ALL THAT GLITTERS
AT THE HOTEL LEGER: Everything Old Is New Again "Just a job" took on a whole new spin twenty years ago when Jane Cantry met Ron Pitner. Jane was the bartender at the Leger (pronounced lah-jay). Ron the maintenance man. Love at first sight? Maybe. For certain, work became lots more fun. Still, no one could ever have guessed what fate had in store for them. Jane and Ron became a couple, then a married couple. Jane worked for three Leger owners, Ron for two. A familiar refrain around their house was seemingly a pipe dream, "Now, if that place were ours..." Jane's daughter, Ashley, grew up, graduated from Calaveras High School and high tailed it out of Dodge--I mean Mokelumne Hill. "I couldn't get out fast enough," she says today. "I wanted the big city life. She got it too. First Ashley went into retail, then interior design. But, of course, she came home often to visit her parents. Driving by the Leger, a place where she'd literally grown up, the interior decorator in Ashley saw its possibilities. "I felt the old building calling out: 'Save me! Save me! Make me pretty again!'" Suddenly, unexpectedly, opportunity did the Knock! Knock! thing. The rest is modern history. Jane, Ron and Ashley bought the hotel in November and the transformation began. What's followed is a renaissance. A year ago Mokelumne Hill was the town that time forgot, but once its centerpiece was reactivated the tempo changed. Four new businesses (a gallery, coffee house, brewery/beer garden and antique shop) have opened.
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Suddenly the slumbering village is a happening place.
ANCIENT HISTORY:
The courthouse section of the present building dates from 1855, the annex in back, also made of stone, from 1862. In late August of 1874 George Leger embellished his hotel with a new bar. It was said to be a gorgeous creation of black walnut, maple and laurel. The Calaveras Chronicle raved: "All the hotel lacks to make it equal to any house in our rival city of San Francisco is an elevator." Wow! Unfortunately, the building was gutted a week later in the Sept. 4 fire which raged through Mokelumne Hill. The hotel as we see it today dates from April 1875,
AND NOW A GREAT MARTINI:
Maybe you think it was Jane's pixie smile that first attracted Ron. But I suspect it was her prowess with a martini shaker. Whatever, the Leger's martinis are awesome. Perfect martinis are hard to come by. Here's Jane's cherished recipe: Put a martini glass on ice. Fill shaker three-fourths full. |
Add one-half ounce dry vermouth (Jane prefers Martini and Rossi). Swirl--don't shake--four times. Drain off vermouth. Pour in three ounces of your favorite gin. Swirl 17 times! Pour into chilled glass. Add two olives. Rim the glass lightly with olive juice. Enjoy!
IT GETS BETTER AND BETTER:
The Gold Rush Forum, an
ongoing series of cultural events, is
the Leger's newest attraction. More
later about award winner Jim
Spencer's short story workshop on
Sept. 20 and the two-day seminar and
fashion show, Celebrating The
Woman on Sept. 27-28th.
WHY ME?
I hope you'll share your news, interests, causes and concerns by calling 286-1320 or just dropping a note in the mailbox opposite the peach house on West Center. |