Some venues are built to look historic. Willow Creek Inn actually is. The building standing at 2516 Willow Creek Road in Prescott, Arizona, was not designed to be a wedding venue, a restaurant, an inn, or even a garden retreat. It was built in 1877 as a pastor’s residence on the grounds of the Methodist church on Summit Street in downtown Prescott. What happened next is the kind of story that makes a venue genuinely interesting, not just aesthetically, but historically.

A Building With Many Lives
The structure began as the home of the Methodist church’s pastor, but over the years it served purposes far beyond a simple residence. Within its walls, Sunday school classes gathered. For a time, it operated as a laying hospital where new life entered the world. And in the colorful days of the old wild west, the building even served as a bordello. Few structures can claim such a varied and storied past.
In 1962, the building was relocated from its original downtown Prescott location to where it sits today on Willow Creek Road. It did not move as a single piece. The structure was carefully cut and transported in two separate sections, then reassembled on its current foundation overlooking the creek and the surrounding gardens.
That kind of relocation was not common even then. It required careful planning, significant effort, and a belief that the building was worth preserving. Whoever made that call got it right.
From Inn to Restaurant to Boutique Venue
Over the decades that followed, the building changed hands and identities. It operated as the Green Frog Inn, then as The Carriage House Inn. From 1997 to 2018, it became well known locally as Willow Creek Restaurant, a gathering place that Prescott residents still remember. The building had already lived several lives before Nancy Bewley purchased it in July 2021 and began the work of transforming it into the boutique event venue it is today.
What Survives From 1877
Most venues that claim historic character are trading on a general aesthetic. Willow Creek Inn is different because the original materials are still there. The woodwork that was part of the building when it served as a Victorian residence in the late 19th century is still in place. The stained glass windows, original to the structure, still filter light the way they did more than 140 years ago.
These are not reproductions. They are not installed to suggest age. They are the actual bones of a building that survived relocation, multiple renovations, and well over a century of Arizona weather. When natural light comes through those stained glass windows during a late morning ceremony, it does something that no amount of lighting design can manufacture. That authenticity is exactly why photographers keep coming back.
Two Acres That Frame Every Shot
The historic manor is surrounded by two acres of lush gardens, majestic trees, creek-side views, four garden gazebos in the south patio area, lantern-lit patios, and lawn areas that shift in character depending on the time of day and the season.
At an elevation of 5,367 feet, Prescott’s light is different from what you get in Phoenix or Scottsdale. The high-country air is cleaner, the shadows are sharper, and golden hour lasts longer. Photographers who work in both markets consistently note the difference. The natural setting at Willow Creek Inn gives them creek-side backdrops, garden depth, gazebo backdrops with seasonal trees perfect for photo ops, and string-lit evening atmosphere all within the same two-acre property.
For couples, that variety means your gallery does not look like it was all taken in one spot. Ceremony portraits under the pines look different from the creek-side shots, which look different again from the lantern-lit patio images at the end of the night.
Nancy Bewley and the Renovation Vision
When Nancy purchased the property in 2021, the transformation required more than cleaning and decorating. She brought a genuine eye for detail shaped by a family history of event hosting that goes back three generations, with roots in Beverly Hills, California. The renovation work she oversaw respected the original architecture while making the spaces fully functional for modern events.
The indoor reception hall, the sunlit parlor, the grand hall, and the outdoor garden spaces were developed with intention. Twinkling lights were strung throughout the property. The gardens were cultivated. The four gazebos in the garden south patio area became charming gathering spots, each decorated with lights and offering views over the seasonal creek and meadow. Guests relax at the decorated tables and chairs within each gazebo, and live musicians have performed violin and vocals from these beautiful vantage points. The venue that exists now is the product of someone who understood both the history of the building and what couples actually need on a wedding day.
Why Couples Drive From Phoenix to Get Here
Willow Creek Inn sits approximately 90 miles north of Phoenix, a 90-minute drive that trades valley heat for high-country calm. In July, while Phoenix averages 105 degrees, Prescott sits at 89 degrees with cooler evenings and consistent breezes. For couples planning outdoor ceremonies, that difference is not a minor comfort consideration. It is the difference between a comfortable celebration and a miserable one.
But the drive is not just about temperature. Couples come to Prescott because the setting here cannot be replicated closer to the city. An 1877 Victorian manor with original stained glass, surrounded by creek-side gardens and pine trees, at an elevation where the air and light behave differently. That combination does not exist in the Valley.
It exists here, on Willow Creek Road, in a building that someone thought was worth moving across a city more than sixty years ago.
Conclusion
Most wedding venues are built to hold events. Willow Creek Inn was built as a pastor’s residence, witnessed Sunday school gatherings and new births, survived a cross-city relocation in two pieces, outlasted multiple identities across more than a century, and was eventually transformed into one of Northern Arizona’s most distinctive event properties.
The history is not decoration but embedded in the woodwork, the stained glass, the foundation, and the two acres of gardens that surround it. When you get married here, you are standing inside something that has genuinely lasted.
If you want to see it in person, Nancy and her team are ready to walk you through every corner of the property. Reach out at 928.710.7212 or visit willowcreekinn.info to schedule your tour.
FAQs
How old is the building at Willow Creek Inn?
The structure was built in 1877, making it nearly 150 years old, and it still features original woodwork and stained glass.
What was the building originally used for?
The building was constructed as the pastor’s residence on the grounds of the Methodist church on Summit Street in downtown Prescott. Over the years it also served as Sunday school rooms, a laying hospital, and even a bordello during the wild west era before being relocated to its current site in 1962.
What outdoor ceremony spaces are available?
The property offers four garden gazebos that serve as stunning backdrops in the south patio area, creek-side ceremony areas, lush garden lawns, a lantern-lit patio, and manicured grounds surrounded by mature trees. Couples typically work with Nancy during the planning process to select the setup that best fits their vision and guest count.
How many guests can the venue accommodate?
Willow Creek Inn comfortably hosts events ranging from 20 to 100 guests across its indoor and outdoor spaces.
Can we do a venue tour before booking?
Yes. Tours and consultations are available and encouraged. You can request a tour directly through the website at willowcreekinn.info or by calling us at 928.710.7212.


