Motor Inns

There is coming to be a new development in connection with motor touring which is designed to meet the requirements of those who desire a little more luxury than can be had in ordinary camping, but who do not care for either the formality or the expense involved in putting up at the average first-class hotel.

To meet the demands of this class what are called Motor Inns are springing up in hundreds of localities, some of them being operated on the chain principle, thus securing uniformity of operation and standardized service and equipment.

One of the most complete of these motor inns is one that is in operation at Los Angeles. Like others it combines in many respects the features of both an automobile camp and a hotel. The plant consists of an office, a community building, and a group of bungalows, numbering at present some fifteen. Each bungalow has four bedrooms fitted up for two persons, many of the rooms with private bath. These rooms rent for $1.50 and $2.00 per night, accordingly as they are without or supply baths.

This inn represents an investment of about $90,000, and one of the same scope and cost, the second in a chain that is to dot the state, has been established at Fresno.

The California motor inns for the most part consist of a group of four apartment bungalows, [[203]]garages, main building, and pavilion on spacious landscaped grounds. Usually the bungalow apartments consist of a single room with toilet and bath. Thus under one roof there will be but eight persons, at most, housed at one time.

The price of entertainment also includes a garage for the car, and the use of the kitchen and its equipment, such as gas stove, sink, running water, tubs and the like. The kitchen is located in the community house. The rooms are as large as one finds in first-class hotels. Those without private bath adjoin so as to provide toilet and bath between the two rooms.

The community building provides a well-furnished reception room, and also a dining-room with tables for the guests. The motor inn is really a first-class hotel with a large degree of self-service.

Ample furniture is supplied for both the bedrooms and those in the community house. Naturally, however, kitchen utensils and dishes are not furnished for the guests. In effect the guest continues to be a camper, but a camper with hotel conveniences. [[204]]

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CHAPTER XIII

LIST OF CAMPING SITES BY STATES

A List of About Two Thousand Camping Sites Arranged Alphabetically by States—Municipal Camp Sites, State Camp Sites, and Camp Sites in National Parks and Forests, Beginning with Alabama and Closing with Wyoming—This List Indicates in Tabular Form the Facilities Offered at Each Camp Site.

(Note: So rapidly is the camping movement growing that any list of sites is subject to continual addition. The following list, however, is the result of a thorough canvass of all state and national forest and park officials, and of all towns and cities in the United States. A large percentage of the civic authorities in replying to inquiry either omitted to give details concerning the camp site in their locality, or else stated that the provision of facilities was as yet undetermined. In such cases the line following the name of the site is left blank. A number of facilities may be available at such points, but statement of the accommodations is given in this chapter only where the authors have a definite record on the various points noted.)

F indicates “Free.”

C indicates “a moderate charge is made.”

Y indicates “Yes, the facility referred to in the column heading is available.” [[205]]

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