The 'Belton Chalets' are a group of historic
hotel buildings in the village of
West Glacier,
Montana, near the western entrance to
Glacier National Park. The chalet buildings were built in 1910-11 by the
Great Northern Railway (GN) as the first component of the railroad's ambitious program of hotel, road, and trail construction in Glacier. The buildings featured a "Swiss Chalet" architectural style that set the style for much of the Great Northern's building program in Glacier. Ultimately, the site included five buildings, including a dining hall and a hotel facility.
During the 1910s and 1920s the Belton Chalet was operated by the
Glacier Park Hotel Company, the GN subsidiary responsible for the railroad's concession operations in Glacier. The property was less successful than the GN's other Glacier facilities, however, probably due to its remoteness from the park's other railway-operated hotels, and by the 1930s it saw only intermittent use. The railway sold the chalet buildings in
1946, and the main hotel building stood empty for most of the next five decades, while a cafe and bar intermittently operated in the old dining hall. In
1997 ,the property was acquired by new owners who undertook a $1 million restoration of the entire complex, and the hotel reopened beginning with the
1998 summer season.
[1] The chalet buildings were designated as a
National Historic Landmark in
2000.
References
★ Djuff, Ray, and Chris Morrison. ''View with a Room: Glacier's Historic Hotels and Chalets''. Helena, Montana: Farcountry Press, 2001. ISBN 1-56037-170-6.
★ Ober, Michael J. "Enmity and Alliance: Park Service-Concessioner Relations in Glacier National Park, 1892-1961." MA Thesis, University of Montana, 1973.