Cask Villa was undoubtedly one of the more unique places for travelers to spend a night on the shores of Lake Erie beginning in the 1920s and into the 1960s.
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Courtesy OhioLINK Digital Resource Commons |
Located just west of Vermilion, the small tourist camp with cabins fashioned from discarded wine casks was a source of fascination, and as a result was featured on postcards.
Due to the novelty of its cabins, Cask Villa was also the subject of many small newspaper filler items throughout the time it was in business.
Here are a few of its appearances in newspapers around the country during the 1930s, 40s and 50s.
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From the August 13, 1937 Zanesville Times Recorder |
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From the June 10, 1943 Akron Beacon Journal |
The year 1949 seemed to be one in which Cask Villa was heavily promoted.
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From the Daily Eagle of May 17, 1949 |
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From the Austin American Statesman of May 26, 1949 |
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From the Dayton Daily News of June 12, 1949 |
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The “Strange As It Seems” feature as it appeared in the St. Louis Star and Times of August 1, 1949 |
(Click
here to read about the “Strange as It Seems” syndicated cartoon feature.)
The year 1957 was another busy year for Cask Villa in the newspapers.
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From the Alamogordo Daily News of Sept. 16, 1957 |
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From the Clarke County Tribune of Sept. 13, 1957 |
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From the Austin American Sun of Oct. 6, 1957 |
And here’s a small blurb from a year later.
For more information about the history of Cask Villa, click
here to visit the Sandusky Library history blog.
Today, Cask Villa’s former location is the home of a same-named condo development.
1 comment:
It was so much better with the old wine casks.Now some multi-millionaire 1%er kept the name but put a condo on the property.Time marches on but to a different tune now.
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