The Canyon Hotel was built in
Yellowstone National Park
Yellowstone National Park is a List of national parks of the United States, national park of the United States located in the northwest corner of Wyoming, with small portions extending into Montana and Idaho. It was established by the 42nd U ...
in 1910 by the Yellowstone Park Company to accommodate visitors to the area of the
Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone
The Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone is the first large canyon on the Yellowstone River downstream from Yellowstone Falls in Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming. The canyon is approximately long, between deep and from wide.
History
Althou ...
and
Yellowstone Falls
Yellowstone Falls consist of two major waterfalls on the Yellowstone River, within Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, United States. As the Yellowstone river flows north from Yellowstone Lake, it leaves the Hayden Valley and plunges first ove ...
. The hotel was built on a huge scale, with a perimeter measurement of one mile. Situated on a hill to the west of the falls, it dominated the landscape. It had an elegant resort-like air when first built. After World War II it was regarded by the National Park Service as outdated. Suffering from neglect, it was abandoned in the late 1950s and was in the process of demolition when it was destroyed by fire in 1960.
Temporary hotel
The Canyon Hotel was one of four major hotels operated by the Yellowstone Park Company in the early and mid twentieth century in Yellowstone. The company operated a circuit tour of Yellowstone, featuring stops at the Mammoth Hotel, the
Old Faithful Inn
The Old Faithful Inn is a hotel in the Western United States, western United States with a view of the Old Faithful Geyser, located in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming. The Inn has a multi-story log lobby, flanked by long frame wings containin ...
, the
Lake Hotel and the Canyon Hotel, taking about five days for the complete tour.
[Barringer, pp. 42-48] There were three successive hotels at the Canyon site. The first hotel was built by the Yellowstone Park Association, a predecessor to the Yellowstone Park Company, opening in May 1886. The prefabricated structure was intended to be a temporary replacement for a tent camping accommodation. This hotel was placed close to the Upper Falls. By agreement with the
Department of the Interior
The United States Department of the Interior (DOI) is an executive department of the U.S. federal government responsible for the management and conservation of most federal lands and natural resources. It also administers programs relatin ...
, the building was to serve a single season and was to be demolished in August 1886, when construction was to start on a permanent hotel. A sawmill was built and timber was cut and sawn, but no work on the hotel took place until 1889.
[Quinn, pp. 73-74]
Second Canyon Hotel

The new hotel was built about south of the present Canyon Junction. The site was an east-facing meadow on a prominent hillside overlooking the road. The building, when completed in 1891, was called by the park superintendent "a most unsightly edifice."
The hotel compensated for its unattractive appearance by offering a high standard of comfort and service.
This second hotel was a plain three-story wood-framed building with an entrance porch on the long dimension of the building. The 250-room hotel was enlarged with twenty-four more rooms in 1901, when dormers were added to the roof.
Foundation troubles, discovered during the original construction, required that rooms in the original section be replastered during the 1901 work.
[Haines, p. 129]
Third Canyon Hotel

