Lahey Hotel is a small estate in Bayfield, Portland, owned by Hendrik Koopman. It was built in the 1920s by William Lahey, an American-born investor. When he left Lovia in 1937, Francis Lewis, Jr. lived there until his death in 1947. The house and its gardens were inherited by Francis' nephew, Thomas Lewis, Sr., who turned it into a hotel. William Lahey's grandson Edward Lahey, a famous cricket player, opened the hotel in 1958 on behalf of his deceased grandfather. In 2010, the hotel was bought by Hendrik Koopman, who uses it as a second home.
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| - Lahey Hotel is a small estate in Bayfield, Portland, owned by Hendrik Koopman. It was built in the 1920s by William Lahey, an American-born investor. When he left Lovia in 1937, Francis Lewis, Jr. lived there until his death in 1947. The house and its gardens were inherited by Francis' nephew, Thomas Lewis, Sr., who turned it into a hotel. William Lahey's grandson Edward Lahey, a famous cricket player, opened the hotel in 1958 on behalf of his deceased grandfather. In 2010, the hotel was bought by Hendrik Koopman, who uses it as a second home.
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| - Lahey Hotel is a small estate in Bayfield, Portland, owned by Hendrik Koopman. It was built in the 1920s by William Lahey, an American-born investor. When he left Lovia in 1937, Francis Lewis, Jr. lived there until his death in 1947. The house and its gardens were inherited by Francis' nephew, Thomas Lewis, Sr., who turned it into a hotel. William Lahey's grandson Edward Lahey, a famous cricket player, opened the hotel in 1958 on behalf of his deceased grandfather. In 2010, the hotel was bought by Hendrik Koopman, who uses it as a second home.
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