Size: 43 X 66 and
26 X 20 (4740 square feet)
Constructed: 1936
Levels: two story with
attached log carriage house
Misc: Hand hewn, american chestnut, wormy chestnut, oak,
chinked style, dovetail joinery
The Thayer Lodge is a 4740 square foot hunting lodge
that was originally constructed in 1936 high atop a ridge
overlooking Charleston, West Virginia. The man who commissioned the
lodge was Dr. Cannady - the founder of Charleston General Hospital.
In addition to Dr. Cannady, West Virginia Governor Holt also lived
in the lodge for a brief period while the executive mansion was
being restored. The ridge top location of the lodge, as well as its
copper shingle roof, turned the whole building into a veritable
lightning rod during summer storms. The lightning strikes, and first
hand reports of ghost sightings from the lodges last reclusive
resident, Mrs. Elma Smith Thayer (who lived there from 1981 to 1995)
lead to the local belief that the lodge was haunted.
The lodge is now fully disassembled, marked and stored
in a warehouse just outside of Charleston. The two-story lodge has 7
bedrooms, and an attached log carriage house. The great room has a
cathedral ceiling with large, exposed log trusses and balconies on
both ends. The antique windows, red wood shutters and black iron
strapped doors have also been salvaged.
If you are interested in this property, please contact
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