Springside
Inn is located across the road from the western shore of
Owasco Lake, one of the Finger Lakes. This shimmering body of water
takes its name from the Indian word meaning "crossing,"
and it stretches twelve miles long through winding scenic countryside.
At the foot of the lake, Native Americans fished and hunted more
than two hundred years ago. They walked the quarter mile from their
village to this spot to get drinking water from natural springs
found close to the ground's surface.
Hunting eventually gave way to agriculture, and in the early nineteenth
century, this site was the Waring farm. In 1851, Rev. Samuel R.
Brown came to Cayuga County to become pastor of the nearby Dutch
Reformed Church. Brown, a missionary and teacher, also desired to
start a school. He purchased the farm and built a boarding school.
Reflecting the distinctive local landscape, Brown called the school
Springside.
Galpin Hill, behind Springside, witnessed long tense nights in
the years before the Civil War, when Harriet Tubman, an escaped
slave herself and a leader of the Underground Railroad movement,
hid runaway slaves in the thickets surrounding Springside's back
yard. Legend has it that Springside itself was used as part of the
Underground Railroad.
Brown left the area in 1859 to become a missionary in Japan, and
Springside was eventually sold as a private residence. It passed
through several owners until 1919, when an Englishman, Captain John
Holland, opened the building as a summer resort. It continued in
this role until the 1940s when it become a year-round hotel and
restaurant, called Springside Inn. In 1941, it was purchased by
the Miller family, who ran the Inn until Bill Dove and Barbara (Miller)
Dove assumed the operation, with help from their daughter Lois,
in later years.
Nestled in this rich, historic landscape, Springside Inn continues
to offer the best of Finger Lakes atmosphere and hospitality. New
Innkeepers Sean and Beth Lattimore, and their children Sydney and
Sean Jr., invite you to experience tradition
redefined.
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