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Maxx Visits Eureka Springs
Author: Maxx
Blog URL: http://www.paralore.com/blogs/eureka
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A slideshow of Maxx's latest adventure in Eureka Springs Arkansas.
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Eureka Springs 2007
Eureka Springs, Arkansas has welcomed visitors for hundreds of years. Legends of several tribes spoke of a Great Healing Spring in the mountains of what later became known as "Arkansas." Early visitors believed this spring to be Basin Spring itself, and the magical waters drew the afflicted in such numbers that Eureka Springs transformed from an isolated wilderness to a flourishing city in a few short months.

"There is a story, very popular with the health-seekers camped around the spring they called The Basin, that Sioux Indians brought the young daughter of a great Chieftan to the Spring in search of healing. She suffered from an eye affliction which had taken away her sight, and the people were deeply saddened that such a fate should befall their beloved little princess. The young girl bathed her eyes in the waters, and within a short time her eyesight was fully restored, to the great joy of her people who told the story far and wide until it reached the ears of the first white men exploring the region."

--The Eureka Chronicles by June Westphal

The first white settler to "discover" the healing springs is reputed to be Dr. Alvah Jackson, who used the healing waters to cure his son of an eye ailment in 1856. The waters were used at "Dr. Jackson's Cave Hospital" to care for combatants during the Civil War and, following the war, Dr. Jackson set up a brisk business selling "Dr. Jackson's Eye Water."

Pawnee Visitors at the Turn of the Century

Eureka's miraculous cures remained a local marvel until 1879 when the doctor's friend and hunting companion Judge J.B. Saunders was cured of a crippling disease by a visit to Basin Spring, and subsequently put his considerable influence behind promoting the Springs to friends and family throughout the state.

getting water from the Springs
Weaver Cottage

The City of Eureka Springs was founded and named on July 4, 1879. As word of Eureka's miraculous, healing waters began to spread, thousands of visitors flocked to the original encampment of tents and hastily built shanties.

By late 1879, the estimated population of Eureka Springs reached 10,000 people and in 1881, the town was declared a "City of the First Class," the fourth largest city in Arkansas.


impractical building ideas

"The location of the city is the last one in the world which would ordinarily have been chosen. The impossibility of presenting a striking and vivid picture of Eureka Springs has been fully realized by every person who has made the attempt, and the most powerful descriptive writer would rise from the task dissatisfied with the best efforts of his pen. To group and present a few of its most prominent features would utterly fail to do justice to a city without parallel--unique, phenomenal, picturesque and beautiful."

Eureka Springs Descriptive & Historical published 1892

The Eureka Springs Improvement Company was formed in 1882 to bring the railroad to the city and to develop amenities to service the growing visitor population. The involvement of the ESIC secured Eureka's position as one of the premier resorts of the Victorian era. Thousands of residences and commercial structures were built in two short years. These structures still exist today--so rigorously preserved that the entire town of Eureka Springs is on the National Register of Historic Places.

The Crescent Hotel, 1886






     MY TRIP TO EUREKA SPRINGS

Eureka Springs Trip Oct 14 & 15, 2007


Cobblers Cottage is one of the oldest homes built in Eureka Springs, believed to be constructed around 1880.
The only known event of significance in the home was a hanging by suicide, carried out by a previous renter of the home. This was not revealed by the current owner, but by a resident in the town.

Basin Park Hotel - This Historic Hotel opened its doors in 1905 and has hosted many famous guests over the years such as Al Capone & Pretty Boy Floyd,
During prohibition the upstairs balcony ballroom was used as a Speakeasy for drinking and gambling.
The Hotel was in Ripley’s Believe it or Not, because all 7 floors of the hotel are “ground level”.
This is because it sits on the side of a mountain, you can actually walk out onto a mountain “walkway” on any floor. This geographical oddity was also the downfall of the wild speakeasy days for the hotel. When police raids would happen they had a warning on the top floor and had plenty of time to hide the slot machines and booze, until the police found out they could go straight to the 7th floor from the mountain walkway. The hotel was shut down immediately.
The Hotel was purchased and used for a museum for a number of years until it was finally restored and is a grand Hotel once again.

There have been many reports of ghosts throughout this hotel over the years including a man in a suit and a derby hat, believed to be the man who built the hotel, he is also believed to be fond of redheads. Several rooms on the 4th floor have had visitors report awaking to the sound of spurs and boots only to open there eyes and see a cowboy walking right through the rooms. The strangest ghost sighting there has been that of a lion in one of the rooms looking over a dead body, although this sounds very far fetched, it has been reported multiple times. I spoke to the bartender there about the resident spirits, and she claimed that after a few drinks she has had long conversations with some of the hotels ghosts.  We took the Ghost Tour that is offered at the Hotel which was very informative about the Hotel’s past and the ghost sightings, but all the evidence offered was a collection of  “orb” pictures. Which made me think of my haunted couch at home. I believe it is a Pandora’s box of trapped spirits, for if I give it a good smack and quickly snap a few pictures, You can see many spirits being released into this dimension. (Of course the preceding statement is not ment to be taken seriously)

However, the tour was informative and fun and I would recommend it to anyone interested in hearing the lore of the hotel and towns wild past.

The Crescent Hotel - Ah yes, one of my favorite vacation spots for many years, and yes, the Hotel seen on Ghost Hunters where they captured the image of a man on thermal scanner in the basement. This place has all the marks of what anyone would consider a haunted Hotel,
creepy looking, very old, and a checkered past. I have been coming  here every year for the last 15 years, but since its appearance on the SCI FI channel, room prices have almost doubled, they offer ghost packages in excess of 375 dollars, they sell ouija boards, and are building modern cabins around the hotel to sell.
I still love this Hotel, but I am sad to see them cashing in so much on this. I even emailed them and asked a few questions about one of their “Sleep in the Morgue” packages and still after 2 weeks have not received a reply.
You can even purchase the episode of ghost hunters in which the Hotel appeared for a mere 16 dollars.
I think I will wait a week or two and catch it on Sci Fi again.


I will spend a few more days going over all my audio and pictures and I will share my results with you soon.

10/19/2007 5 Comments | Add Comment
 
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