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Hot Springs National Parkcolored print labeled 1888 Bath House Row, from Fountain St. to Reserve St. showing white plumes to show springs on the hillside
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Hot Springs National Park
Brochures
Line drawing of boy (1800s, dressed in knee pants, shirt and cap, barefooted) with a water can in one hand and a cup in the other outstretched hand.
Water boy with can filled with hot spring water and cups for health seekers to drink.

Hot Springs National Park is an unusual blend of a highly developed park in a small city surrounded by low-lying mountains abounding in plant life and wildlife. It is a park with a past, too. The picture above shows Bathhouse Row as it looked in 1888. None of these bathhouses exists in this form today, although some of the names live on in present-day structures. New, fireproof structures took their places. The Fordyce Bathhouse which houses the park visitor center sits on the site of the Palace in the above drawing. The water boy with his pot and cups (left) was a familiar sight in the late 1800s.

Water. That's what attracts people to Hot Springs National Park. Old documents indicate that American Indians knew about and bathed in the hot springs during the late 1700s and early 1800s. Their ancestors may have also known about the hot springs. Some believe that the traces of minerals and an average temperature of 143ºF/62ºC give the waters whatever therapeutic properties they may have. People also drink the waters from the cold springs which have different chemical components and properties.  Besides determining the chemical composition and origins of the waters, scientists have determined that the waters issuing from these hot springs are more than 4,000 years old. The park collects 700,000 gallons a day for use in the public drinking fountains and bathhouses.

 
This is a portion of the park brochure. If you want to read more, click here. For a map of the park, look at the top of the page in the light green bar under the words "National Park." To get a park brochure in the mail, please contact us with your name and postal address.
black and white photo of Rector's bathhouse, a small one story frame building near the edge of Hot Springs Creek  

Did You Know?
In May 1862, Arkansas Governor Henry Massie Rector moved the state government to his hotel and bathhouse located on Hot Springs Reservation, now Hot Springs National Park. That July, the government seat was moved further south to Old Washington for the remainder of the Civil War.

Last Updated: March 20, 2008 at 14:11 EST