About The Smithton
Twelve
miles north of Lancaster is an inn that stands apart from all other inns
in the Pennsylvania Dutch country;
the
Historic Smithton Inn has been open for 237 years. The location is about
sixty miles west of Philadelphia. Innkeeper Dorothy Graybill is Pennsylvania
Dutch, and was born just one mile from the inn. The inn is built of stone,
is surrounded by flowers, and stands on a hill overlooking the Ephrata
Cloister, a Protestant monastery, which is now a museum dating from 1723.
Oil lamps are lighted in the windows at dusk. The first floor has a Great
Room, and a room where breakfast is served, to the left. These rooms all have fireplaces that are used from November to
April, weather permitting.
All
rooms can be candle lighted. Guest rooms are picturesque and provide a
romantic setting for visitors. The Inn is furnished with antiques and hand
made furniture, that are all appropriate to the period. Each room has an
operating fireplace. Most rooms have hand sewn Dutch quilts, reading lamps,
stencils, and mini-refrigerators. Feather beds are stored
in antique blanket chests, and must be requested in advance, before the
rooms are made up.
All rooms have traditional white walls with a dominant color used elsewhere.
Most rooms have canopy and four poster beds; some with whirlpool tubs.
Numerous decorative influences are the product of Dorothy's architect partner
who has used the motifs of the Eighteenth Century Germans, and those of
the Ephrata Cloister.
People who were members of the Cloister built and operated the Inn. Hand
worked timbers with mortise and tenon joints, secured with locust trunnels
(large wooden pins), are common place in the building and its restoration.
The floors and woodwork are hand worked, as well as some of the ceramics
in the bathrooms. The Smithton Dahlia Gardens surround much of the property,
blooming from June through October.