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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
History & Culture
 

Hot Springs National Park has a rich history. The park has prehistoric American Indian novaculite quarries. It was the destination of the Dunbar-Hunter Expedition sent by President Jefferson in 1804. A bustling town grew up around the hot springs to provide services for health seekers. Central to the American Spa was the bathing industry. The Public Health Service Clinic that was in conjunction with the Government Free Bathhouse was one of the first facilities in the United States to use penicillin.

A Brief History of Hot Springs National Park (Word document)

Bathhouse Row

Read about the role of African Americans in the bathing industry. These are excerpts from an interactive kiosk program at the park visitor center. You can purchase the entire program from the park's Eastern National store.

Below are some free resources you can download. They are in .pdf format unless otherwise noted. You need the free Adobe Acrobat Reader to read them. 
-African Americans and the Hot Springs Baths
-American Indians at Hot Springs National Park
-Hot Springs National Park Through the Years: A Chronology of Events-Excerpts-36 pp, 407 kb
(The complete version is available through the Eastern National store)
-The Forgotten Expedition of Dunbar and Hunter
-The Oertel System of Graduated Exercise
-Whittington Park
-The Remarkable Therapy Machines of Dr. Gustav Zander

Check out the "Frequently Asked Questions."

2007 Hot Springs Reservation anniversary logo, blue Quapaw Bathhouse with text
2007 park anniversary
Find out about the many activities held for the anniversary in 2007
more...
Pres. Roosevelt is in an open touring car on Fountain St. in front of the Arlington Hotel. A crowd surrounds the car.  

Did You Know?
On June 10, 1936, President and Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt visited Hot Springs National Park and toured the Fordyce Bathhouse as part of the Arkansas centennial celebration. FDR used the baths at Warm Springs, Georgia, on a regular basis to relieve his polio. He never bathed in Hot Springs.

Last Updated: February 22, 2008 at 12:15 EST