The area was inhabited by
Mahicans,
Algonquian speakers who largely lived along the Hudson and Housatonic Rivers. Hostilities during the
French and Indian Wars discouraged settlement by European colonial settlers until 1750, when Jonathan and Sarah Hinsdale from
Hartford, Connecticut, established a small inn and general store. The
Province of Massachusetts Bay thereupon auctioned large tracts of land for 10 townships in Berkshire County, set off in 1761 from
Hampshire County. For 2,250 pounds Josiah Dean purchased Lot Number 8, which included present-day Lenox and
Richmond. After conflicting land claims were resolved, however, it went to Samuel Brown Jr., who had bought the land from the
Mahican chief, on condition that he pay 650 pounds extra. It was founded as Richmond in 1765. But because
the Berkshires divided the town in two, the village of Yokuntown (named for an
indigenous chief) was set off as Lenox in 1767. The town was intended to be called
Lennox, probably after
Charles Lennox, 3rd Duke of Richmond and Lennox (
Scottish Gaelic Leamhnachd), but the name was misspelled by a clerk at incorporation. Early industries included
farming,
sawmills,
textile mills,
potash production,
glassworks, and
quarrying. A vein of
iron ore led to the digging of
mines under the town, and the establishment by Job Gilbert in the 1780s of an
iron works at Lenox Dale, also known as Lenox Furnace. In 1784, Lenox became the county seat, which it remained until 1868 when the title passed to Pittsfield. The county courthouse built in 1816 is today the Lenox Library. The region's rustic beauty helped Lenox develop into an
art colony. In 1821, author
Catharine Sedgwick moved here, followed by actress
Fanny Kemble.
Nathaniel Hawthorne and his family came from
Salem in 1850, staying a year and a half. Other visitors to the area, including
Timothy Dwight,
Benjamin Silliman and
Henry Ward Beecher, extolled its advantages. After an extension of the
Housatonic Railroad arrived in 1838, tourists discovered the town in increasing numbers. In 1844,
Samuel Gray Ward of
Boston, the American representative for
Barings Bank of London, assembled tracts of land to create the first estate in Lenox. Called
Highwood, the
Italianate dwelling was designed in 1845 by
Richard Upjohn. In 1876, Ward hired
Charles F. McKim to design in the
Shingle Style another property,
Oakwood. The period from 1880 until 1920 would be dubbed the Berkshire Cottage era, when the small
New England town was transformed into a
Gilded Age resort similar to
Newport, Rhode Island, and
Bar Harbor, Maine. The wealthy and their entourage opened immense houses for recreation and entertaining during the Berkshire Season, which lasted from late summer until early fall. One event was the annual Tub Parade, when Main Street was lined with ornately decorated carriages. Property values jumped as millionaires competed for land on which to build showplaces. In 1903, an acre in Lenox cost $20,000, when an acre in nearby towns cost a few dollars. The imposition of the
federal income tax in 1913 ended construction of the country mansions in the Berkshires. The estates started to break up during the 1920s. Carnegie's widow sold Shadowbrook to the
Jesuits for a seminary in 1922. The
Depression made it harder to maintain the estates, and labor was scarce during
World War II. After the war, some of the estates were torn or burned down. Others became schools or seminaries. Some estates became
preparatory schools, although they would close by the 1970s and 1980s. The Shadowbrook property is now the Kripalu
yoga center; another,
The Mount, is the former home of
Shakespeare & Company. Some have been converted into vacation
condominiums. Tanglewood, the former estate of the Tappan family which lies partially in Stockbridge, would in 1937 become summer home to the Boston Symphony Orchestra. Lenox remains a popular tourist destination. It was a filming location for
Before and After (1996) and
The Cider House Rules (1999), which was shot at
Ventfort Hall Mansion and Gilded Age Museum. Image:Lenox Library, Lenox, MA.jpg|Lenox Library Image:Bellefontaine, Lenox, MA.jpg|
Bellefontaine in 1912 Image:Curtis Hotel, Lenox, MA.jpg|Curtis Hotel Image:Shadowbrook, Lenox, MA.jpg|
Shadowbrook in 1908 Image:Lenox High School, Lenox MA.jpg|Lenox High School, 1908 building ==Geography==