
Wings Hill Inn & Restaurant
Route 27, Belgrade Lakes, Maine
Tel: 207-495-2400
Information Pertaining to Belgrade Lakes
Directions
Norm Goldman is the Editor of Sketchandtravel.com and
Bookpleasures.com. He and his artist wife, Lily Azerad-Goldman meld Norm’s words
with Lily’s art work.
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