Montreal Gazette

Cranwell Resort is a trip back to the Gilded Age

- Rochelle@rochellela­sh.com

When

is a cottage not a cottage? When it’s a majestic mansion in the patrician town of Lenox in the Berkshire Mountains of Massachuse­tts.

This New England enclave was settled during the late 1800s, the booming industrial period that Mark Twain labelled the Gilded Age for the ostentatio­us lifestyles of the less-than-one per cent. As American tycoons discovered the British tradition of weekending, and transporta­tion outside of cities improved, folks from New York and Boston, such as the Morgans, the Vanderbilt­s, the Sloanes, the Westing houses and the Astors, built elaborate country homes and called them “cottages.”

The splendid Tudor-style Cranwell mansion dominates a picturesqu­e hilltop spread of 380 acres, or about three-quarters of the size of Montreal’s Mount Royal Park. Its impressive grounds were designed by the same prominent landscape architect, Frederick Law Olmsted. Today’s guests can revel in the eminently walkable spaces amid towering cedars and rock gardens that were created for the bygone Gilded Age of afternoon strolls and exhilarati­ng foxhunts.

The modern Cranwell Resort, Spa & Golf Club is a classic hotel complex with 114 rooms and suites of country elegance, three dining spaces, its own venerable, 18-hole golf course that dates from 1926 and one of the largest and most striking spas in the northeast. The ballroom still handles A-list society weddings and the gift shop carries Cranwell’s private-label wines and its own line of spa and bath products.

“We’re high-end, but not haughty,” said Norma Probst, Cranwell’s director of marketing.

“The grand, historic mansion gives us a sophistica­ted, distinctiv­e air, but we have a widely varied clientele.”

Choices abound. A gaggle of girlfriend­s on spa getaway can jump into such fitness classes as Zumba, Pilates or water cardio, and then spoil themselves with such services as the new Aromathera­py Salt Scrub or the Radiant Body Buff with Moroccan Oil. Every menu at Cranwell lists health-conscious options: the breakfast frittata in the Morning Music Room has 176 calories and four grams of fat; the grilled portabella mushroom salad at the Spa Café comes in at 475/7.

For golfers, LPGA Hall of Famer Kay Mcmahon recently launched clinics to allow duffers and scratch players alike to fine-tune their stan- ces and swings. Then it’s on to the 19th hole, Sloane’s Tavern, for a steak sandwich or a spinach-and-bleu salad, plus 18 kinds of single-malt Scotch and tart vodka cocktails, such as the John Daly or the Lenox Lemonade.

If the kids are along, the weatherpro­of swimming pool is a lifesaver. The hotel offers a children’s menu, plus burgers with a dozen toppings and a “personal pizza.” Couples can cocoon in a plush suite and have dinner at Wyndhurst, the formal dining room, where the chef cooks up such fancy fare as stuffed quail, Kobe osso buco and grilled meat and fish.

Cranwell sounds busy, but what struck me was the peacefulne­ss of this pastoral property, if you choose to be alone. You wake up to birds chirping, a breeze rustling through bushes and soothing mountain views.

The accommodat­ions, in seven pavilions around the estate, all are supremely com- fortable and spacious, with white porcelain bathrooms and such traditiona­l furnishing­s as brass-trimmed dressers, writing desks and floral drapes. Three buildings are connected to the spa-pool complex through weatherpro­of, glassed-in walkways.

Another is adjacent to the first tee of the golf course. My favourites are the rooms with their own grass-level patios, because when you sit outside, you feel that the entire estate is yours.

Or, you can live like a Vanderbilt in the guest rooms of The Mansion, the historic centrepiec­e of Cranwell. It’s a treasure of gracious and refined Victoriana with fine furniture, magnificen­t marble-topped fireplaces, intricate mahogany woodwork and leaded windows.

The posh Carriage House reopens in July after a fire and a total revamp based on 100-year-old architectu­ral drawings. These brand-new rooms will have fabulous mountain views, richly textured fabrics and spa-style bathrooms with glass fittings.

The Berkshire region is a hotbed of culture, and is particular­ly known for the prestigiou­s Tanglewood Music Festival, which will hold its 75th edition June 22-Sept. 2. Cranwell also presents its own inhouse musical satire by the Capitol Steps, a troupe that will perform almost nightly, July 2-Sept. 2, to lampoon the political world from Obama to Berlusconi. The hotel organizes visits to 11 museums and historic sites, such as The Mount, the magnificen­t estate built by author Edith Wharton, and Ventfort Hall, The Museum of the Gilded Age.

The resort is a member of Stash Hotel Rewards, a loyalty program at unique, independen­t hotels. It’s similar to frequent-points plans at chains, but without blackout dates (stashrewar­ds.com). Berkshire Region: 413743-4500, berkshires.org.

 ?? SCOTT BARROW CRANWELL RESORT ?? The grounds of the Cranwell Resort, Spa & Golf Club in Lenox, Mass., were the work of landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted, who also designed Montreal’s Mount Royal Park. The mansion dominates a picturesqu­e hilltop.
SCOTT BARROW CRANWELL RESORT The grounds of the Cranwell Resort, Spa & Golf Club in Lenox, Mass., were the work of landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted, who also designed Montreal’s Mount Royal Park. The mansion dominates a picturesqu­e hilltop.
 ?? ROCHELLE LASH ?? COUNTRY ROADS
ROCHELLE LASH COUNTRY ROADS

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