About twenty-five miles northeast of downtown Cincinnati, tucked along a wooded bend of the Little Miami River in the village of Loveland, sits one of the most gloriously improbable structures in the entire Midwest. Château Laroche — known locally as Loveland Castle — is a genuine, hand-built medieval castle constructed almost entirely by one man over the course of six decades. And yes, it is every bit as extraordinary as that sentence sounds.
The story begins with Harry D. Andrews, a World War I medic and devoted Boy Scout leader who fell in love with European castles during his time overseas. When he returned to Ohio, he decided — with the calm conviction of a man who simply does not recognize obstacles — that he would build one himself. Beginning in the 1920s and continuing until his death in 1981, Andrews hauled local river stones, mixed his own mortar, and laid every block with his own hands. The result is a three-story stone fortress complete with towers, battlements, a great hall, a dungeon, a working kitchen, and a chapel. It is bonkers in the best possible way.
Today the castle is maintained by a dedicated group called the Knights of the Golden Trail, a volunteer organization Andrews founded. They keep the grounds open to visitors nearly every day of the year, and admission is remarkably affordable — a few dollars for adults, even less for children. There is something deeply refreshing about a landmark that hasn’t been polished into a corporate experience. The docents here are passionate volunteers who actually know the history and love sharing it. Ask them a question and you will get a real answer, possibly followed by a fascinating twenty-minute tangent.
Wandering the interior feels like stepping into a place that exists outside of ordinary time. The rooms are filled with Andrews’ personal collections — medieval weaponry, armor, flags, and handmade furniture — all arranged with the earnest enthusiasm of a man who genuinely believed he was building something for the ages. Climbing the narrow stone staircase to the tower battlements rewards you with a lovely view of the river and the surrounding forest, particularly spectacular in autumn when the hardwoods turn gold and crimson.
The grounds along the Little Miami are equally appealing. Pack a picnic, bring the kids, and plan to spend at least two hours here. The river path nearby connects to the Little Miami Scenic Trail, one of Ohio’s finest rail-trail corridors, so cyclists and hikers often make Château Laroche a natural stopping point on a longer outdoor adventure.
What makes this place linger in the memory long after you leave isn’t the stones themselves — it’s the audacity of the dream behind them. Harry Andrews looked at an ordinary riverbank and saw a castle waiting to be built. Every visitor who walks through that arched entrance is, in some small way, walking through the proof that he was right. Come see it for yourself. Loveland is waiting.