Date: Fri 03-Oct-1997
Date: Fri 03-Oct-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Quick Words:
Hawley-Manor-Inn
Full Text:
The Hawley Manor's History Has Had Many Chapters
(with cuts)
BY KAAREN VALENTA
When Emilie Harasymczuk graduated from Hawley High School in 1939, she knew
exactly what she wanted to do - work as a waitress at the Hawley Manor Inn.
But Emilie was only 17 and her parents were very strict. She had to stay on
the family farm on Brushy Hill Road until she turned 18. As soon as that
happened, however, she left the farm and moved into town to work at the new
inn on Main Street.
"It was a beautiful place with beautiful gardens," she said. "I worked six and
a half days a week as a waitress and as general help. That's the way they did
it then. But I also lived there so I had room and board."
The minute Eleanor Mayer turned 16 she also started working part-time at the
inn, commuting there in a 1931 Chevy. She worked there part-time and full-time
for more than ten years. The two women agree that the inn was a great place to
work.
"In the early years there was no liquor and selling liquor there [later]
created a big controversy," Eleanor Mayer said. "The inn had been the home of
[town benefactress] Mary Elizabeth Hawley [who died in 1930]. She tore down
the old Newtown Inn just to get rid of it and used the land for the library."
The Hawley Manor was a safe place for young women to live and work. Many of
the guests, like Mrs Charles Peck, lived there year-around. Mrs Peck's husband
had been adjutant physician to Gen John Pershing, who commanded army units in
the Spanish-American War and later led an American expeditionary force during
World War I.
"Mrs Peck had two rooms - the only suite in the whole place - and a bird
feeder outside her window," Emilie Harasymczuk said.
A few of the long-term guests lived at the inn only during the winter to save
fuel by shutting up their homes, especially during World War II when fuel was
scarce. Each waitress was assigned a few house guests who had regular tables
in the dining room.
"We had a few transients, but not too many empty rooms," Ms Harasymczuk said.
"Mostly we had steady guests."
"Emilie really ran the place with an iron hand," Eleanor Mayer said. "In the
summers a lot of college girls worked there. Their goal was to raise $1,000
for school."
At one point during the war, Emilie was the only waitress. "Oh boy, I really
had to move," she recalled. "There was a bell in the tower that we'd ring when
the whistle blew for an [air raid practice] alert. I rang it so hard that I
broke it."
At first she worked for Mr and Mrs William Hunter. "Every New Year's Day the
Hunters would hold an open house and all the townsfolk would be invited to
drop in," she said. "It was a very popular tradition."
There was a huge dining room and a glassed-in porch which could be closed off
during the winter. "We only used it on Sundays - we had a big kerosene heater
- because we didn't have heat in that room," she said. "When it snowed, we
went skiing on Main Street. There was very little traffic then and they
wouldn't plow until after the snowstorm had stopped."
"The Hunters had no children, but Mrs Hunter's father, Mr Syme, came to live
with them after his wife died. They also had two cats, Muff and Fluff, and
many of the guests had their dogs with them."
One of the guest rooms was in a converted tool shed and was affectionately
called "The Honeymoon Cabin." It was only used in the spring and summer
because it didn't have any heat - it was very rustic.
"The Hunters sold the inn just after 1945 when the war ended," Emilie
Harasymczuk said. "That's when the Bowens bought it."
Mrs Bowen, now Eloise Bowen-Singer, 91, of Nokomis, Fla., said that she and
her husband, William, were having dinner with the George Mentleys on Taunton
Hill Road. Over polite conversation the Mentleys suggested that the Bowens,
who were involved in real estate, hotels and restaurants, look at the Hawley
Manor, which was for sale.
"Needless to say, I fell in love with the place," Mrs Bowen-Singer said.
At that time, Eli Bruce was the chef.
"He had been a baker in Brattleboro, Vt., and he still made all kinds of
wonderful baked goods," Eleanor Mayer recalled. "One Sunday he was cooking
ducks in the oven and had a pipe in his mouth when he opened the oven door.
