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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home3/hipvacat/public_html/abdul2-rosslynredux-com/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6121Meet the former Rosslyn bathhouse. No longer extant on our waterfront, this charming building still exists nearby, having migrated south decades ago (or so we understand.) As boating and swimming (aka bathing) season yield to fall foliage and Canada geese migration, it seems a suitable moment to revisit a\u00a0post I shared on the Essex community blog<\/a>\u00a0on June 17, 2013.<\/p>\n My post focused on the photograph above which features a lakeside utility building and remnants of a crib dock \/ pier extending out into Lake Champlain. This\u00a0historic photograph was gifted to me by Essex neighbor and friend Todd Goff<\/a> some years ago, and it stands as one of relatively few visual records documenting this iteration of Rosslyn’s waterfront.<\/p>\n Let’s cull some of the goodies from 2013.<\/p>\n [Note: The following is adapted from\u00a0my 2013 Essex community blog post<\/a>.]<\/em><\/p>\n It\u2019s time to wander out on a proverbial limb. And despite a lifelong penchant for climbing trees I\u2019m not 100% confident with this morning\u2019s adventure. I\u2019m hoping that you\u2019ll help me!<\/p>\n When we posted this mystery photograph on the Essex community blog as part of the Vintage Essex Trivia<\/a> series, we asked readers to guess the subject of the photo. We were looking for answers to questions like these:<\/p>\n While previous Vintage Essex Trivia posts rendered plenty of history, rumor and anecdote, this photograph only resulted in two guesses from members of the community. There\u2019s a reason for that. The scene captured by Gene Van Ornam<\/a> (Geri Van Ornam<\/a>\u2019s father) in this photograph no longer exists in Essex. The wiles of time have transformed this waterfront more than once, but there are still some vital clues to guide us.<\/p>\n CLUES: SHERWOOD INN & ROSSLYN WATERFRONT<\/p>\n Despite the almost deafening sound of digital silence which greeted this most recent challenge, two oracular residents shed light on the photograph.<\/p>\n \u201cThis looks like a no longer existing precursor to the Sherwood Inn dock.\u201d \u2014 Diane Lansing<\/a><\/p>\n \u201cLooks like a precursor to the Rosslyn dock, based on the topography of the hillside. But that\u2019s a total guess on my part.\u201d \u2014\u00a0Kathryn Reinhardt<\/a>\u00a0(@adkkathryn<\/a>)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Both Diane and Kathryn are correct. Bravo!<\/p>\n The stony pier (crib dock) actually\u00a0predates<\/em><\/strong><\/span> the Sherwood Inn<\/a> (though by how many years I\u2019m uncertain), and remnants of it still exists today. The topography and pier are indeed helpful clues, but perhaps the most telling detail is the stone retaining wall which girds the bottom of the hillside.<\/p>\n The stone terracing has endured the wrath of icy flows and swirling floods. Or at least, most of it has endured Lake Champlain\u2019s persistent threat. The 2011 floods<\/a> which initiated this blog damaged Rosslyn\u2019s waterfront, and reparations are ongoing. But the stone terracing and ramp are once again restored, offering a contemporary context for the historic photograph above.<\/p>\n The photograph below confirms the hypothesis that the building is the former Rosslyn bathhouse.<\/p>\n Special thanks to\u00a0Diane and Kathryn for your sleuthing, Todd Goff for the superb photograph of Rosslyn bathhouse, and Identify established, one significant mystery remains. We\u2019ve confirmed that the building appearing in both of the photographs above depicts the former Rosslyn bathhouse, but I can also confirm that it no longer stands lakeside on Rosslyn’s waterfront. What happened to it?<\/p>\n This is where I climb out onto that proverbial limb. Are you ready?<\/p>\n I\u2019ve been told on several occasions by different people that the building now absent on Rosslyn\u2019s flood-challenged hillside is none other than the charming cottage on Whallons Bay<\/a> known as the Green Frog<\/a>. In fact, I\u2019ve even been told that it was transported from the Rosslyn waterfront to its present perch by dragging it over the frozen waters of Lake Champlain<\/a>. Now that \u2014 hauling the Rosslyn bathhouse over the ice, perhaps with a robust team of draft horses? \u2014 is a vintage photograph I\u2019d love to discover!<\/p>\n Perhaps you\u2019ve heard the same thing? Or maybe you can offer a different explanation for what happened to the Rosslyn bathhouse?<\/p>\nFormer Rosslyn Bathhouse<\/h2>\n
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\nShirley LaForest<\/a> for the color postcard image which helps solve the mystery.<\/p>\n