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Anchor Inn Resort
55960 County Road 4
Spring Lake, MN 56680
Phone: 218-659-2718
Toll Free: 1-888-798-2718
Click Here to Email Us
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Anchor
Inn Resort
History Anchored
in Riverboat Lore
Anchor Inn Resort got its start in 1921 as a hunting lodge owned
by William Osufsen. In 1946 the resort was purchased by
Ray and Nellie Chaplain. They operated the resort until
1968 when it was purchased by Kitty and Naomi, the first
generation of the Kitterman family to own Anchor Inn Resort.
Today Bud and Gin Kitterman, son
of Kitty and Naomi, along with their children continue the
family tradition of providing great Minnesota vacations
Hoosier-style. Contact them
today for information about a stay at Anchor Inn Resort and
experience their legendary hospitality for yourself.
The
following article printed in the Grand Rapids Herald Review in
July 26, 1939 gives interesting insight in Anchor Inn's early
days.
"Up
In This Neck of the Woods"
People who build and operate summer resorts sometimes have
difficulty in finding an attractive name which will mean
something to their patrons, and bring them back again. When
William Osufsen wanted to entertain hunters and fishermen, quite
a number of years ago, he had little difficulty in selecting a
suitable name, for the material was in the ground, or rather on
the shore, waiting for him. Mr. Osufsen bought a tract of land
between Little Sand lake and Rice lake, on the upper waters of
the Bigfork river, intending to establish a hunting lodge there.
As he looked over his property, Mr. Osufsen found a huge anchor,
one which had been used by a logging company to anchor their
steamboats used on Bowstring and Sand lakes for towing logs. The
anchor, weighing several hundred pounds, had been abandoned when
the biggest steamboat, the "Elijah Price" had been pulled out on
the bank and left to fall
into decay. This was after the most of the big pine in that part
of the county had been cut and floated down the Bigfork river to
mills along the Rainy river. Struck by the possibilities of the
anchor, Mr. Osufsen hauled it home, erected a handsome scaffold
to hold the anchor clear of the ground, and attached a sign
"Anchor Inn," which has since remained the name of his place.
The site now occupied by Anchor Inn has been used by human
beings for hundreds of years. This column carried a story about
a year ago of the exploration of Indian mounds on the Osufsen
property. Incidentally the mound has been named the "Osufsen
Mound" by the University of Minnesota. It was declared the
richest and best mound studied last year by the archaeologists
of the university. Later than the mound builders were the
Indians who used the waters of the lakes and connecting streams
as a highway.
For the first few year, when roads were often poor, most of the
guests at Anchor Inn came during the hunting seasons, September
and October for ducks, and in November for deer and bear. As the
roads got better and more tourists sought distant places for a
summer vacation, there came to be a better demand for
accommodations during the summer months, until now that is an
important season at Anchor Inn. Fishing is good in Sand lake,
and in numerous other lakes not far away, and the cottages under
the trees at Anchor Inn have a large number of occupants during
the hot weather.
Squaw lake has been termed the best lake for duck hunting in
Minnesota. That may be, but the men who hunt Rice lake, just
north of Anchor Inn, believe that their lake ranks a close
second. There is always a wild rice crop of some sort, and most
years a very heavy one. Prospects are good this year for plenty
of wild rice, which means lots of wild ducks. Rice lake
and the swamps nearby are good duck breeding grounds. There is
plenty of natural cover, an abundant of feed, and protection
during the nesting season from poachers.
Bill, as Mr. Osufsen is know to hundreds of duck hunters, is not
only a good hunter, but a student of nature. He believes in
conservation of wild ducks, and watches them on the nesting
grounds. This year there were two brooks of mallards and three
broods of teal hatched within sight of his boat landing. The
ducks are now of good size and have gone out into the lake.
Mr. Osufsen is a firm believer in the one buck provision for
deer hunters, if it could be applied to the entire state, and
urges his hunters to save the does and fawns when they are at
Anchor Inn for the big game season.
In a few weeks, the Indians will again return to Rice lake, to
gather their share of the crop of wild rice. Some Indians have
allotments on the shore of the lake, on the west side, where
they live the year round, others come by boat and canoe from
Inger and camp on the lake shores while gathering the crop.
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Anchor Inn Resort
A Sportsman's
Paradise - Then and Now
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