Litchfield County has long been the preferred home-away-from-home for many chic New Yorkers, including Diane von Furstenberg, Wes Gordon, and Oscar and Annette de la Renta, but the hotel offering has been fairly limited. That is slowly starting to change, opening up the area to more and more visitors. Earlier this summer, Lost Fox Inn opened from the Foxfire Mountain House team; next spring, nearby Troutbeck will open Belden House & Mews; and this September, the Salt Hotels team has turned the town of Litchfield’s historical courthouse into a boutique hotel, restaurant and rooftop bar, called The Abner. The courthouse closed in 2017, and a deed search on the building revealed that the property reverted back to six of the original landowners. Of those, only one family had maintained the rights through the generations, meaning one gentleman out on the West Coast found himself the rightful heir to an old courthouse in Connecticut. “He ended up selling it to the Litchfield Preservation Trust for $300,000, which is well under market value, and they had wanted to turn it into a town hall,” explains Kevin O’Shea, one half of the Salt Hotels duo. “The problem was that the town couldn’t really afford it.
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