YE KENDALL INN 128 W. Blanco, Boerne |
HISTORY: Situated a block off main street in Boerne is the
charming old Kendall Inn that has been visited through the years by stagecoach
passengers and twentieth-century celebrities. Its history began April 23, 1859,
when John James and Gus Theissen sold the land on which it stands to Erastus and
Sarah Reed for the sum of only $200. The Reeds had come to Boerne from Georgia,
and with them they brought the Southern Colonial style of architecture and built
the center section of the inn.
As the town had been founded only ten
years previously, there was no regular establishment for the shelter of the
traveler. However,the hearts of the few home owners were large and it became the
custom for any home owner with a spare room to care for the transient guest,
sometimes for pay, sometimes not. Whether or not the Reeds offered their
hospitality for pay is not known, but is is believed that they did. Eventually,
the place was designated as the Reed House.
The Reeds later leased the
property to Henry W. Chipman. On a paying basis, he accommodated horsemen and
occasional stagecoach passengers. He then opened the grounds as a wagon yard for
the convenience of the surrounding ranchers who penned their cattle in what is
now the city park, awaiting other cattle for a big drive up the trail.
On
May 4, 1869, Colonel Henry C. King and his wife Jean Adams King, purchased the
inn from the Reeds. Colonel King was a jovial man who made a host of friends.
Campaigning successfully for the office of State Senator, he covered his
district on horseback. While on these campaign trips, which sometimes lasted for
weeks, the operation of the King Place was left to his wife. After serving one
term as senator, at which time the present state constitution was written and
adopted, he ran for the office of Governor, but was defeated. Later, motivated
by the urge to venture into newspaper work, Henry King returned to San
Antonio.
By 1878, Boerne had become famous as a resort. In that year,
C.J.Rountree and W. L. Wadsworth of Dallas purchased the "King Place" and
renamed it the Boerne Hotel. As visitors began flocking to the town to take
advantage of the hearlthful dry climate, the hotel expanded. So great was the
demand for accommodations, two long wings were added on either side of the
portion built by the Reeds. It is believed that at this time the present kitchen
wing was also added.
Six years later, James T. Clarke became the
proprietor of the inn. For a while he was the agent for the state line that came
through Boerne. It was at this time that the Boerne Hotel was truly an authentic
Stagecoach Inn.
In 1882, Mr. Edmund King and his wife, Selina L. King,
and children came to Boerne from England and leased the Boerne Hotel. Mr. King
was killed in a hunting accident in back of the hotel on September
26,1882.
In 1909, Dr. H. J. Barnitz, a prominent San Antonio physician,
adopted the name "Ye Kendall Inn" [for the hotel]The name was a tribute to
George W. Kendall, eminent journalist, who was ressponsible for bringing the
first sheep to the Hill Country and for whom Kendall County was
named.
From 1922 to 1943, Kendall Inn was owned by Robert L. and Maude
M.Hickman. It was during their ownership that many steps toward modernization
took placed athe famous old inn. One of the most important was the installation
of privatebaths.
Hickman had learned the hotel business while working for
his father at the popular old Southern Hotel in San Antonio. Along with the
Prince Solms colonists, he was civic minded; for it was during his term as mayor
that the city installed the swimming pool that is immediately adjacent to the
dining porch of the inn.
Through the years Kendall Inn has served as a
gathering place for frontier lawmen, army personnel, cattle drovers, and many
celebrities.
Mrs. William T. Grinnan purchased Kendall Inn in 1960 and
lived there with her three sons. The property was sold to Ed and Vicki Schleyer
in April 1982. Two years of extensive restoration brought back the historic
beauty of the hardwood floor, original fireplaces,molding mantels and the 200
foot front porch with railing and columns."
Source: Boerne Public Library files.