|
A THUMBNAIL SKETCH
OF THE INN The
Inn is made up of CLIFF COTTAGE, THE PLACE NEXT DOOR
and THE ARTIST'S COTTAGE, plus two individual HISTORIC
COTTAGES (OSCAR WILDE'S and ZELDA'S STUDIO.) All
suites have jacuzzis for 2, some have fireplaces, Oscar Wilde's
Cottage and Zelda's Studio both have private outdoor hottubs. All
have fridges with complimentary Champagne or white wine or sparkling
cider chilled and waiting, coffeemakers with imported teas, coffee,
hot chocolate, chai, cappucino, and CLIFF COTTAGE INN is the only
B&B with an elf who delivers a full-gourmet breakfast right
to your door if you are in a suite...for Oscar Wilde and Zelda's
Studio (both have fully-equipped kitchens for light cooking), breakfast
is an optional extra which guests order in advance when they make
their reservations and the elf delivers it in a lovely basket.
CLIFF
COTTAGE SUITES (Sarah Bernhardt
Suite and Alfred
Lord Tennyson Suite). The cottage was designed by
one of the Victorian period's most illustrious architects, Charles
Locke Eastlake (1836-1906), a British art critic, Secretary of the
Royal Institute of British Architects, and Secretary of the British
Fine Arts Commission. Eastlake was also a furniture designer and
in his book, Hints on Household Taste in Furniture, Upholstery
and other Details (1868), he advocated a return to simple, straight-line
designs inspired by country work, executed in oak and various fruitwoods.
He also advocated that a single, cohesive style dominate the home
rather than a hodgepodge of influences. In 1872 he re-published
his book in the United States, where it became a decorating bible
and planted the seeds of the Arts & Crafts Movement in America.
He was commissioned by Sears to design their very first kit home
sold in their catalogue and Cliff Cottage is just that...a Sears'
kit home, built in 1881. It is a National Historic Registry house
and is also honored by inclusion in the State of Arkansas Historic
Preservation Program. The cottage property has a lovely age-old
cave many spelunkers have explored and which the innkeeper has turned
into a wine cellar as it maintains 52 degrees year-round, perfect
for storing vino!
THE
PLACE NEXT DOOR SUITES, with Colette's
Mini-Suite and Thoreau's
Suite upstairs, was designed and built by Innkeeper Sandra
in 1993 when she came to Arkansas after spending 7 years sailing
alone in the Pacific. It is a Victorian replica with understated
lines so as not to detract from the jewel next door (Cliff Cottage)
and has a cathedral-ceilinged Great Room on the first floor where
Elopement Weddings are performed. Most everyone thinks it is an
old house she restored! There's a serene koi pond at the front door
to set the mood for arriving guests, and Sandra had an artist design
a waterfall coming down the bluff, ending in another pond which
she uses as a transition pond for new-arrival koi!
THE
ARTIST'S COTTAGE, the latest addition to the Inn's "monopoly
board", is right next to Cliff Cottage and was built in 1910.
Its first illustrious resident was a man named Jacob who was a stained-glass
artist and a glassblower. The barn behind was his studio and when
Sandra was building The Place Next Door, she discovered a
beautiful old door on the back of the barn all covered with ivy
and sadly neglected which Jacob had made and etched with two beautiful
deer - he even signed the etching! Sandra rescued the door by donating
a generous sum to the then owners of the property, Good Shepherd
Humane Society who were using the house (which they bought in 1989
for $10 from Don Teeters, who coincidentally, was also a glassblower
and stained glass artist!) as a thrift store to benefit the Society.
When the Humane Society decided to move to larger quarters in June
2003, Sandra purchased the house as she was told it was going to
be bought for a motorcycle repair shop! Suites are called Robert
Louis Stevenson Suite and Emily
Dickinson Suite and have the same luxurious amenities as
the others -- the delivered breakfasts, fancy new jacuzzis that
operate on air instead of jets (they even have spinal column "massage"
features!), wetbars, one has exclusive use of a full porch overlooking
all of downtown, and naturally, both have fantasy luxe decor lots
of original art. The artist's studio barn became Zelda's
Studio and it has a whimsical two-person shower and the
hottub. All the original stone walls have been retained to give
it a secret hideaway ambiance.
SOME
BASICS: Suites and cottages accommodate 2 adults only -- Sarah
Bernhardt's Suite can possibly accommodate two additional guests.
The two suites in historic Cliff Cottage have connecting
doors between and two couples or a family with older children can
reserve both suites -- that way, you have Cliff Cottage all to yourselves!
CLIFF
COTTAGE and ARTIST'S COTTAGE suites all have king beds
as does ZELDA'S STUDIO; the two suites in THE
PLACE NEXT DOOR have queens as does OSCAR WILDE'S COTTAGE.
Artist Cottage suites, Oscar Wilde's and Zelda's are all strictly
for non-smoking guests as smoking is not permitted anywhere on those
properties. For Cliff Cottage and The Place Next Door Suites, guests
may discreetly smoke on balconies or decks but cigars are not permitted
anywhere on any of the Inn properties.
