Pagosa Springs Colorado
The
Great Pagosa Hot Spring, Part 1: Some old history
and some new history!


This is a century old image of the springs with a current
photo taken in the same spot. In the old photo the distant
hills and trees in the background and the spring water,
foreground, have been tinted to better separate them visually
from the people and buildings. On the far left is a gazebo
that had a hot spring fountain where folks could feel and
also collect the water for drinking. On the right is a fence
that protected a sluice that carried river water from somewhere
near town park down to the light-plant where it turned a
generator producing electricity for the town. Until recent
times the road was named Light-plant Road but was changed
to Hot Spring Blvd. Also note Pagosa had a "brass band"
back then. I believe this was the Columbine Band.
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The Bottomless Pit
This article deals with the history of mankind at the spring and
not with the longer term geology except to note that the bottom
of the spring has never been found. The late Worth Crouse, Pagosa
story teller, historian, writer, and engineer, once told me of
his efforts at finding the bottom. He made a steel tripod big
enough that it spanned the spring vent. There was a pulley wheel
hanging from the peak and he bought “A LOT” of rope.
A steel pipe was used as a weight. He never said how much rope
he let out except, “A LOT.” I don’t know if
that information is recorded but he firmly stated that he never
got to the bottom. He found that the pit was not straight down
but followed a serpentine path. He had to jiggle the rope and
pipe several times to get it to fall farther and became afraid
the pipe might become stuck. He pulled it out and never tried
again.
Who was first?
We have no knowledge of the first person to discover the spring.
It may have been 10,000 years ago, give or take a few thousand
years. There is evidence man populated the Pagosa area, part time,
that long ago. We know very little about these people except for
their stone tools. They quarried stone creating identifiable chips
and their butchering sites also were littered with chips from
constantly keeping tools sharp. They were first found and identified
at Fulsom, New Mexico in the far northeastern part of the state.
They were nomadic, traveling what archeologist call a “seasonal
round,” moving to the mountains in summer and down to lower
and warmer elevations in winter. A local “amateur expert”
in archeology claims to have found a “Dalton Point”
with an estimated age of 9,000 years linked to a stone circle,
within three miles of Pagosa Springs. Don’t ask!
We know considerably more about the Anasazi. They were the first
people to adopt farming technology flowing up from Mexico. As
farming is intensive year-round work, they had to settle down,
building permanent homes and leaving behind the seasonal round
and a wealth of artifacts.

This graphic shows how the river was pushed west by a combination
of erosion from Reservoir Hill and deposits from the spring.
The entire bulge west is composed of a mix of deposits and
dirt.
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The Anasazi, they were here!
Mr. Crouse once told me a story of a group of men hand digging
a water well somewhere in town. The story took a half hour as
Worth was very detailed, this is the short version. They reached
bedrock and then drilled many small angled shafts in the stone.
They packed the shafts with dynamite. When the charge was set
off it broke through the bedrock. It evidently also pressurized
the hot spring aquifer: Worth reported the spring “turned
dark and coughed up Anasazi pottery shards for quite a while.”
They were here!
It is interesting to note that the Anasazi were known to break
a person’s pottery and bury it with them. It may be that
when one soaks in the mineral water there could be, in some infinitesimal
amount, Anasazi pottery and bones dissolved in the water.
The Anasazi and many other Indian people had interesting creation
stories. A common theme is that life, physical and spiritual,
began and developed on several layers of space and existence under
the ground. These ever smaller layers within layers were populated
by people, higher beings and Gods. At some point the main God,
probably a female spirit as they were a matrafocal – woman
centered society, ordered a group to find a path up to the top
surface. It is an epic story of adventure and gaining wisdom.
They finally climbed four giant trees and sprouted onto the earth’s
surface through holes in the ground.
The Anasazi built chambers within their pueblo structures called
kivas. Excavated in the ground they had roofs of timber and earth
and ranged from two person size up to huge ones that held a hundred
or more. In every kiva a small hole was dug to symbolize the hole
the people and spirit life came up through. The kiva had a single
larger hole in the roof and many ceremonies started in the chamber
and moved up a latter to the roof’s earthen surface. Emergence
from the earth is a constant theme with southwest Indians.
Holy Ground
One can only imagine what the Anasazi thought as they first walked
up to the Great Pagosa, steaming and boiling from the ground.
If not for 10,000 years, certainly from the Anasazi time, the
Great Pagosa was holy ground.
Welch Nossaman, the first white man to build and settle near
the spring, noted Indian trails from all directions led to the
spring and those tribes, otherwise at war, were peaceful while
at the spring. The Utes, led by Colorlow Ignacio, did not like
Welch building at the spring site and ran him off, burned the
cabin two years in a row, but did no harm to Welch. The famous
dual fought for ownership of the spring between the Navajos and
Utes was held three miles west and completely out of sight of
the spring. The spring was obviously a nonviolent and peaceful
place.

