Stockbridge, MASSACHUSETTS - Red Lion Inn - 1906:  From the hotel's website: According to tradition, Silas Pepoon established a small tavern on this corner in 1773, under the sign of the Red Lion. It was a welcome stop for stagecoaches traveling the dusty road between Albany and Boston. In July of the following year, angry citizens from several towns gathered at Pepoon’s to pass resolutions protesting England’s repressive Acts of Intolerance. They also pledged to boycott British goods. Throughout the colonial years and the early days of the Republic, this Inn participated fully in the busy life of a remote community….  By 1884, it was known as the Stockbridge House and had been enlarged to accommodate 100 guests. The summer hotel, open from May through October, was one of several rambling wooden hostelries in the Berkshires. More additions were made in 1892 and 1894, but a fire destroyed the entire building on August 31, 1896. The Berkshire Courier reported, “Mrs. Plumb’s noted collection of colonial china, pictures, wearing apparel and furniture, the largest of its kind in the country, and the delight of everyone who went to Stockbridge was saved.”  Miraculously, the rebuilt hotel opened the following May 1897. For over ninety years, it remained with the Treadway family, descendants of the Plumbs. U.S. Congressman Allen T. Treadway, their nephew, was one of the most prominent owners. The building was virtually unchanged until the early ‘60s when private baths were added in the South Wing and a swimming pool was installed. For several years Robert K. Wheeler, a Great Barrington businessman, and owner at the time staved off developers and searched for a purchaser who would be willing to keep one of the most historic inns in Massachusetts going. The Fitzpatrick family now owns the last of the 19th Century hotels still in business in the Berkshires. It is one of the few American Inns that have operated continuously since before 1800…. The Inn has had several names, but a red lion 
has always graced its sign and the name has been used since around 1900.
 Among noted guests are five presidents: Cleveland, McKinley, Theodore Roosevelt, Coolidge, and Franklin Roosevelt. Other guests have included Nathaniel Hawthorne, William Cullen Bryant, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Thornton Wilder, John Wayne and Bob Dylan. More modern guests of note include Lyle Lovett, Steve Martin, Martin Short, and Post Malone."  This Undivided Back Era postcard, mailed in 1906, is in good condition. American News Co.  New  York.  No. 8118.