Viewfinder: Historic Jim Thorpe
The wonderfully preserved Victorian architecture of Jim Thorpe, Carbon County, is a stunning testament to the ingenuity of 19th century craftsmen and one of the reasons thousands of tourists visit the town each year.
Jim Thorpe is an easy and worthwhile day trip for residents of the Lehigh Valley.
Located about an hour north of Allentown and Bethlehem, this picuresque Carbon County borough was the seat of an anthracite coal empire in the 19th century, when it was known as Mauch Chunk.
The preserved Italianate mansion of coal baron Asa Packer, who founded Bethlehem's Lehigh University, remains one of Jim Thorpe's most recognizable landmarks.
Because of its location in a deep valley along the banks of the Lehigh River, Jim Thorpe acquired the nickname "Switzerland of America" not long after its founding in the early 1800s, and the Hotel Switzerland is another well-known downtown landmark. The famed Mauch Chunk Switchback Railway, which was a 9-mile gravity railway that operated until 1938 as an early rollercoaster, also contributed to the town's mountainous mystique.
Mauch Chunk was re-christened Jim Thorpe in the 1950s, as part of a bid to help bring recognition to the turn-of-the-century Native American athlete Jim Thorpe, who was infamously stripped of his Olympic gold medals in 1912.
Thorpe, who died destitute and largely forgotten in 1953, is buried on the outskirts of town in a mausoleum located at the center of a small memorial park. As of 2010, his son, Jack, was attempting to have his father's remains disinterred and returned to Oklahoma, where Jim Thorpe was born in 1888.
Mark Albright
6:59 am on Sunday, February 5, 2012
My wife and I have spent many enjoyable getaway weekends in Jim Thorpe. I was a bit surprised to learn that Jim Thorpe was a pretty key industrial center of the 1800s - sort of the 'Silicon Valley' of its day. Between canals, mining and railroads, the town boasted one of the highest concentrations of millionaires in the country in its heyday.
Chris/Oil Man
10:44 am on Sunday, February 5, 2012
Man the railroad at that town is really historic with reading and northern which was back in the late 60's 70's and 80's which were great times for the reading lines for running coal around pannsylavania and all around the lehigh valley that railroad is really important it's a good thing they tuned it into a tour ride around the mountains so you can see historic things by the moutain awesome place to vist i would reccomend by the oil man