Casino Yosemite California
Historic Names Restored
As part of a lawsuit settlement agreement in 2019, historic facility names in Yosemite have been restored. As a result, the following names have changed:
- The Majestic Yosemite Hotel is again known as The Ahwahnee
- Half Dome Village is again known as as Curry Village
- Big Trees Lodge is again known as Wawona Hotel
Yosemite's only luxury hotel offers fine dining, grand architecture, and a central location in Yosemite Valley; open year-round.
A traditional lodge near the base of Yosemite Falls offers several dining options and easy access to popular destinations; open year-round.
A historic Victorian lodge in the southern part of the park near the Mariposa Grove of Giant Sequoias; open seasonally.
Traditional cabins and canvas-sided tent cabins offer a rustic lodging option in the heart of Yosemite Valley; open seasonally.
Housekeeping Camp units offer a laid-back, open-air experience in Yosemite Valley on the banks of the Merced River; open seasonally.
Traditional cabins and canvas-sided tent cabins 30 miles from Yosemite Valley offer great access to High Sierra hikes; open seasonally.
Canvas-sided tent cabins 50 miles from Yosemite Valley put you close to popular high country destinations; open seasonally.
Five different camps spaced six to ten miles apart provide overnight lodging and dining on wilderness trips; reservations by lottery.
This winter lodge offers bunks with spectacular views of Half Dome and Yosemite Valley, accessible by a 10.5-mile cross-country ski trip.
Visit Black Oak Casino Resort near Yosemite National Park in Tuolumne, CA for big wins, plush accommodations, exceptional dining and exciting entertainment. Ahwahnee Hotel Tall Belly Mug - Blk $39.95. Yosemite Falls print by Gunnar M. Widforss $50.00. 13 x 22 Matte Print - Mohan Bhasker Photography $39.99. Vernal Falls print by Gunnar M. Widforss $25.00. Ahwahnee China Creamer -STEELITE. Yosemite Valley, CA 95389 www.travelyosemite.com. Located on the most direct, scenic route to Yosemite National Park from the San Francisco Bay Area and Sacramento on Highway 120, Yosemite National Park’s year-round northern entrance is just a half-hour, or 24 picturesque miles from our hotel. The Groveland Hotel is pet-friendly, and we welcome guests from around the globe – families, road-weary tourists, business executives, aviation enthusiasts, rock.
Glacier Point Hotel | |
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General information | |
Location | Glacier Point, Yosemite National Park, California, United States |
Coordinates | 37°43′51″N119°34′22″W / 37.73083°N 119.57278°WCoordinates: 37°43′51″N119°34′22″W / 37.73083°N 119.57278°W |
Opening | 1918 |
Closed | July 9, 1969 |
Management | Yosemite Park & Curry Company |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 3 |
Design and construction | |
Developer | The Desmond Park Service Company |
Other information | |
Number of rooms | 80 |
The Glacier Point Hotel was a historic 80-room chalet-style hotel built on the grounds of Glacier Point overlooking Yosemite Valley, California, adjacent to the McCauley Mountain House. It was known as the venue for the Yosemite Firefall spectacle. The hotel opened in 1918, and was taken over by the Yosemite Park & Curry Company in 1924. The building was severely damaged by snowfall in winter 1968-69, and was still empty when it was destroyed in a fire in July 1969.
History[edit]
Built 3,274 feet above the valley floor, the Glacier Point Hotel opened in 1918 and provided magnificent views of Half Dome and Yosemite Valley. Both housing units were constructed from 1916 to 1917 by The Desmond Park Service Company and Gutleben Brothers contracting firm. In 1924, the hotel's ownership was transferred to the Yosemite Park & Curry Company as it had proved a large financial burden for its previous owners.
The hotel consisted of two housing units with a combined total of 80 available rooms. A dining room, lounge area, and other facilities were located within the main complex. Also situated within the back of this building was the well-known viewing porch. Here, visitors would often spend several hours reclining and admiring the landscape. Next to the hotel was James McCauley's old Mountain House. In the years following the opening of the hotel, the Mountain House was used for employee housing and put into service as a public cafeteria. Although the Glacier Point Hotel was in an excellent location, it still struggled as a business. High room costs would continually leave several rooms vacant, but this would slowly change as the hotel gained favor with the increasing numbers of tourists. Water was always a problem at Glacier Point. Some summers the hotel was closed in August due to insufficient water.
Winter was always a tough time for the establishment. Snow was very frequent in the area, and due to the light construction of the buildings, maintenance workers were often needed to live within the hotel, their primary job to keep snow off the roofs so they would not collapse under the weight.
For many years, the guests of the Glacier Point Hotel would witness and participate in the Yosemite Firefall. What was once a summer event would gradually become daily routine. At 9:00 every night, hotel employees would push burning embers off Glacier Point to fall 3,000 feet down and mark the end of a performance at Camp Curry on the valley floor. As the coals fell in a set pattern, the resulting shower would closely resemble a burning waterfall. This tradition would continue on and off from 1872 until the last firefall on Thursday, January 25, 1968.

Calamities[edit]
During the winter of 1968 and 1969, the hotel, along with the McCauley Mountain House, were severely damaged by snowfall. Repairs were later needed and applied to the structures. In the meantime, no guest reservations were booked, and the employees used the Mountain House to sell snacks to Glacier Point visitors.
Indian Casino Yosemite California
On July 9, 1969, an electrical fire started on the bottom floor of the unoccupied hotel.[1] Within minutes, the Glacier Point Hotel, along with the Mountain House and several trees, was destroyed. A nearby stockpile of Red Fir left over from the firefall helped feed the flames. After the incident, visitors were kept away from Glacier Point as demolition crews removed the remaining debris.
YPCC considered rebuilding a hotel at Glacier Point, but the Park Service would not permit rebuilding at the same location; it would have to be placed further back from the precipice.
Aftermath[edit]


The next summer the Yosemite Park and Curry Company built a small snack shop to serve daytime visitors to Glacier Point. In later years, a granite amphitheater was built on the site of the hotel, and a new visitor center was completed nearby. These changes were part of a 1996-1997 modernization effort[2] to transform the heavily traveled path. Even so, some evidence of the Glacier Point Hotel, such as some of the old foundations, are still evident. The iconic boulder[3] behind the hotel has also remained in its original position.
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^'Hotel Burns at Yosemite'. The Times. San Mateo CA. 10 July 1969. Retrieved 7 July 2014.
- ^Paul McHugh (August 27, 1997). 'New Lodge Built at Yosemite Glacier Point is home of $2.7 million ski hut'. San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 2012-02-03.
- ^'Glacier Point Amphitheater'. Yosemitehikes.com. Retrieved 2012-02-04.
Bibliography[edit]
Yosemite Lakes Park California
- Radanovich, Walter. Yosemite National Park and Vicinity. Arcadia Publishing, 2006
External links[edit]
- HABS—Historical American Engineering Record: Glacier Point Road[permanent dead link]