Around 1919, George Weston left New York to return to his boyhood home
in the Arden-Fletcher area of Western North Carolina. The US government
had recently established Pisgah National Forest by purchasing 80,000
acres from Edith, George Vanderbilt's widow; lands deserted by logging
companies; and other tracts. While superintendent of farms at the
Biltmore Estate, Weston had admired those mountainous landscapes. About
two miles from Mount Pisgah and a mile from Vanderbilt's private Buck
Spring Lodge, Weston constructed Pisgah Inn on property leased from the
US Forest Service. Visitors came from across the country and around the
world to stay and dine at Pisgah Inn. By the 1940s, the construction of
the Blue Ridge Parkway brought drastic changes across the narrow,
isolated Pisgah ridgeline. Today, a more modern 1960s lodge welcomes
guests to its grand views and preserves the history, charm, and natural
setting of the original Pisgah Inn.