Search the web
Sign In
New User? Sign Up
NatNews · Native News: Up to the minute news and i
? Already a member? Sign in to Yahoo!

Yahoo! Groups Tips

Did you know...
Want to share photos of your group with the world? Add a group photo to Flickr.

Best of Y! Groups

   Check them out and nominate your group.

Messages

  Messages Help
Advanced
The Tee Pee Motel in Texas   Message List  
Reply Message #45949 of 49934 |
http://www.kansascity.com/270/story/284202.html

Posted on Sat, Sep. 22, 2007

Lottery winner invests in a piece of national nostalgia: The Tee Pee Motel
in Texas

By MONICA RHOR
The Associated Press

WHARTON, Texas | A bit of American history — quirky and curious, but
history nonetheless — huddles next to old U.S. 59, past the tractor dealers
and the rice mills, just before a green sign that proclaims Wharton’s
population of 9,237.

It’s easy to miss. But it is there, just around the bend: a row of 10
freshly painted, sand-colored tepees.

As in the Tee Pee Motel, a throwback to the 1940s and ’50s, when taking a
drive was still in style and roadside businesses used gimmicky architecture
— like a gas station that looked like an oil derrick — to lure customers.
The Tee Pee Motel is one of a handful of tepee-themed lodges left.

For years, however, Wharton’s Tee Pee Motel was little more than gutted
shells engulfed by a tangle of overgrown weeds and a broken sign that once
beckoned guests with neon lights and an image of an American Indian chief.

Then, a diesel mechanic named Bryon Woods won $49 million in the Texas
lottery in July 2003.

Four months later Woods and his wife, Barbara, were driving by the ruins of
the Tee Pee Motel, about 50 miles southwest of Houston, when Barbara Woods
piped up.

“I want to stay there,” she said. “Let’s buy it and renovate it.”

The Woodses bought the 10-acre property for $60,000 and spent the next two
years and $1.6 million sweeping away the cobwebs and debris, remodeling,
painting and fixing the neon sign.

“This wasn’t about making money. It’s having something no one else has,”
said Woods, 42, whose grandmother was Comanche. “This is a piece of Texas
history.”

Barbara Woods and her sister decorated, adorning each of the tepees with
American Indian artifacts purchased at powwows and covering beds with
handmade quilts.

Modern conveniences were added: barbecue grills outside each room,
air-conditioning units jutting from the exterior walls and high speed
Internet and satellite TV in each tepee. The Tee Pee Motel reopened for
business in October 2006.

Soon couples who had spent their honeymoons at the Tee Pee Motel were
paying the $52.50 a night to celebrate their golden anniversaries there.
Adults who had pined to sleep inside the tepees as children came back to
fulfill that long-ago yearning.

Usually, Woods said, once a family stops to get a motel brochure, they’re
hooked.

“We see a lot of families come out here. The kids love it,” Woods said.
“They are running around, saying ‘I’m staying at the Tee Pee Motel!’”

The Tee Pee Motel is at 4098 North U.S. 59 in Wharton, Texas, about 50
miles southwest of Houston. Nightly rates for two: $52.50, additional
guests $5. Pets welcome; $25 deposit. 979-282-8474, teepeemotel.bravehost.
com or myspace.com/ teepeemotel.



Wed Sep 26, 2007 12:00 pm

rvsjr
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email

Message #45949 of 49934 |
Expand Messages Author Sort by Date

http://www.kansascity.com/270/story/284202.html Posted on Sat, Sep. 22, 2007 Lottery winner invests in a piece of national nostalgia: The Tee Pee Motel in...
Robert Schmidt
rvsjr
Offline Send Email
Sep 26, 2007
12:03 pm
Advanced

Copyright © 2010 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy - Terms of Service - Guidelines - Help