Blue Mountain Inn, Gordon Town Road. By the side of a mountain stream (Hope River). The inn is housed in an 18th century coffee plantation great house built in 1754. The house was furnished with traditional mahogany furniture. According to the Tourist Board it was one-time bordello. Mostly a restaurant since the mid-1960s. There were seven rooms.
- First Gleaner mention of the Mount Mansfield Hotel is May 1903. The hotel is looking for gentlemen boarders.
- The next mention with Hotel after the name is January 1935. Nellie Jones was proprietress. Small classified ads were frequent.
- In 1935 they were using Mount Mansfield Hotel and Beer Gardens, but only for a year.
- In the late 1930s the hotel upgraded from a classified ad to a small display ad.
- The Gleaner still lists as an advertiser in 1947, but after that there were no ads and only infrequent social announcements.
- At the end of June 1952 the hotel was broken into. The safe was taken out of the hotel, but the burglars were caught before they were able to open it and get the £35 inside.
- In May 1953, Mr. Stanley Dent, hotelier that established Sans Souci and then retired in 1951, returned to Jamaica and acquired the hotel. He renamed the hotel to Blue Mountain Inn, and plans, along with the manager, Mr. Gordon Black, to maintain the present old English atmosphere for which the inn is already well known.
- Endless social announcements in the Gleaner. It became the most famous eating place in Jamaica for Continental cuisine.
- On October 10, 1968, Robert Lake, former managing director of the inn, announced the closing of the inn as a restaurant.
- A couple weeks later, Mr. C. Vincent May, announces the purchase of the company. The inn will continue as before. Mr. Richard D. Anderson, former manager of Morgan's Harbour and also Courtleigh Manor, was appointed managing director.
- In 1980, Roc Pavesi became Maitre d'Hotel. He spent a rather unhappy year at the inn.
- In May 1981 the inn closed for a month to undertake renovations.
- In 1982 the inn was owned by the Rousseau brothers.
- By 1988 the inn was also serving Jamaican food.
- In 1995, the new owner Mrs. Ardelle Dalla Costa invited the media to see the newly refurbished facilities at the inn. Now more rooms to hold events.
- In 2001 the inn was acquired from Peter and Pat Rousseau by a consortium of businessmen headed by attorney Ivor Alexander.
- In December 2001 the inn was closed for refurbishing, though still available for private functions
- In January 2003, Kevin Hendrickson buys into the inn. His goal is to develop the inn's potential to host corporate banquets and small corporate retreats, and as a day dining venue. [No evidence that they had the day dining.]
- In 2009 the neighbors were complaining of sound systems every weekend until 4:30-5:00 AM. There were no more social event announcements or advertisements in the Gleaner after this.
- In 2013 a bike race started at the inn, but the inn may not have been open.
- Assumed to be sitting there closed, until notified otherwise.