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Stickney Inn
Horace Stickney built the Stickney Inn and Store in 1929 at mile marker 78.75 in Schroeder, Minnesota. The two-story Tudor Revival-style building is located on the south side of the scenic North Shore Drive (Highway 61) near the west bank of the Cross River and is situated on .47 acres. After a 2002 renovation, the building became the Cross River Heritage Center, operated by the Schroeder Area Historical Society.
In 1921, Horace T. Stickney (1885–1983) purchased a thirteen-acre parcel of land along the Cross River in Schroeder from Hedley Redmyer. The parcel had been part of the Schroeder Lumber Company’s logging camp.
At the time of the purchase, the property included the logging superintendent’s frame house, a shed, an office building, and a log bunkhouse. Stickney called it a “depressed place” because of past logging and the burned landscape. His first store, built in 1922, burned down when the gas stove malfunctioned during food preparation.
After the fire, local artisans and an unnamed architect helped Stickney build a new structure featuring prominent, half-timbered gables. On June 6, 1929, the Cook County News Herald reported that the Stickney Inn featured bedrooms and a large dining room as well as a confectionary and store. The first floor had a grocery store, a kitchen, a post office, a dining room, and a living room with a large stone fireplace. The second floor had seven tourist bedrooms for 15–20 people. It was one of the first buildings in Schroeder to have indoor bathrooms.
Soon, Stickney received requests for cabin rentals. In 1930, he built a log cabin, measuring sixteen by twenty feet, behind the inn overlooking the Cross River. After he completed a second cabin, a Minnesota tourism pamphlet described the site as “Stickney’s Resort.” By 1936, Stickney had built eight cabins with views of the river and the shores of Lake Superior.
The inn served as a Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) winter headquarters for workers who arrived on the North Shore in 1933. They constructed 135 miles of telephone line, forty miles of truck lines, thirty bridges, three dams, and sixteen Forest Service buildings. The single-lane steel bridge (built in 1915) over the Cross River was replaced in 1932.
A small sign on Highway 61 advertised the Stickney Store and Cabins. It was a destination on the North Shore, and the Northland Bus Depot maintained a depot stop at the inn throughout the 1940s and 1950’s.
The Stickneys did not offer organized activities; tourists were attracted to the hikes, trout fishing, and games of horseshoes. The inn did have an ample living room and a piano used for songfests and dancing. Author Florence Page Jacques wrote about her visit to the Stickney Inn and Store on November 13, 1942. She noted that she was surprised to see the inn’s three modern bathrooms and to stay warm in the snug, airtight building.
Horace and Nell Stickney sold the inn to Horace’s nephew, Harry Stickney Lamb (1909–1971), in 1955. Harry and Doris Mae Lamb (1913–2003) moved to Schroeder in December 1954. After Harry Lamb became postmaster in 1955, they renamed the inn Lamb’s Resort.
In the early 1950s, the Erie Mining Company started construction of a taconite loading facility 2.5 miles south of Lamb’s Resort. Harry Lamb made an agreement with the ore carriers to supply them with groceries.
The third generation to live and work in the Stickney/Lamb store took over in 1965. Harry Lamb’s son, Horace “Skip” Lamb, purchased the resort with his wife, Linda.
In 1976, the Lambs separated the Stickney Inn and Store from the resort property and sold the inn to Bill and Gloria Jordon. The Lambs moved the post office into the empty Pure Oil Station. The Jordons named their purchase Cross River General Store.
The Minnesota Department of Transportation (MnDOT) condemned the inn and store in preparation for highway repairs and bridge replacement in 1998.The Schroeder Area Historical Society persuaded MnDOT to transfer the title of the Stickney Inn and Store building to the Town of Schroeder in 1998. With secured funding and volunteer support, the Schroeder Area Historical Society completed the building’s restoration in 2002 and began operating the building as Cross River Heritage Center.

Bibliography
Bell, Mary T. Cutting Across Time: Logging, Rafting and Milling the Forests of Lake Superior. Minneapolis: Nodin Press, 1999.
