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Mountain Pines Campground in Champion celebrates 100 years

By Alyssa Choiniere for The newsroom@heraldstandard.Com 5 min read
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Mountain Pines Campground has Pennsylvania鈥檚 largest pool at 278 by 153 feet.

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Mountain Pines Campground in Champion is celebrating 100 years in operation.

One of the oldest campgrounds in the country is celebrating its 100th anniversary.

Mountain Pines Campground was born as the Newill鈥檚 Grove Picnic Area in 1922. It was built by Dr. Domer S. Newill as a way to give back to the community of Champion.

In those days, much like today, the Laurel Highlands was an escape from the hustle and bustle of daily life. Wealthy Pittsburgh residents made summer homes in the Laurel Highlands before the turn of the century, thanks to the nation鈥檚 first federally funded highway. The National Road, now known as Route 40, was built in 1811. Travelers followed the National Road to the mountains and traded hot summer days for mountain breezes in the days before electricity.

The campground changed owners and names over the century, but the reasons people leave the city to immerse themselves in nature stayed the same.

鈥淓ven though the campsite has changed and gotten bigger, the underlying passion is the love of the outdoors,鈥 said Forrest Johnson, Mountain Pines鈥 general manager. 鈥淵ou鈥檇 sit around a campfire, roast marshmallows, fish, do all the things you couldn鈥檛 do in the city. People could let their kids play outside because it was a safe environment.鈥

Johnson saw a job posting for Mountain Pines 15 years ago, and moved from the White Mountains in New Hampshire to the Laurel Highlands. He noted the imprint the campground has left in the minds of locals.

鈥淎 lot of people I鈥檝e run into over the years have said, 鈥極h, I learned how to skate in your skating rink. I learned how to swim in your pool,鈥 Johnson said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 a lot of people鈥檚 memory of us.鈥

Many locals remember it as Cutty鈥檚 Campground, owned by Bette and Clair 鈥淐urly鈥 Shaffer from 1968 until Curly鈥檚 death in 1980.

Cutty鈥檚 became Alpine Valley in the 鈥80s and Mountain Pines in the 鈥90s. Before it was Cutty鈥檚, it was Maple Grove, the name it was given when Linda Rose started camping there as a young mother in the mid 鈥60s.

She and her husband rented a pop-up camper with their 3-year-old son and parked next to her parents鈥 motorhome. She chuckled at a memory of her first night camping.

鈥淎t 3 o鈥檆lock in the morning, I heard this cry, and he had fallen out of the back of the camper because it was just cloth. He was wanting to get back in,鈥 she said.

Despite the minor mishap, that night started a four-generation family tradition. Rose鈥檚 daughter, born a few years later, became a lifelong camper. One of Rose鈥檚 granddaughters got a job at the campground, and another granddaughter bought a campsite behind her grandma.

鈥淭hey all grew up there. We had lots of friends, had fires together,鈥 she said.

There were only about 100 campsites at Maple Grove. Now, there are more than 800. Rose remembers when a wooded area on the grounds was a ballfield.

鈥淭here was not one tree there. We watched those trees grow for 50 years, and now they鈥檙e huge,鈥 she said.

She has fond memories of unconventional potlucks with about 20 campers who became lifelong friends. They would load up garbage cans with kielbasa and other favorites for a family-style feast.

She still spends summer weekends at Mountain Pines, and upgraded her campsite to a home with a deck near the pool 鈥 Pennsylvania鈥檚 largest at 278 by 153 feet.

It was built in 1938, and the nearby boardwalk was the place to be in the small town. It was lined with shops on both sides and had activities every night 鈥 skate parties for the kids and bingo for the adults. A jukebox set the stage for local teens to mix and mingle with out-of-town visitors.

While Rose and other parents were watching their kids in the pool, teens and young adults had their eyes on each other.

鈥淭here鈥檚 quite a few that met up there and got married,鈥 Rose said.

While one generation was finding spouses, Joe Sarnelli found a business opportunity. He said the campground changed the course of his life when he took his family camping in the 1970s. The campground was packed, but there were no stores nearby.

He opened Sarnelli鈥檚 Corner Market in 1978 at the intersection of Routes 31 and 711 near the campground. It was so successful that he closed his first location, about 25 miles away in south Greensburg.

鈥淲e鈥檝e been here on this corner 44 years,鈥 Sarnelli said.

His customer base started with campers, but visitors come to the area year-round. Three ski resorts draw winter sports enthusiasts. The Youghiogheny River draws white water rafters, kayakers and fisherman. Bicyclists come for the Great Allegheny Passage. Hikers and backpackers visit for the Laurel Highlands Hiking Trail. Rock climbers and sightseers visit Ohiopyle State Park. Architecture aficionados know the area as a mecca for Frank Lloyd Wright鈥檚 Fallingwater and Kentuck Knob.

Mountain Pines will hold its 100th anniversary celebration Friday and Saturday, Aug. 12 and 13, which will include fireworks and a band, Drew Nugent and the Midnight Society. Local officials will hold a ribbon cutting, and longtime campers will have the chance to reminisce.

鈥淭he campground brought us up here, and we met a lot of great people from all over,鈥 Sarnelli said. 鈥淲e have good memories with that place.鈥

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