Category Archives: Hotels and Motels

Lone Oak Motel in Toccoa, Georgia was the Final Home of R&B singer Dee Clark

The Lone Oak Motel is an abandoned motel outside of Toccoa, Georgia. Built in 1941, it seems to have been in use until 2021. Tax records indicate it was sold in 2024, so its future is unknown. It could be restored, demolished, or continue to languish.

When I researched the motel’s history, I found out it was the final home of the singer Delecta “Dee” Clark (1938-1990), who sang the 1961 hit “Raindrops.” The song reached number 2 on the Hot 100 chart. You can hear the song here.

One of the things I love researching is unexpected or hidden stories. When I found the article about Dee’s death, I did some research about him and found that he had an interracial cover in 1961. If any music history people know more about this cover, please share.

Once Listed in The Green Book, the Mrs. Octavia Jones Tourist Home Still Stands in Spartanburg, South Carolina

Dean Street was the heart of Black business and life in Spartanburg, South Carolina. Octavia Jones and her husband, Gilbert, lived at 255 N. Dean Street. By the 1939 Negro Motorist Green Book, their address is listed as one of several tourist homes (a residence where the owners would rent out rooms their rooms to travelers) on Dean Street. A garage is also listed at this address. I wonder if that was situated behind the home.

The 1939 entry on Spartanburg, Siuth Carolina in The Negro Motorist Green Book

Ancestry records indicate that Mrs. Jones died in 1951, and Mr. Jones died in 1954. Despite this, the O. Jones Tourist Home is still listed in The Green Book as late as 1962.

The 1950 Census Record

While researching Octavia Jones, I found an interesting tidbit in the census records. This is the only time I can recall a wife being listed as head when the husband is still alive. I am intrigued to know if there is a story or not.

The Childhood Home of Alex Haley in Henning, Tennessee

Alex Haley was born in Ithaca, New York, in 1921. Very early, he moved with his family to his maternal grandparents’ house in Henning, Tennessee. This 1918 American Craftsman served as a home base for the family for the next five years. It is also where Haley would hear the stories of his ancestors and other relatives. These stories inspired him to write Roots

The home was initially known as the WE Palmer because his grandfather was a successful businessman in town, and he built the home. The home was fully restored, and the furniture used by the family is in the house. The house was put in the National Re

Cleveland DeLuxe Cottages-A Georgia Motel with a Connection to the Cabbage Patch Kids

On the northwest outskirts of Cleveland, Georgia, you will drive past a sign that says, “You just passed BabyLand.” When I passed the sign, I immediately looked to my right to see through the trees an abandoned building. The allure of an abandoned building and the possible former home of the Cabbage Patch Kids caused me to turn around immediately.

As someone who did not collect Cabbage Patch Dolls, I was unaware of what BabyLand looked like, but I was immediately perplexed by what the building was. It did not seem to be a place where baby dolls could be adopted. It turns out this mid-century modern building with its breezeblock window and octagonal bay windows started out as the Cleveland Deluxe Cottages.

An article in The New York Times about the filming of I’d Climb the Highest Mountain in the north Georgia mountains sent me to research more about the Cleveland DeLuxe Cottages. Grady Johnson (1950) writes that the population of White County doubled its population of 6,000 during filming. He shares, “Incidentally, these headquarters, the Cleveland DeLuxe Cottages, are a story in themselves–a $300,000 anomaly in the mountains built by reckless Grady Carpenter, who was lured back from Augusta to help save his home town [sic] from financial ruin.”

May 20, 1946 advertisement in The Atlanta Journal

So, why did the author state he was reckless? My guess is that it is because of Carpenter’s storied past. It seems Carpenter got himself into a bit of trouble in Augusta. In 1934, the feds shut down his business for illegally selling alcohol and not paying taxes. By 1942, he was in trouble again with the federal government. This time, Solicitor General George Hains was trying to tackle the issue of “the war-aggravated problem of venereal disease.” He was trying to close down Carpenter’s tourist camp, Big Oak, in Augusta, which he described as ‘the last word in an up-to-date lewd house’ (The Macon Telegraph). Judge A. L. Franklin called it a ‘filthy cesspool of indecency.’ Carpenter challenged the ruling to the Richmond Superior Court, but they supported the decision. In 1944, Grady Carpenter was fined $10,000 and sentenced to two years in prison for violating whiskey sale laws.

1955 aerial view of the Cleveland DeLuxe Cottages

By 1946, Carpenter seemed to be out of prison because the tax records indicate that the main building of the DeLuxe Cottage was built and opened. By the 1960s, it was named Holiday Manor and became a place for locals to eat and have a good time. The dance floor was situated on a sand bar in the middle of the Little Tesnatee River. In 1988, Xavier Roberts (Harman, 1988), the designer and owner of the Cabbage Patch doll empire and Cleveland native, purchased Holiday Manor and renamed it the Villagio di Montagna. Roberts restored the motel and created a resort with an Olympic-sized pool, jacuzzi, and other amenities. Supposedly, no clocks were on the premises so guests could focus on the ultimate getaway. I am uncertain when the Villagio closed. Comments I’ve received elsewhere on social media was that it closed in late 1996.

Image in the July 13, 1991, Atlanta Constitution

The land is still owned by Original Appalachian Works, the company owned by Xavier Roberts.

Imperial Hotel-Atlanta, Georgia

Designed by architects Edward Daugherty and R. M.Walker, The Imperial Hotel was built in 1910. It cost $300,000 to build. There were 119 rooms and 59 individual baths.

The hotel was used until 1980 and then abandoned. It stayed vacant until the Olympics when the city turned it into low-income housing. In 2014, the hotel went under restoration. It reopened as housing for formerly homeless people and supportive housing for those with special needs.

Smoak House-Glenn Springs, South Carolina

The Smoak House once served as a boarding house for people who were traveling to Glenn Springs, South Carolina to experience the healing waters of the Glenn Springs. While the Glenn Spring Hotel was more known, the Smoak House provided easy access as it was across the street from the springs. The home was built in 1890. Based on ads, it doesn’t seem to have become a boarding house around 1910.

Undated image
September 6, 1914 advertisement in The State
May 7, 1922 advertisement in The State