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Popular bed and breakfast is historic jewel
By Sharon Hicks, Special to KP News
Situated in a serene surrounding on a hillside
overlooking quiet Glen Cove is the Olde Glencove Hotel,
established in 1896. Current owners Luciann and Larry
Nadeau restored the historic building more than three
decades ago, saving it from demolition.

Old Glencove Hotel owner Luciann and Larry
Nadeau
Photo by
Karina Whitmarsh |
The land was owned by Capt.
Winchester and later purchased by Nicholas Petersen with
the dream of building a hotel to support his wife,
Agnes, and daughter, Louise.
This grand old building was a huge
undertaking at that time and was constructed by using
“balloon framing” from the ground up; the trees cut had
to be big enough for the lumber. It was the only
Victorian structure in the area. The steamship
“Messenger” (part of the Mosquito Fleet on which Capt.
Winchester arrived) delivered all the lumber and
building supplies. Luciann says, “Petersen himself made
all the bricks used in construction and some remain to
this day.”
Upon Petersen’s death, the hotel
went to Louise. It continued as a hotel until its
closure in 1930, when it became utilized as a private
residence for Louise, her husband and two children. An
additional building was built with seven bedrooms. Each
had its own running water but no toilet other than a
central one to accommodate all rooms.
In 1972, Luciann and Larry Nadeau
purchased the property and decided to revive it by
restoring it to a hotel and keeping the original
architecture. Luciann recalls, “Our first guest was the
(original) owner of O’Callahan’s.”

Photo by Karina
Whitmarsh |
About 20 years ago, she and Larry
changed it to a “bed and breakfast” consisting of one
guest room and later a second one. Currently they have
four: two upstairs and two in an attached addition.
The Olde Glencove served as a
stopover for many salesmen and Tacoma weekenders who
traveled by steamboat until the 1920s, when roads were
being built on the peninsula.
The current owners have maintained
the antique hotel by furnishing it in Victorian décor
and antiques, which has been an ongoing task for 35
years. A variety of memorabilia is part of the décor,
including an old-fashioned wood telephone with a March
1949 Peninsula phone book, published by Sound Telephone
Co. and containing many familiar names of early
residents.
Larry’s hobby is stained glass, so
when he restored the main door window, he inserted a
beautiful rose circle, leaving the original stained
glass perimeter intact. One of the popular attractions
is the gazebo they built several years ago for weddings.
The gazebo is located by a quiet pond with fountain. A
unique fairytale “secret garden” is also an addition to
the grounds and can be viewed mostly from one of the
guest rooms.

Photo by Karina
Whitmarsh |
Nadeau says, “While most clients
arrive by car, a few will travel by private boat and
recently a couple arrived in a kayak. Guests usually
stay from overnight to as long as five days.” The hotel
has seen as many as 12 guests at a time, usually when a
party arrives for a wedding.
On May 22, 1978, the Olde Glencove
Hotel was entered into the National Register of Historic
Places, making it a true part of local history due to
its unique architecture. This grand old hotel had
endured three family generations before the Nadeaus took
it under their care. Luciann and Larry Nadeau plan to
live at the property for the rest of their lives — or,
as Luciann puts it, “until they carry me out feet first
or God willing, the creek
don’t rise.”

Photo by Karina
Whitmarsh |

Photo by Karina
Whitmarsh |
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