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Sperry Chalet

Sperry Chalet
General information
Elevation 6,500 ft (2,000 m)
Owner

National Park Service

Sperry Chalet
SperryChaletBW.jpg
Sperry Chalet - The initials under the gable are "GNRy," for Great Northern Railway
Sperry Chalet is located in Montana
Sperry Chalet
Sperry Chalet is located in the US
Sperry Chalet
Nearest city West Glacier, Montana
Coordinates 48°36′16″N 113°47′08″W / 48.60444°N 113.78556°W / 48.60444; -113.78556Coordinates: 48°36′16″N 113°47′08″W / 48.60444°N 113.78556°W / 48.60444; -113.78556
Built 1913
Built by Great Northern Railway
Architect Cutter & Malmgren
NRHP Reference # 77000115
Added to NRHP August 2, 1977

National Park Service

Sperry Chalet is located about seven miles east of Lake McDonald in Glacier National Park in the U.S. state of Montana. The chalet was opened in 1914 by the Great Northern Railway and is a National Historic Landmark contributing property, being one of five structures in the Great Northern Railway Buildings National Historic Landmark. Along with Granite Park Chalet, Sperry Chalet is one of the two remaining backcountry chalets in Glacier National Park, both operated by Belton Chalets, Inc.

The chalet is reached only by trail, via hiking or horseback. One of the two trails leading to the chalet are the Sperry Trail, which starts at the Lake McDonald Lodge parking lot and stretches 6.7 miles to the chalet, climbing 3200 feet in the process. The trail passes along the base of Mount Brown and over the west ridge of Mount Edwards, with views of U-shaped valleys along the way. A side trip to Sperry Glacier is also possible, being a 4-mile hike (8 miles round trip). The other means of accessing the chalet is via the Gunsight Trail, which is a 12.1-mile hike from the Jackson Glacier Overlook on Going-to-the-Sun Road. This hike averages 9 hours, so it is important to plan ahead.

The chalet, nestled in a glacial cirque, consists of two buildings from the Great Northern era: a two-story hotel building and a kitchen/dining room building. A restroom facility has been added, but is not part of the historic landmark designation. The dormitory building, completed in 1913, is built with random rubble masonry, providing a feel of architectural ruggedness, and is topped with a large gable roof that has two dormers on either side. The kitchen building, completed in 1912, is also made of random rubble masonry, but uses smaller stones and appears less striking in its design. The kitchen building is topped with a lower gable roof.


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Wikipedia

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