Any
season, CLIFF COTTAGE INN is the perfect place to stay for enjoying
Eureka Springs. During the Autumn, CLIFF COTTAGE INN is especially
gorgeous with lovely plantings gracing the inn's gardens, setting
off the koi ponds and waterfalls. The inn is surrounded by lots
of beautiful age-old trees which create a lovely "painting"
around the inn in the colorful fall and winter. During Springtime,
the redbuds and dogwoods around the inn create a lacy pink canopy
that envelops the inn like magic. If you're coming in November or
later, or even in the early Springtime, ours is the best place to
stay as we are within a few minutes of shops and eateries...in case
we get any of that white stuff, you don't have to drive to find
goodies and foodies! Here's what a recent outdoors editor had to
say about Eureka in Winter:
"While
the area is beautiful year-round, it's
especially stunning during the winter months. The trees' loss of
leaves makes viewing natural rock formations and wildlife even easier.
Bald eagles can be observed in their winter habitat on nearby Kings
River and just 20 minutes out of town at Lake Leatherwood. As many
as 30 birds have been spotted at one time. Elk can be seen grazing
all winter long just a short drive away in Boxley Valley on the
Buffalo River. Hiking trails of varying lengths and difficulty criss-cross
the area, providing visitors with the best possible venue for viewing
and photographing the region's beautiful waterfalls and bluffs."
Spring
and Summer are perfect for a stay at CLIFF COTTAGE INN, a splendid
location to enjoy all the various fairs and festivals in downtown
Eureka and there's no better location for a super shopping spree!
The
Inn also offers small Elopement Weddings (for the bride and groom
and up to a maximum of 4 guests), Vow Renewals and Commitment Ceremonies.....very
lovely ceremonies either in the Inn's Great Room surrounded by antiques
in front of a big pink marble fireplace or on the garden deck beside
the 3-story high rock bluff and a fountain or in "Secret Garden"
by a koi pond with lovely waterfall. The Elopement/Vow Renewal Package
is $135 which includes use of the Inn's wedding facilities, the
minister, the photographer, borrowed use of French silk Victorian
bridal bouquet and matching boutonniere (Optional: Fresh flower
Bridal bouquet and matching Boutonniere, mini-wedding cake and toasting
Champagne For Two, add $75). The Inn is just 17 steps away from
the Courthouse so it's real easy to check in to the Inn and then
walk down for your license.
APPROX.
DRIVING TIMES TO CLIFF COTTAGE INN:
| Tulsa,
OK 2½ - 3 hours |
St.
Louis, M0 5 hours |
| Oklahoma
City 4½ - 5 hours |
Memphis,
TN 5½ hours |
| Springfield,
MO 2 hours |
Dallas,
TX 6½ hours |
| Kansas
City, MO 4 hours |
Branson,
MO 1 hour |
| Joplin,
M0 2 hours |
Passion
Play, 6 minutes |
The Cliff Cottage Inn Caves
In 2003, Sandra purchased the arts & crafts movement house next
door to Cliff Cottage During the renovation process, she tore down some sheds at the
back of the new property and discovered a cave. The first time it
rained, after about an hour, all of a sudden, a gush of water came
out of the side of the cave and completely flooded the yard. She
had "inherited" a spring.
When the yard dried up, she cleaned up the muddy mess and discovered
a small channel hewn out of the rock bluff which had become all
debris-blocked. That was cleaned out and the next time it rained,
the water came out of the side of the cave and ran down the channel
But now there was another problem because the channel led to the 2-story
building she were going to restore as a guest quarters.
The area was solid limestone and impenetrable, so the only
thing to do was to allow the channel to continue to run underneath
the portion of the building where she wasgoing to put in a bathroom
and out the front of the building into the new sewer line just put
in. Sandra asked the carpenter if she could have a glass floor
in the bathroom and maybe have some fish swimming in there for guests
to watch but he didn't like that idea.
Next it was time to clean out the cave which went quite a ways back
into the three-story high rock bluff. " In my other property
next door, I found a cave as well when I was building The Place
Next Door, the Victorian replica portion of the inn," explains
Sandra. "I discovered the cave maintained 52 degrees
year-round...perfect for storing wine. So, being an old onophile
from the years I spent living and studying wines in France, it was
only natural to turn that cave into a wine cellar.
"While clearing out that cave, I discovered where hippies living
on the property in the past had been growing you-know-what in the
cave! No wonder the sheriff's helicopter went over the inn
every Thursday years ago when I was building that house with the
helicopter door open and an infra-red device aimed in the direction
of my cave....until he realized hippies no longer lived there!
Now, for the second cave.....Sandra cleaned it out and her girlfriend
(a retired psychiatrist in her 70s!) removed about 18 inches of
dirt that had accumulated for quite some distance outside the cave
only to discover pipes leading from the cave to the house with some
other wierd contraptions in the cave. SheI asked the plumber
what all that odd arrangement was and he said, "They had a still
here long ago!" Sandra found that quite amusing, especially
since her other house, Cliff Cottage built in the 1880s, right next
door to the Artist's Cottage, had belonged to the first mayor of
Eureka Springs! No telling what secrets these age-old Ozark
bluffs hold!
Last Modified: April 17, 2006 |