
An arch frames Shattuck-St. Mary’s School in Faribault, Minnesota. Minnesota Prairie Roots file photo.
FOR SOME FORTY YEARS the oldest building on the campus of Shattuck-St. Mary’s, a prestigious private college prep school on Faribault’s east side, stood empty.

YESTERDAY: The original part of this building was constructed in 1871 as the library for Seabury Divinity School. When the divinity school relocated, the building was sold to Shattuck School and a small wing was added to the east. The building became Phelps Cottage, serving as a boys’ dormitory. Photo courtesy of Shattuck-St. Mary’s School.

TODAY: The Inn at Shattuck St. Mary’s, a conference/retreat center, banquet/reception facility and hotel, opened on Friday.
But, on Friday, the stunning stone and stuccoed building, with a section dating back to 1871 and edging a wooded ravine, opened to the public as The Inn at Shattuck-St. Mary’s.
Saturday afternoon I toured The Inn during the school’s annual Campus Christmas Walk and spoke briefly with David Connelly (former manager of an Owatonna restaurant), who’s genuinely excited to take on the challenge of managing what he terms “a historically modern retreat get-away.”
That seems an accurate description for this one-time library, then boys’ dormitory and infirmary now transformed via renovation and an approximate 10,000 square foot addition into a complex with 12 guest rooms, meeting/conference rooms and banquet/reception space. The Inn includes a full catering kitchen. It also serves as a retreat center for the Episcopal Church in Minnesota, which partnered with Shattuck on the project.
From the exterior, The Inn, vacated in the early 1970s (except for feral cats), presents a timeless European style that fits this aged campus. Arched windows and steep, peaked roofs and stone prevail.

In the early 1920s, a wing was enlarged and covered with stucco. It became the Phelps Infirmary. The infirmary opened just in time for an outbreak of scarlet fever. It remained open into the early 1970s. Phelps was last used in 2006 as a Halloween haunted house. Photo courtesy of Shattuck-St. Mary’s School.
It’s a beautiful structure which seamlessly blends old with new, as it should given the oldest section is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Inside you will find, as Manager Connelly says, a thoroughly modern facility with all of the amenities you would expect. Touches of the past remain, though, in sections of exposed stone, in those arched windows and in the original stairway from main to second floor, although I suspect that the wood was not painted white back in the day.
Hallways wind to guest rooms in a deliberate way that definitely makes this place feel more inn-like than hotel.
Muted green and brown hues complement the natural setting of The Inn on the wooded west edge of the campus.
Banks of floor-to-ceiling windows in the meeting/reception spaces and a spacious woods-side deck and patio showcase the outdoors.
The opening of The Inn seems a smart move on Shattuck’s part. Many couples are married in the historic The Chapel of the Good Shepherd, just a short walk away. Parents from all over the world visit their children at the school. And top-notch hockey teams (think NHL feeder school) draw out-of-town fans to games.
On opening day Friday, The Inn guest rooms were three-fourths full, Manager Connelly says. And on Saturday, during the Campus Christmas Walk, visitors seemed duly impressed with the newest old addition to Faribault’s lodging and banquet/meeting facility options.
FYI: Click here for more information on The Inn at Shattuck-St. Mary’s. Room rates range from $110 – $150 Sunday – Thursday and from $140 – $180 on Fridays and Saturdays.
© Copyright 2014 Audrey Kletscher Helbling
Vintage photos are courtesy of Shattuck-St. Mary’s School and are published here with permission.













Wow! Elegant, with all the modern amenities, yet the ‘Old World’ charm is not lost but rather accented! So encouraging to see such sensitive melding of the two.
Precisely.
Wow, beautiful photos. I love the first one. That would be such a fun place to stay.
I agree. It’s a stunningly beautiful, historic campus.
Wonderful! Just wonderful! In our throw-away society, it warms my heart immensely to see an old building brought back to life.
I couldn’t agree more.
What an interesting blog you wrote on the inn. Also a very fine job selling me on the tranquility this inn offers. It would be a great place to do writing and some contemplative thinking:) Love the pictures.
Sue
Thanks, Sue. Yes, with a view of those woods, I could easily escape into tranquility and writing.
What a beautiful restoration and I’m so glad the building wasn’t pulled down – too much of that has gone on here in Sydney. I love how the building is decorated for Christmas and I’d love to come over and stay for a few nights xx
Shattuck-St. Mary’s truly appreciates its old buildings as does my community. You would love our downtown with all of its historic buildings.
You are welcome in Faribault any time. Visit Wisconsin and then head west.
Audrey your first photo is stunning, “frame-worthy” for sure! So much history and beauty tied up in this elegant setting. Thanks for sharing.
Thanks, Jackie. The magic of photo editing going on in that first pic.
A child hood friend’s father attended Shattuck. He would have been there in the 60’s.
Wouldn’t it be wonderful to attend school at such an historic campus?