Corner Brook's iconic Glynmill Inn celebrates a century - Action News
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Corner Brook's iconic Glynmill Inn celebrates a century

The Tudor-style hotel in the centre of Corner Brook opened 100 years ago. Its popular posh 1920s esthetic has made it one of the nicest hotels in the area and holds great historical value surrounding the opening of the paper mill and the city of Corner Brook.

The iconic hotel in the centre of the city opened 100 years ago as place for mill engineers to live

A large white and brown hotel sits behind trees with flowers around the front entrance.
The Glynmill Inn in downtown Corner Brook has 78 rooms, two restaurants, a bar and a ballroom. (Colleen Connors/CBC)

In the middle of Corner Brook sits a large, 78-room hotel steeped in opulence and elegance and a century of history in the social life of the city on Newfoundland's west coast.

The Tudor-style building with green trim opened in 1924 as a staff quartersfor the pulp and paper mill's engineers and managers and later became the fancy Corner Brook Hotel.

And today, the Glynmill Inn open for tourists, weddings and conferences still holds its posh 1920s esthetic.

"We still continue to have our silver service and our white tablecloths and our cloth napkins. If you wanted to be seen in Corner Brook the place to dine was the Glynmill Inn," general manager Connie Rose told CBC News.

Rose has been working at the hotel for 45 years, as manager for the last 25. Most of her family have worked here.

A woman stands in the dining room of a hotel.
General manager Connie Rose has worked at the Glynmill Inn for 45 years. (Amy Feehan/CBC)

People from Corner Brook know the place well, says Rose, and many got married in the ballroom, celebrated anniversaries at the Wine Cellar, or lunched in the Carriage Room.

In 1924, it was a very different place.

George French of the Corner Brook Museum and Archives says the building had two dining rooms at the time, one of them a members-only club. It hadtwo bars and tennis courts around back.

"It was housing for those overseeing the construction [of the mill]," French said.

It was built by Glyn West and designed by Andrew Cobb of Halifax. The building hasn't changed much, architecturally.

WATCH | The 100-year-old Glynmill Inn and its glamorous past and present:

Celebrating a century, this is the Glynmill Inn in Corner Brook through the decades

3 months ago
Duration 3:14
Corner Brooks Glynmill Inn, opened 100 years ago, was one of the first buildings on Newfoundlands west coast to have electricity. Today its a stunning hotel. But what about all the years in between? The CBCs Colleen Connors takes us back in time.

On the bottom floor of the Corner Brook Museum, large pictures of Corner Brook, the paper mill and the Glynmill Inn are scattered across the walls.

Some treasures from the hotel's early days, including a gravy boat and silver platter, were donated to the museum, which also displays a dinner menu, printed on a small roll of paper, as an homage to the mill.

"Very opulent," George said.

The Glynmill Inn would have been one of the few places that had ample power, lit by lights and not lanterns.French says it got its power from the plant in Deer Lake that was part of the mill's construction.

It became a hotel in 1925, the same year the mill officially opened, when staff moved intotheir new homes in the townsite area of Corner Brook.

An old, green tinted picture of the hotel.
The Glynmill Inn was built in 1924 to house engineers and managers constructing the paper mill. It became a hotel in 1925. (CBC)

"I think it's very important. It's a landmark. Everybody knows what it looks like," said George.

"It certainly something people remember, because it's also service organizations that go there and have held events there."

In the Second World War, when the Bay of Islands Patrol was formed to provide naval protection for the region, the first meetings were held there, he said, and the Rotary Club meets there today.

A man standing next to pictures in a museum.
George French is the manager and archivist with the Corner Brook Museum. (Amy Feehan/CBC)

"It's certainly a focal point for the community."

Some of the original hotel rooms are still intact. The building has been through a fire, major renovations, and new owners, making the 100th anniversary especially important.

Rose says staff expect to be very busy this tourist summer season andhope to celebrate with a garden party in September and a New Year's Eve gala.

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