The whole kitchen exploded, dishes came off the shelves and the water pipes
broke."
The explosion burned the chef's face and most of his mustache.
"They took him to Dr Desmond's and he was laid up for the rest of the day," Ms
Mayer said.
The Bowen Years
The Bowens made some major changes in the inn. When they purchased the inn and
its five acres, the inn consisted of the main building with several upstairs
bedrooms, the carriage house with the clock tower and a few small
outbuildings. The Bowens added a fireplace in the dining room and remodeled
the kitchen, adding a dishwasher, commercial ranges and refrigeration units. A
two-story addition containing six bedrooms and baths was built to connect the
main house and the carriage house.
The outbuildings - an ice house and chicken coops - were converted into
pine-paneled guest quarters. The garages in the carriage house also were
converted into guest rooms. Later a three-room apartment was added onto the
back of the carriage house.
"We had a large auction about that time which sold most of the antiques from
earlier years," recalled the Bowen's son, Col Ralph Bowen, (USAF Ret). "But
the two bronze St Bernard dog statues on the side lawn were still in existence
as were the two greyhounds at the driveway entrance."
There also was a gift shop on the first floor of the carriage house for
several years.
"Without sounding too complimentary to ourselves, our dining facilities were
well known," Col Bowen said. "We catered to the original cast of South Pacific
with Mary Martin and Enzio Pinza, as well as planning the luncheon for the
[founding of the] United Nations."
"Our Saturday night Smorgasbord at $1.95 a person was well-known as were many
of the other functions such as Thanksgiving dinner for $2.25," Col Bowen said.
"We have many fond memories of Newtown, our customers and our days at the
Hawley Manor since selling it in 1952, and it is refreshing to know that many
of these customs will be revived" when the Mary Hawley Inn opens soon.
The Hawley Homestead
No one knows exactly what the original house looked like when it was built by
Dr Cyrenius H. Booth in about 1820. Dr Booth, the grandfather of Mary
Elizabeth Hawley, lived in the house and ran his medical practice there until
he died in 1871. The next year his daughter, Sarah, and her husband, Marcus
Hawley of Bridgeport, renovated it extensively. They moved in with their
teenage daughter a year later.
Dr Booth was wealthy but the Hawleys were wealthier. Marcus Hawley's fortune
came from his father's hardware business which boomed with the discovery of
gold in California. The Hawleys also built the house and cottage next to the
carriage house, then an annex to the main house called Fern Cottage, now owned
by neighbor Edwin Baumer.
Mary Hawley hired the late Charles Steck, Sr, of Bethel to plant a half-acre
garden, complete with gazebo, grapevines, and arbor, which can be seen on old
postcards but was later paved for the inn's parking lot.
There were many more changes after February 1931 when F.W. Scott of New York
bought the manor and opened it as a restaurant in the summer of that year.
William Hunter bought the inn from Scott in 1934 and ran it until 1945 when
Eloise Bowen and her husband, William, bought it. Mrs Bowen, now Eloise
Bowen-Singer, is 91 and lives in Nokomis, Fla., with her son.
The Singers sold the manor to Ken and Ruth Hathaway in 1952. Hathaway sold the
manor and 3.11 acres to Lowell Hodgkins and Associates of Bridgeport for
$250,000 in 1970. It was operated by the Vazzano family of Stratford until
1994. In August 1996, the property was sold to Hawley Inn LLC for $475,000,
and work began on a complete renovation including demolition of many of the
outbuilding conversions. The new Mary Hawley Inn now is expected to open
sometime this month.
Today Emilie Harasymczuk works in the bakery at Stop & Shop at Sand Hill Plaza
after retiring from Heli-Coil, a Danbury division of Black & Decker; Eleanor
Mayer operates Mayer Real Estate in Newtown, and Eloise Bowen-Singer and her
son, Ralph, are active in the day-to-day operations of their business, Spring
Hill Park Realty near Sarasota, Fla.