Livdahl, Barbara Smith. Schroeder Area History …As Shared By Those Who Lived It. Schroeder, MN: Schroeder Area Historical Society, 2010.
Schroeder Area Historical Society newsletters, 1997–2016
Archival Collection, Schroeder Area Historical Society, Schroeder
“North Shore a Winter Resort.” Cook County News-Herald, December 27, 1928.
Humphrey, M. M. Interview with Horace Stickney, June 28, 1980.
Oral History Collection, Cook County Historical Society, Grand Marais
Description: Digital audio recording and transcript of oral history interview with Horace Stickney.
Niewald, Earl. Interview with Horace Stickney, May 22, 1977.
Oral History Collection, Cook County Historical Society, Grand Marais
Description: Cassette recording of oral history interview with Horace Stickney.
Related Resources
Primary
“Locals.” Cook County News Herald, June 6, 1929.
Lucas, Amy L. “Stickney Inn and Store”. (CK-SCH-007) National Register of Historic Places Evaluation of Significance. Landscape Research LLC Minneapolis, Minnesota, March 2015.
Zankman, Pat. Interview with Horace “Skip” Lamb, October 10, 2002.
Oral History Collection, Cook County Historical Society, Grand Marais
Description: Digital recording and transcript of oral history interview with Horace Lamb.
Web
Cross River Heritage Center.
http://www.crossriverheritage.org
Related Images

Stickney Inn and Store, looking east
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First Stickney Store, facing east
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Stickney Inn and Store, facing east
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Stickney Inn and Store, living room
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Exterior of Stickney’s grocery store
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Stickney’s Cabins
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Stickney Inn and Store, facing south
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Stickney Inn and Store, facing south, from Cramer Road
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Sign on Highway 61 marking “Stickney’s Cabins & Store”
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Interior of Stickney’s grocery store
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Lamb’s Resort
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Stickney Inn and Store dining room
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Lamb’s Resort with laundry and grocery
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Stickney Inn and Store as the Cross River General Store
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Stickney Inn and Store, north elevation
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Stickney Inn and Store, east elevation
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Stickney Inn and Store, south elevation
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Stickney Inn and Store, first floor living room
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Stickney Inn and Store, second floor bedroom
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Stickney Inn, second floor stair
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Stickney Inn and Store, basement
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Related Articles
Turning Point
The stock market crashes in October 1929, leaving Stickney unable to pay his bills. He receives a financial boost when construction workers building the telephone lines along Highway 61 spend the winter of 1929 at his inn.
Chronology
1922
1923
1925
1928
1929
1930s
1954
1955
1957
1950’s
1965
1976
1986
1998
2002
Bibliography
Bell, Mary T. Cutting Across Time: Logging, Rafting and Milling the Forests of Lake Superior. Minneapolis: Nodin Press, 1999.
Livdahl, Barbara Smith. Schroeder Area History …As Shared By Those Who Lived It. Schroeder, MN: Schroeder Area Historical Society, 2010.
Schroeder Area Historical Society newsletters, 1997–2016
Archival Collection, Schroeder Area Historical Society, Schroeder
“North Shore a Winter Resort.” Cook County News-Herald, December 27, 1928.
Humphrey, M. M. Interview with Horace Stickney, June 28, 1980.
Oral History Collection, Cook County Historical Society, Grand Marais
Description: Digital audio recording and transcript of oral history interview with Horace Stickney.
Niewald, Earl. Interview with Horace Stickney, May 22, 1977.
Oral History Collection, Cook County Historical Society, Grand Marais
Description: Cassette recording of oral history interview with Horace Stickney.
Related Resources
Primary
“Locals.” Cook County News Herald, June 6, 1929.
Lucas, Amy L. “Stickney Inn and Store”. (CK-SCH-007) National Register of Historic Places Evaluation of Significance. Landscape Research LLC Minneapolis, Minnesota, March 2015.
Zankman, Pat. Interview with Horace “Skip” Lamb, October 10, 2002.
Oral History Collection, Cook County Historical Society, Grand Marais
Description: Digital recording and transcript of oral history interview with Horace Lamb.
Web
Cross River Heritage Center.
http://www.crossriverheritage.org