SIAHMV_031209_058
Existing comment:
1930's
Roadside Communities: Ring's Rest, Muirkirk, Maryland
Cabins for Rent--Nightly rates only
As more people took to the road, clusters of roadside businesses sprang up to accommodate motorists' needs. By 1925, many tourists stayed in roadside cabins rather than at campsites or hotels. Hotel operators, worried that cabins were undermining their business, warned that the cabins were dens of vice and danger. FBI director J Edgar Hoover claimed that criminals used tourist cabins as hideouts. Still, auto courts became more and more popular. But as motorists began to look for consistency along the road, they patronized chain restaurants and motels instead of family-owned businesses.
Ring's Rest, located about 20 miles north of Washington DC, was one of the many small tourist courts scattered along US 1 from Maine to Florida. The Ringe family rented out four wooden cabins and owned a roadside store with gasoline pumps. Miles from the nearest town, the Ringe family lived within earshot of highway traffic, but in relative isolation. The only neighboring buildings were a general store, a railroad station, and a roadhouse.
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