Moonstone Hotel Properties Carmel River Inn

Carmel River Inn

 

    Highway One, Carmel, CA 93922, USA.  Tel (800) 966-6490 Fax (831) 624-0290 E-mail Info@CarmelRiverInn.Com

 
Carmel River Inn offers delightful cottage accommodation in Carmel Carmel River Inn in Carmel by the Sea CaliforniaJoin us at Carmel River Inn

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Cottages

Nestled throughout the 10-acre grounds of Carmel River Inn, each of our cottages is unique. Several feature a white-picket fence, others a wood-burning fireplace, and some have a kitchenette. All of our cottages are pet-friendly. Each of these eclectic cottages is named for a well-known character in California’s colorful history. Among these famous names, you will find such California historical icons as conservationist and photographer Ansel Adams, and controversial author Henry Miller.

Most of the cottages at Carmel River Inn feature:Cottage At Carmel River Inn

  • Fridge

  • Stove

  • Freezer

  • Coffee / Tea maker

  • Toaster

  • Microwave

  • Eating utensils

  • Dishware

  • Cooking utensils

  • Television and DVD Player

  • Cable TV

  • Sitting area

  • Dining area

  • Multiple rooms

  • Fireplace

  • Hair dryer

  • Telephone

  • Voicemail

  • Alarm clock

  • Separate water heater

  • Adjustable showers

  • Private Patio

  • Outdoor furniture

  • Individual gardens

  • Covered parking

  • Windshield washing station

  • Iron and Ironing board

  • Toiletries

  • Ice Bucket

  • Heater / Air conditioner

  • Access to the Heated Outdoor Swimming pool

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Ansel Adams Born in San Francisco on February 20, 1902, Ansel Adams was the only child of Olive and Charles. In 1916, on a family vacation, he visited Yosemite for the first time, and was to return there every year for the rest of his life. Although known and admired as a photographer and conservationist, Ansel Adams was also an accomplished concert pianist. His first acknowledged photograph was 1927’s Monolith, The Face of Half Dome. In 1928, he married Virginia Best in Yosemite. In 1962, Ansel Adams moved to Carmel, where in 1967 he was instrumental in the foundation of the Friends of Photography. Ansel Adams died of heart failure aggravated by cancer on April 22, 1984.

 

Henry Miller Born in New York in 1891 of German-American parentage, Henry Miller spoke only German until he began school. His first marriage in 1917, to Beatrice Sylvas Wickens, ended in divorce in 1924, five years after the birth of his daughter, Barbara. In 1922, he began to write his first book, which was later to be called Clipped Wings. In 1924 he married June Mansfield, a dancer, who was to be Miller’s inspiration and frustration. His marriage to June ended in 1932. In April 1928, Henry Miller traveled to Europe, where he roamed the streets of Paris searching for inspiration and financial support. Here he began work on the novel Tropic of Cancer, which, with the help of friend, colleague, and eventual lover, Anais Nin, was published in 1934. This work was heavily autobiographical and so sexually explicit that it was banned in English-speaking countries. (The first American edition did not come out until 1961.) Subsequent books such as Black Spring (1936) and Tropic of Capricorn (1939) were also banned. In 1942, Henry Miller relocated to California and finally settled in Big Sur in 1944, where he would spend much of the rest of his life. He resumed his interest in painting, producing hundreds of paintings in a few months, in addition to his writing. Miller had been lonely since his divorce from his second wife, and in 1944 he married a Polish immigrant, Janina Martha Lepska. The couple had a daughter, Valentine, in 1945, and a son, Henry Tony, in 1948. Miller's third marriage collapsed in 1951. Within a year, he had met Eve McClure, and they were married. During this time, he wrote Big Sur and the Oranges of Hieronymous Bosch, a book about his life in Big Sur. His fourth marriage dissolved in 1960. His Sexus (1949) was the first part of a promised trilogy on his life, called The Rosy Crucifixion, but only Nexus (1960) appeared thereafter. By the late 1950s, he found himself increasingly honored by the literary establishment, and with the legal decision that Tropic of Cancer was not obscene, his works began to be republished. He also began to receive some recognition as a watercolorist. Henry Miller was married for a fifth time, in September 1970, to Hiroko Tokuda, a Japanese jazz singer who was more than forty years his junior. This marriage ended after only two years. Henry Miller, now in his eighties, was alone again. He died in 1980, but his literary legacy continues in the body of literature he published throughout his long life.                                   




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