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Penn Hills Resort, bubble bath, circa 1970s. Penn Hills Resort was a honeymoon resort located in Analomink, Pennsylvania, in the Pocono Mountains.Founded as a tavern in 1944, the resort grew in the 1960s, with over a hundred rooms in the hotel [1] and a ski resort and golf course on the 500-acre site.
Constructed in 1898 as an eight-room inn, Mount Airy Lodge was re-constructed in the 1950s as the Pocono's largest resort. In its heyday in the 1960s and 70's, Mount Airy had more than 890 rooms, indoor/outdoor pools, skiing, snowmobiling, ice-skating, hiking, biking, horseback riding, archery, an 18-hole golf course and paddle ball courts on over 1,000 acres of property.
This hotel is situated on a 5,500 acres (22 km 2) wooded site in Skytop, Pennsylvania, at an elevation of 1,500 feet in the Poconos.The property includes a 75-acre lake, 30 miles of hiking trails, and an 18-hole golf course. [4]
Woodloch Pines (also known as Woodloch) is an all-inclusive resort located in Hawley, Pennsylvania on Lake Teedyuskung in the northeast Pocono Mountains Lake Region. The nearest large city is Scranton, which is 40 miles away. [1] The resort has been owned by the Kiesendahl Family since 1958 and is open all year round.
Lifts begin spinning at Palmerton’s top-notch Blue Mountain resort in the Pocono Mountains come the end of November, with the pistes of Pennsylvania’s highest vertical skiing (1,082ft) prepped ...
In 1958 Wilkins and his partner Harold O'Brien purchased Hotel Pocopaupack on the banks of Lake Wallenpaupack in Lakeville, Pennsylvania. They renamed the hotel Cove Haven and marketed it as a couples-only resort. [3] [4] [6] In 1963 Wilkins invented the heart-shaped bathtub as a way to generate more honeymoon business at the hotel.