Site icon Uncharted Lancaster

Phantom Places: Wabank House. What happened to this ‘fashionable and favorite place of summer resort’?

Advertisements

For less than a decade, a magnificent establishment exuded prominence and grandeur suitable to a National Park lodge, but incredibly right here in our County along the Conestoga River. Then, it was dismantled, reconstructed, and admired in Lititz before burning to the ground just shy of another decade thereafter.

This Phantom Place is almost entirely gone and forgotten. But, the stories of this four-story recreational edifice seem to echo across the centuries. Frank Diffenderfer’s 1904 account appeared not just in the local Lancaster newspaper “New Era,” of which he was editor, but also in the Journal of the then-named Lancaster County Historical Society. Here’s a link to that Journal article.

Screenshot of Lancaster County Historical Society journal article.

I’ve found only one photograph, most likely taken from a hilltop across the Conestoga. Trees now obscure the view. So, I had to use a drone to capture a similar perspective.

A Brief Timeline:

The Wabank House after being moved to Lititz.

Other similar structures were planned, some built, and a few smaller ones remain today in various hidden nooks and crannies of the County. I know of none other that were relocated so deliberately. The structure itself would certainly today be considered historically significant. But, it seems certain that it would not have survived. Most of the posh and headline-grabbing events took place in the first few years.

Advertisements for transient lodging seemed to signal a death knell for the Wabank House’s economic viability.

Imagine, if you will, that the water in front of the Wabank House was probably 10’-15’ higher than we see it today. The river bed had not yet seen the dreadful scouring away from all of the upstream runoff that our conversion of Penn’s Woods into the Garden Spot resulted in.

Here’s a Google Street View of the former Wabank House location. The stone retaining wall is all that remains.

A dam across the river was built in 1827 in concert with Lock #3 of the Conestogo Navigation Company’s slackwater navigation system. There were at least six more dams downstream of the Wabank House location holding back the Conestoga into a series of step-pools and locks that made the River navigable to watercraft. More than a hundred other dams were in existence upstream of this point in the Conestoga watershed, as well. These dams provided at times mill power, navigation, or impoundment for the City’s water supply.

Coincidentally, these dams created flood control but also stored legacy sediment and other pollutants all along the way. For a time, the setting must have been lovely though with water flowing with an 8’ drop over a stone and timber dam.

As part of its Sherriff’s sale auction in 1858, the property was described in the Lancaster Examiner on February 17 as noted below:

So, what occurred here to cause the claim of being a “fashionable and favorite place of summer resort”? Here are a few:

These stories have been reported and re-reported all too infrequently (i.e. 1904, 1922, 1930, 1963, and 2012). So, I nominate this location as a premier example of a Phantom Place that certainly has a place of honor in Uncharted Lancaster.

Adventure Awaits!

Never miss a new post or article by signing up for email updates below and following Uncharted Lancaster on Facebook or Instagram.


Shop

Purchase a beautiful reproduction map from 1875 or 1899 of Conestoga Township and Manor Township.

Exit mobile version