Boathouse History
The Boathouse was built in the late 1800’s by William Tevis as part of his 75 acre estate. Due to a bad financial investment and bankruptcy, the then Tevis Estate was purchased by George Pope, Sr. of the Pope & Talbot Lumber and Shipping Company. George’s pride and joy was his motorboat, The Sheik, which he named after his friend and frequent guest Rudolph Valentino. The Sheik was the biggest and fastest boat of its time on Lake Tahoe, and was housed in the Valhalla Boathouse during that period.
In 1924 George Pope, Sr. sold 3.3 acres of his property to Walter Heller, a San Francisco financial broker. The contract and sale of the property was conducted in winter, however the official survey of the property was not conducted until the following summer. To Mr. Pope’s distress it was discovered that his boathouse had been included in the sale of the property to the Heller’s in error!
The Boathouse originally had four bedrooms and a bathroom on the second level that today contain the restrooms, tech room and small storage rooms. Over the years it became dilapidated, used primarily for storage until the late 1980’s when the Tahoe Tallac Association (now Valhalla Tahoe), with the support and vision of Dr. Leo Buscaglia, turned it into a thriving and unique theater.