May 192020
 

Jennifer Hart by the just-restored Randles Court neon sign.

The rock rubble classic motor court from the early days of America’s roadside culture is coming to life again along Business Route 54 through Eldon, Missouri. Jeremy and Jennifer Hart are renovating the place to offer hospitality for nostalgia-driven travelers. The nostalgia bringing me to Eldon was hunger for some of the world’s best onion rings, which we used to get at two restaurants there – a discovery made the summer we spent in Eldon making a very early direct-to-video horror movie, Copperhead. But I digress. Both restaurants are gone now. One of them was part of the Boots-Randles Court Motel. It burned to the ground, but the motel remains.

Jeremy’s aunt and uncle owned the place in the 1970s and through a series of karmic events, it has come to them. Jennifer can explain the full string of connections that finally put this roadside jewel in their hands. She’s made it her mission to put the pieces of history together, treating herself to occasional visits to the Eldon newspaper to search their archives.

One article she found indicates that Lloyd Boots started building his motor court in 1931, with a plan that called for a gas station and five cabins with attached carports. That was the year that Bagnell Dam closed. Eldon soon took the motto: “Gateway to Lake of the Ozarks.” The carports don’t show in the façade of the building today but architectural evidence remains. As the Hart’s renovated, they found original hardwood floors in every other room, and concrete floors in the ones between.

Last year, a tornado hit Eldon and the Randles Court. The stone building survived; roof, windows and the classic neon sign were damaged. Cleanup and repairs from the tornado carried on through the summer and early winter. Plans made for a grand reopening were put on hold with the coronavirus lockdown. Now with stay-at-home orders lifted and the classic neon sign fully restored and reinstalled, they are planning the lighting ceremony for this Friday night, May 22, the one-year anniversary of the tornado. Check their Facebook page for more information.

Provided to the Harts for the amusement and edification of their future guests, our book See the Ozarks, a visual history of the early days of tourism in our region.

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