In 1906, Charles Woodward gazed at Lake Minnetonka from his summer home on Crane Island. Woodward, along with a group of Presbyterian families, founded an island community to escape the heat and congestion of the city. Each spring, they ferried across the lake, bringing the supplies to last for their summer sojourn.
More than a century later, Leni and David Moore relish that same view from their summer home, which sits on the island's highest point.
Before building their 21st-century getaway, the Moores often vacationed on Crane Island at the summer homes of their Minneapolis neighbors. They even rented a cottage for a month to immerse themselves in the island's timeless qualities.
The densely wooded, 13-acre island is dotted with 15 cottages, many of which are pre-World War II dwellings passed down from generation to generation. There are no cars or grocery stores and limited TV reception, but the island boasts a close-knit community. Just as they did in the 1900s, residents take in docks and close the cottages on Nov. 1.
The Moores hoped to continue a family tradition of lake living, which started well before they were married in 2007. Leni, who lived in New York, vacationed at a family retreat in the Hamptons. David grew up spending summers at a lakeside house in Connecticut.
"I love how Crane Island is so quiet and idyllic," said Leni, "the opposite of the Hamptons."
David, a multimedia artist and retired theater manager, compared it to "a miniature Madeline Island. But it's only a 30-minute drive back to Minneapolis," he said.
The Charles Woodward cottage had burned down many years ago, so the original lot was empty. Luckily for the Moores, a longtime island resident decided to sell that lot and some adjacent land, which was overgrown with buckthorn and basswood trees.