The third hotel was designed by architect
Robert Reamer
Robert Chambers Reamer (1873–1938) was an American architect, most noted for the Old Faithful Inn in Yellowstone National Park. A number of his works are listed on the National Register of Historic Places for their architecture.
Reamer was ...
, a close friend of Yellowstone Park Company president
Harry W. Child, who had designed the Old Faithful Inn and a renovation of the Lake Hotel in 1903. Reamer and the Childs had together taken a grand tour of Europe in 1909, and at Child's direction Reamer set out to design an elegant accommodation, in contrast to the rustic Old Faithful Inn. Reamer, assisted by Charles A. Popkin, incorporated the old hotel into the new design, but changed its character completely to a long, horizontal structure that flowed along the hillside, anchored by a heavy hipped roof accented by prominent hipped dormers. The new hotel comprised 400 rooms with 100 baths, and measured in length making it the largest building ever built in Yellowstone.
[Quinn, p. 75] Construction started in June 1910, and the hotel was already enclosed by October. Nearly all exterior work was completed by December, and work continued on the interior through the winter. The partially complete hotel opened for guests in June 1911, with the grand opening held on August 2, 1911.
[Quinn, pp. 76-77]
The hotel showed clear influences of
Frank Lloyd Wright
Frank Lloyd Wright Sr. (June 8, 1867 – April 9, 1959) was an American architect, designer, writer, and educator. He designed List of Frank Lloyd Wright works, more than 1,000 structures over a creative period of 70 years. Wright played a key ...
's
Prairie School
Prairie School is a late 19th and early 20th-century architectural style, most common in the Midwestern United States. The style is usually marked by horizontal lines, flat or hipped roofs with broad overhanging eaves, windows grouped i ...
with its horizontal lines and dominating roof.
The interior made generous use of sturdy pilasters and exposed timber roof framing, with interior spaces following the slope of the hill down to the massive ''
porte-cochere'' entrance. The lounge, located to one side of the sloped entrance structure, measured by , featured views through panoramic windows from an elegant, sheltered space, and was overlooked by viewing platforms and bandstands within.
[Quinn, pp. 78-79]
In 1936 the Old Faithful Inn and Canyon Hotel advertised rates of $2.75 per day without meals in a single person room, ranging upwards to $9 per day for a single room with attached bath and meals.
The basement featured a notable wine cellar, bowling alleys and billiard rooms, as well as meeting and banquet rooms.
Mission 66
Following World War II, National Park Service facilities were in a state of poor repair and were incapable of accommodating the floods of automobile-borne tourists that patronized the national parks in the 1950s. The
Mission 66
Mission 66 was a United States National Park Service ten-year program that was intended to dramatically expand Park Service visitor services by 1966, in time for the 50th anniversary of the establishment of the Park Service.
When the National P ...
program was proposed as a Service-wide program to improve or replace visitor accommodations, transportation systems, interpretive facilities and park infrastructure in time for the 50th anniversary of the National Park Service in 1966. One feature of the program was the de-emphasis of park hotels, which were built with railroad-borne tourists in mind, in favor of motel-style accommodations that catered specifically to visitors arriving in automobiles.
[Barringer, pp. 129-130] The Yellowstone master plan stated that
New hotels shall not be proposed. Present hotels should be placed into disuse and ultimately removed as they deteriorate and become marginal in income."
As the chief park concessioner, the Yellowstone Park Company was required to participate in the construction of new facilities to these new standards. The chief new development in Yellowstone was to be Canyon Village, one of the biggest such projects of Mission 66. The all-new community to the east of the hotel included a visitor center, shopping, service station and amphitheater. Visitor accommodations were centered on 500 motel-style units in a series of individual buildings of twenty or so rooms, centering on a new common lodge building. The complex included new housing for park employees, and when full, could accommodate almost five thousand visitors and employees.
[Barringer, p. 131]
Ground was broken for Canyon Village on June 25, 1956, with completion late in the summer of 1957. It became immediately apparent that visitors preferred the Canyon Hotel to the new facilities. The Yellowstone Park Company, in financial difficulty as a result of its contributions to the Mission 66 projects, partially closed the hotel to encourage visitors to stay at Canyon Village,
[Culpin, p. 146] closing it entirely for the 1959 season.
[Barringer, p. 141]
Decline and destruction

In 1957 Lemuel Garrison, who had been chairman of the Mission 66 steering committee, became superintendent of Yellowstone.
[Culpin, pp. 107-108] In 1958 Garrison noted that a portion of the hotel was beyond repair, with uncorrected foundation issues dating to the 1891 building. Garrison speculated that some portion of the hotel could be stabilized, or that the most impressive portions might be moved and incorporated into the Canyon Village development. Garrison ultimately decided to demolish the hotel in 1959,
[Culpin pp. 108-109] with planning for the demolition starting in June 1959. After some debate about the possibility of moving some portions of the hotel to Lake, the Carlos Construction Company of
Cody, Wyoming
Cody is a city in and the county seat of Park County, Wyoming, United States. It is named after Buffalo Bill Cody for his part in the founding of Cody in 1896.
The population was 10,028 at the United States Census, 2020, 2020 census, making Cod ...
was awarded the demolition contract for a $25 bid. Carlos was given 900 days to remove the hotel.
[Culpin, p. 109]
On August 17, 1959, the
1959 Hebgen Lake earthquake
The 1959 Hebgen Lake earthquake (also known as the 1959 Yellowstone earthquake) occurred in the western United States on August 17 at 11:37 pm ( MST) in southwestern Montana.
The earthquake measured 7.2 on the moment magnitude scale, caused a h ...
hit Yellowstone, damaging facilities throughout the park. While the quake has been cited as a rationale for the hotel's demolition,
it is clear that the decision to demolish had already been made and implemented.
The hotel burned to the ground the night of August 8, 1960. No cause has ever been assigned to the fire.
[Culpin, p. 111]
References
Sources
*Barringer, Mark Daniel. ''Selling Yellowstone: Capitalism and the Construction of Nature'', Lawrence, Kansas: University Press of Kansas, 2002.
*Haines, Aubrey L. ''The Yellowstone Story: A History of Our First National Park'', Niwot, Colorado: University Press of Colorado, 1996.
*Quinn, Ruth. ''Weaver of Dreams: The Life and Architecture of Robert C. Reamer'', Gardiner, Montana: Leslie & Ruth Quinn, 2004.
External links
The Loss of the Canyon Hotelimages
with an extensive series of pictures
{{authority control
Buildings and structures in Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming
Buildings and structures in Teton County, Wyoming
Demolished buildings and structures in Wyoming
Buildings and structures demolished in 1960
Defunct hotels in the United States
Robert Reamer buildings