Tease; Can anybody guess where and what
this is? A current photo of this spot and a description
will be provided in Part 2 of this article.
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The Hippy Dip
Twenty years ago, before “The Springs Resort” was
developed, there was a small and free spring pool south from the
main vent. Sitting there one day, up to my chin, a fellow walked
up and got in. After pleasantries, he began asking questions about
the spring. He shared that he was an anthropologist and had been
following ancient signs, carved in stone, to this spring. The
Anasazi and the people before and after them were fond of doing
all sorts of depictions on rock walls and large boulders. These
were historic scenarios, hunting, religious, astronomical, and
they also gave directions to important places. Some of these designs
have been recognized by modern Indians and others translated by
scientist. I never heard from him again and do not know if this
appeared in an academic report but he swore there were direction
signs to this spring in southerly and westerly directions and
for long distances.
Early whites reported that different tribes used the spring in
their own ways. At that time there were many smaller vents surrounding
the main vent. Some preferred to “take the vapors”
and built hogans, six sided cabins made of wood and mud, over
small vents creating a sauna like steam room. Other tribes used
teepees for the same purpose. Some used the mineral mud on themselves
and livestock. Some drank the water and others dug small pits
and filled them for bathing.
Indians were still coming to Pagosa Springs for the 4th of July
- midsummer season as late as the early 1960’s. They put
up teepees and lived on the bank where the Post Office/Best Western
are located. Margaret Archuleta/Daugaard once shared a photo of
the 4th of July Parade of that era and the teepees were clearly
visible in the background.
Pagosa Ladies, Try This One
Early Caucasian settlers dug tubs or built above ground tubs from
wood, filling them with buckets from the main vent. By the turn
of the century, many families of the county had their own small
bathhouses. Sunday afternoons after church, was a time of music,
picnicking, bathing and socializing. There was a series of larger
commercial bathhouses. The most famous was finished in 1881 and
is featured in historic photos and the Chamber of Commerce architecture.
The hotels on mainstreet had their own private indoor pools. One
of these had a “women only” day. This became a great
social event; the ladies brought lavish food and tried to outdo
each other by ordering the latest and fanciest bathing suits from
the east coast or decorating their own. Perhaps our modern ladies
could use a day off, lounging at the spring, once a week!
The Spa Pool was built in 1938. When the Giordano family bought
it in 1950 there were several old rental cabins on the property.
They built the motel and more spring baths in the building behind
the pool. This facility has a long history of use by Indians,
some doing private ceremony until recent times.
Across the street was The Best Western also with bathing access.
Their pools were developed over several years and about thirty
years ago an octagon frame was constructed with four plastic hot
tubs. Part of that octagon still exist under adobe at The Springs
Resort.
Legends
Interest in using hot springs has come and gone many times. The
Great Pagosa followed the same trend. Pagosa never became the
“Carlsbad (Austria) of America” as was predicted by
early whites, but a steady stream of people have kept at least
one facility open. Over these years several legends of The Great
Pagosa have been passed down. One was of a miner who washed his
shirt in the spring and it dissolved in his hands. It was probably
the first time he had taken it off in months and was obviously
composting! An early story involves a Dr.Pierce and some friends
who “salted” the mineral deposits near the spring.
This means they fired a shot gun loaded with small gold nuggets,
into the ground. Then they dug the gold up and tried to claim
the springs as a gold find. Early doctors were keen to find a
hot spring to prescribe for paying patients but his ruse didn’t
work! Another story was that locals told newcomer fishermen that
the spring was cooler down deep, that wonderful tasting fish lived
there and that if one was caught and reeled up very slowly it
would be cooked by the time it was netted. There were a great
many stories of healings, including many Civil War solders coming
in wagons via Fort Leavenworth, Kansas and soaking for weeks.
Many healing reports included infirmed people coming to The Great
Pagosa on stretchers in wagons and leaving walking or riding horseback.
The best known legend is of the curse the Utes put on the spring,
baring white man from having success using the waters. When The
Springs Resort developers bought the spring property the hot tubs
were unsightly and the showers had black construction plastic
lining the walls. They had a Ute Medicine Man and troupe from
Ignacio come exorcise (remove) the curse. There must have been
something to it as they expanded every year from that moment culminating
in the spacious and beautiful bathhouse and facility there now.
The Great Pagosa has a rich history. In part two of this thesis,
I will discuss more recent times bringing more information and
some more delightful stories to light for the first time.
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