The Poconos are a well-known outdoor recreation destination for residents around the northeast, especially from
New York City and
Philadelphia. The region encompasses the
Delaware State Forest, including six designated natural areas, seven state parks, and seventeen state game lands. The
Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area is on the eastern edge of the Poconos and includes of wilderness. These resorts did not allow liquor or dancing, and evening dress was discouraged. The Quakers "brought a quiet, unostentatious style to the region," Buck Hill's stone facade became a model for close to 300 stately stone-and-shingle homes in the region. Buck Hill closed in 1990 and the Inn at Pocono Manor was mostly destroyed by fire in 2019. Skytop Lodge, built in 1928, is described as a "
Dutch Colonial–style
manor house". Designed in reaction to the Quaker resorts, it had a dance floor and served liquor in a basement bar. The Buckwood Inn opened in 1911 and included the first golf course to be designed by renowned golf architect
A. W. Tillinghast. Bandleader
Fred Waring purchased the resort in 1943, renamed it the
Shawnee Inn, and broadcast his radio shows from there. The Shawnee Inn is a
Spanish colonial revival building with white-Moorish architecture and Spanish tiled roofs,
Tamiment was a popular resort among Jewish singles from the working and emerging middle class and has been described as "a progressive version of the
Catskills..." The facility opened in 1921 to generate income for the
Rand School of Social Science, a Socialist school in New York. Tamiment Playhouse entertained resort guests with an original revue every Saturday night during the 10-week summer season, and many prominent Broadway and TV figures gained experience there. The playhouse was referred to as the "Poconos boot camp for Broadway writers and performers." The revues were discontinued in 1960 and the resort closed down in 2005. Unity House, a Pocono retreat, offered affordable vacations for factory workers. The resort was owned for seventy years by the
International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union, and it served as a staging ground for union activities. Ron Devlin of
The Morning Call referred to Unity House as a "blue-collar 'Hilton.'" The resort closed down in 1990, falling victim to changing times and declining union membership. Sally Moore of
Snow Country wrote, "Far from today's sybaritic accommodations, back then the rustic cabins required new brides to make the beds and tidy up while grooms helped with the dishes and did the heavy work."
Morris Wilkins, co-owner of Cove Haven, invented the heart-shaped bathtub in 1963 as a way to lure honeymoon customers. The tub would appear in other couples' resorts and became a symbol of the Pocono resort business. Author Lawrence Squeri wrote in 2002, "If Americans today are asked to name the image that best represents the Poconos, chances are that many will cite couples resorts and heart-shaped bathtubs..." Headliners, such as
Bob Hope,
Milton Berle, and
Connie Francis, performed in the Crystal Room, Mount Airy's 2,000-seat theater. Comedian
Mickey Freeman said, "The food was lousy, but it was a legalized orgy." The resort's heyday was in the 1960s and 1970s before closing in 2001. In the 1950s, the Kiesendahl family purchased a 12-bedroom boarding house along
Lake Teedyuskung. It became the Woodloch Resort and, as of 2014, it encompassed and accommodated 900 guests in a variety of lodgings.
Travel + Leisure identified the Lodge at Woodloch (founded in 2006) as the number 3 destination spa in the world. As of July 2015, there were four Pocono resorts with indoor water parks:
Great Wolf Lodge, H20ooohh! at Split Rock Resort, Aquatopia at
Camelback Mountain Resort, and
Kalahari Resort. In 2014 Jayne Clark of
USA Today wrote, "The former Honeymoon Capital of the World, the Poconos – rebranded in 2007 as the Pocono Mountains – continues to fine-tune its image as a family-friendly outdoor adventureland, health spa getaway and emerging waterpark capital." The
Mount Airy Casino Resort opened in October 2007 (on the site of the former Mount Airy Lodge) with about 2,500 slot machines. The owner,
Louis DeNaples, was later charged with perjury due to suspected ties with organized crime figures. He turned the resort over to his daughter and avoided prosecution.
Camping The Poconos are home to several
Scout camps.
Camp Minsi, owned by
the Boy Scouts' Minsi Trails Council, is centrally located in the Poconos on a property of in
Pocono Summit.
Camp Mosey Wood, owned by
the Girl Scouts Eastern Pennsylvania council, is located on a property of in
White Haven, Pennsylvania. Other Scout camps located in the Poconos include
the Goose Pond Scout Reservation (
Lake Ariel), the
Resica Falls Scout Reservation (
Marshalls Creek), and the
Trexler Scout Reservation (
Jonas). The Poconos are also home to several
Jewish summer camps, including
Camp Massad,
Camp Ramah, and
Pinemere Camp. Other non-denominational season summer camps include
Camp Lohikan,
Camp Watonka, and Pocono Springs Camp.
Racing in
Long Pond Pocono Raceway, a major automobile race track, is home to a
NASCAR Cup Series race, the
Pocono 400, in July. The track formerly hosted a second NASCAR Cup Series race, the
Pocono 325, and an
IndyCar race, the
Pocono 500. It also serves as a racing school, motorcycle track, and hosts club events. The two NASCAR weekends at Pocono are vital to the region for the tourism money it brings to the local economy. Pocono Raceway is the closest major professional race track to Philadelphia and the major metropolitan areas of New York and New Jersey.
Skiing in
Tannersville Skiing was a $230 million per year industry in the Poconos and in 1987 accounted for one-quarter of the region's tourist business. Pennsylvania native John Guresh, a Big Boulder Ski Resort employee, is credited for bringing the ski industry to the Poconos. In the winter of 1956–57, he invented a machine "resembling a lawn sprinkler atop a sled" to generate artificial snow. Joyce Gemperlein of
The Philadelphia Inquirer wrote, "Until Guresh perfected snowmaking at Big Boulder, skiing in the Poconos was a relatively minor sport." Ski resorts in the region could not rely on natural snow and, according to Big Boulder manager Ken Knize, there were times when conditions were right for skiing only two weeks a year. Cal Conniff, president of the National Ski Areas Association, regarded Guresh as "one of the pioneers" of the U.S. ski industry. • Alpine Mountain - now closed. •
Blue Mountain Resort — is one of the most popular ski resorts in Pennsylvania with 39 trails, 13 lifts and of elevation gain. •
Camelback Mountain Resort — The second-highest number of ski runs in the Poconos and one of the more popular ski areas and peaks over . •
Jack Frost Mountain and Big Boulder — Both resorts are owned by the same parent company. Jack Frost caters to more traditional family skiing, while Big Boulder is largely focused on terrain park skiing and snowboarding. •
Montage Mountain Ski Resort — formerly known as "Snö Mountain". •
Shawnee Mountain Ski Area — closest to New York City, just across the Delaware River from New Jersey, suited for families and beginners. • Ski Big Bear == Notable natives and residents ==