HISTORY RUNS DEEP HERE; COME MINE IT
The winding drive into Jerome had me clutching the sides of my car seat while wondering how the town’s ancient buildings remained standing on such startlingly steep slopes. Built in the 1800s, Jerome (population about 450) is an atmospheric former copper mining town in central Arizona with a history of rip-roaring saloons and a red-light district known as “Husband’s Alley.” Today Jerome is an artists’ colony, so there are galleries, cute shops and restaurants housed in the original buildings. The tab: Rooms at the Jerome Grand Hotel start at $165 a night; my husband and I spent $50 for lunch at the Asylum Restaurant and $14 to visit Jerome State Historic Park.
THE BED It seems that talk of the Jerome Grand Hotel once being an insane asylum is just that — talk. But it’s something to think about when you visit. It contributes to the character of the eerie lodging, originally a hospital that closed in 1950 and sat vacant until the 1990s when it became a hotel. Today it’s a magnet for ghost hunters. Overnight guests report numerous incidents of ethereal figures and sounds that, well, spooked them. Parts of the hotel are firmly stuck in the past; the original Otis elevator still works, steam heat is used in some areas, and there’s even a working telephone switchboard. The rooms have upgraded amenities: queensize beds, satellite HD-TVs and Wi-Fi; there’s a range of room types and sizes, some with view balconies.
THE MEAL The good times continue at the hotel’s Asylum Restaurant. It goes full tilt for the theme with such cocktails as the Screaming Bloody Mary, Mad House Margarita and Liquid Valium. We had a great bird’seye view of Jerome and the Verde Valley below from our window table. Our meal included roasted butternut squash soup, a turkey sandwich with chipotle apricot chutney, and the veggieloaded Gardening Naked Sandwich with Muenster cheese and ranch dressing on marble rye, all certifiably yummy.
THE FIND Puscifer the Store is not your average tourist gift shop. It’s a side project of rock star Maynard James Keenan (Tool) named after another of his side projects, the band Puscifer. The first floor has band merch (clothing, posters and accessories), and a barbershop and records are for sale downstairs. The adjacent Caduceus Cellars tasting room features wine from Merkin Vineyards, another Keenan side project.
THE LESSON LEARNED The best way to orient yourself is to stop first at Jerome State Historic Park to visit its museum in the converted Douglas Mansion. Mining magnate James S. Douglas built it on a hill above his Little Daisy Mine in 1916. Highlights include a video presentation, a 3-D model of the town and its underground mines, and photo exhibits and mining artifacts. The picnic area has stunning views of the Verde Valley.