Artifacts old and recent were on display, many atop Desdemona "Mama Des" Parrish's quilt. (Click on photo to enlarge.) |
University of Kentucky School of Journalism and Media
Holly Hill Inn celebrated its 20th year under Chef Ouita Michel and her husband, Chris, Saturday morning with an event called “Up Home” about the history of the building that was a home, an inn and now a restaurant.
“Welcome
to Holly Hill Inn,” speaker Bob Rouse told the sellout crowd. “And while you’re here,
consider yourself up home,” which Rouse’s father and grandmother often called
the place.
The
event began with a lunch by Michel that included Nat’s Naples fish chowder and
poached chicken. Dessert was angel food cake with custard and boiled icing.
Then guests were able to walk around the dining area and see artifacts that
belonged to Rouse and Perry’s great-grandmother. Then everyone went into the
main dining room for a presentation on the history of the Inn, talks of ghost
sightings, and a little bit of family history from Rouse and his sister, Amy
Rouse Perry.
Holly
Hill Inn began as Stevenson’s Tavern, a building closer to Leestown Road. The
first post office in the area was established here as Stevenson’s, and was
renamed Midway when the town was established in 1837. In the early 1840s, after
the tavern burned down, Handcock Davis built the first few sections of the
modern layout of what eventually became the Holly Hill Inn.
Bob Rouse and his sister, Amy Rouse Perry, discussed the history of the house. |
Davis
sold the building to Squire William A. Moore and his wife Mary in 1854. Moore
was the president of the Midway Paper Mill Co. and a magistrate on the Woodford
County Fiscal Court. After he died, she
lived in the house until it was sold to Isaac Parrish, officially becoming the
Parrish family home, in 1903.
“Amy and
I are part of the sixth generation of Parrishes to live in and around Midway,
and we can tell you a lot about the Ike Parrish family that lived here
beginning in the early 1900s because their oldest daughter created a rather
detailed journal later in her life,” Rouse said. “Now, many families at the
turn of the century had similar life experiences. We’re not saying the Parrish
family was extraordinary; it’s just our family.”
The
writer of that journal was Honeywood Parrish Rouse. Her first name came from
her great-aunt, Adelia Honeywood Bailey, the woman who took in Rouse and
Perry’s great-grandmother Desdemona, her brother Jim and sister Katherine “Nat”
Parrish when their mother died.
“Honeywood
was our paternal grandmother, who we called Honey. She was a Southern
matriarch, community leader, historian, entertainer, and party girl, all rolled
into one,” said Rouse. “She was also a stay-at-home writer who penned toast and
notes for her neighbors. ”
The
family was known for their happy home and great hospitality. “On any given
night, no one would know how many people would be at their supper table until
they were about to be seated,” Rouse said. “Visitors came often, and one night
stays might stretch into days or even weeks.”
In 1922,
Honeywood Parrish married Howard Rouse and moved into the town of Midway, where
she died at the age of 92 in 1990.
“She never lost sight of her childhood home,
especially when she passed it every time
she visited her grandchildren, whose house is on the grounds of the old
apple orchard,” Rouse told the crowd.
In 1979,
Isaac Parrish's grandson Ike and his wife Jean converted the home into a
“modern country inn,” according to the Holly Hill Inn website.
It was
the year 2000 when the Inn came into the possession of the Michels, by luck. At
the time, Rouse was interviewing Ouita for a magazine article about a Lexington
restaurant she helped run, Emmett’s on Tates Creek Road.
Michel and Rouse told the Messenger in 2014 that when he
told her, “You must love this place, you’ll never leave it,” she replied,
“Well, I do love it, But I’d only ever leave it for the Holly Hill Inn in
Midway.”
What she didn’t know was that Rouse and his family had
started talking that very week about needing to sell the inn. They did, and
Rouse said in 2014, “I consider that the greatest thing I've ever done for this
community.”
Then
Ouita began seeing ghosts, and that provided one of the most interesting parts
of the program. Rouse said she saw a vague image of a young man standing at the
kitchen door and a face in a window above the kitchen. In 2009, she and Perry
had a husband-and-wife team of ghost hunters try to add context to the
sightings. The face in the window turned out to be Tom, Jim’s cousin, who used
to come and visit.
Perry
recalled that one ghost hunter “spelled out ‘What’s your first name and did you
live here?’ They didn’t live here, but they visited here, so we figured that it
was Jim’s cousin, who would have visited here.”
There
have been so many real-life visitors to the Inn in the last 20 years that it
became the start of Michel’s unique chain of eight restaurants in Lexington and
Midway, serving fresh, farm-to-table food. The newest is named Honeywood.
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