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It is an eight-bedroom, 4500-square foot house.  It was featured in ''Adirondack Life'' in 2014, Vol. XLV, No. 7.
It is an eight-bedroom, 4500-square foot house.  It was featured in ''Adirondack Life'' in 2014, Vol. XLV, No. 7.


[[File:Camp%20To-No-Na.jpg|left|thumb||Camp To-No-Na Display, courtesy of Betty Hanes and Kathy Ford, Shown at History Day 2008.<br>|Download the image to enlarge the display ]] [[File:To-No-Na.jpg|right|thumb||Camp To-No-Na ]]
[[File:Camp To-No-Na.jpg|left|thumb||Camp To-No-Na Display, courtesy of Betty Hanes and Kathy Ford, Shown at History Day 2008.<br>|Download the image to enlarge the display ]] [[File:To-No-Na.jpg|right|thumb||Camp To-No-Na ]]


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Latest revision as of 10:50, 18 September 2025


Camp To-No-Na

Address: 27 Birch Knoll Drive, on Lower Saranac Lake

Year built: 1907

Camp To-No-Na was purchased by William Hanes, head of the P.H. Hanes Knitting Company, after he was diagnosed with TB around 1920.  Hanes also bought the once fashionable Algonquin Hotel, nearby.

The Hanes children and grandchildren continued to use the camp each Summer until William Hanes III sold it to Dan Bready, a family friend, in 2002.  It was on the market in 2014.

It is an eight-bedroom, 4500-square foot house.  It was featured in Adirondack Life in 2014, Vol. XLV, No. 7.

Download the image to enlarge the display
Camp To-No-Na
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