Waconda Spring, or Great Spirit Spring, was a natural
artesian
Artesian may refer to:
* Someone from the County of Artois
* Artesian aquifer, a source of water
* Artesian Builds, a former computer building company
* Artesian, South Dakota, United States
* Great Artesian Basin, Australia
* The Artesian Hotel ...
spring located in
Mitchell County, near the communities of
Glen Elder and
Cawker City in the
U.S. state of
Kansas. It was a sacred site for
Native American tribes of the
Great Plains
The Great Plains (french: Grandes Plaines), sometimes simply "the Plains", is a broad expanse of flatland in North America. It is located west of the Mississippi River and east of the Rocky Mountains, much of it covered in prairie, steppe, an ...
and, for a time, became the site of a health spa for American settlers. With the completion of the Glen Elder Dam in 1968, the mineral spring was sealed then disappeared beneath the waters of
Waconda Reservoir.
Description
Waconda Spring was situated on the bank of the
Solomon River, below the North and South Forks of the river.
The water flowing from the spring had deposited a large cone of
travertine around it.
[Buchanan, Rex, Robert Sawin, and Wayne Lebsack (2000).]
"Water of the Most Excellent Kind: Historic Springs in Kansas".
''Kansas History: A Journal of the Central Plains''. pp. 128-41. Retrieved 2010-09-18.
In 1866, surveyor David E. Ballard described it:
The Spring itself is a natural , it being located on the summit of a cone shaped limestone rock. The rock is circular, about 200 feet in diameter at the base and about 30 feet high, upon the summit of this, rests the spring, the basin being circular and about 30 feet in diameter, its outlet is a trough apparently formed by the action of the water upon the rock. The water in the spring is about 20 feet deep and exceedingly strong with salt ...
Retrieved 2010-09-18.
Native American beliefs
The name "Waconda" is from the
Kanza language, and translates as "spirit water" or "Great Spirit Spring". However, it is located in territory controlled by the Pawnee,
[Entz, Gary R. (2005)]
"Religion in Kansas".
''Kansas History: A Journal of the Central Plains''. pp. 140-145. Retrieved 2010-09-18.
who knew it by the names "Pahowa" and "Kitzawitzuk", the latter translated as "water on a bank".
[Grinnell, George Bird (1893).]
''Pawnee Hero Stories and Folk Tales''.
New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. Retrieved 2010-09-16.
In the Pawnee traditional religion, the supreme being Tirawa allots supernatural powers to certain animals. These animals, the ''nahurac'', act as Tirawa's servants and messengers, and intercede for the Pawnee with Tirawa.
The ''nahurac'' had five lodges, of which Waconda Spring was one. The foremost among them was
Pahuk, usually translated "hill island", a bluff on the south side of the
Platte River, near the town of
Cedar Bluffs in present-day
Saunders County, Nebraska.
[Jensen, Richard E. (1973). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Pahuk".]
Lalawakohtito, or "dark island", was an island in the Platte near
Central City, Nebraska; Ahkawitakol, or "white bank", was on the
Loup River opposite the mouth of the
Cedar River in what is now
Nance County, Nebraska; and
Pahur, or "hill that points the way", was a bluff south of the
Republican River
The Republican River is a river in the central Great Plains of North America, rising in the High Plains (United States), High Plains of eastern Colorado and flowing east U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline ...
, near
Guide Rock, Nebraska.
Beside the Pawnee, many other Native American tribes venerated Waconda Spring, often casting articles of value into it as offerings.
George Bird Grinnell describes the offerings of the Pawnee as including blankets and robes, blue beads, eagle feathers, and moccasins.
A
geoglyph, produced by the intaglio technique of removing the surface sod to form a figure, is located on a hillside about two miles southwest of Waconda Spring. The figure represents an unidentified animal, possibly a beaver. It is thought to be several hundred years old; soil analysis indicates that it was renewed at least once after its initial excavation, suggesting that it was in use over an extended period of time.
[Blakeslee, Donald J.]
''Holy Ground, Healing Water: Cultural Landscapes at Waconda Lake, Kansas''.
pp. 105-112. Retrieved 2010-09-18.
Waconda Spring in history
It is said that the first European explorer to visit Waconda Spring was
Sir William Johnson
Sir William Johnson, 1st Baronet of New York ( – 11 July 1774), was a British Army officer and colonial administrator from Ireland. As a young man, Johnson moved to the Province of New York to manage an estate purchased by his uncle, Royal Na ...
in 1767; however, this is unlikely. The first recorded visit to the site was by General
Zebulon Pike in 1806. Pike visited the spring during his exploration of the Great Plains after he had concluded a treaty with the Pawnee.
Settlement in the area did not take place until after Kansas became a state in 1861. The first settler in the region was in 1870 by a man named Pfeiffer, who took out the first claim on the property. Kansas Senator
Samuel C. Pomeroy
Samuel Clarke Pomeroy (January 3, 1816 – August 27, 1891) was a United States senator from Kansas in the mid-19th century. He served in the United States Senate during the American Civil War. Pomeroy also served in the Massachusetts House of ...
toured the region in 1870 and marveled at what he saw. Said Pomeroy, "At first I declared it the Crater of an Ancient Volcano. The Water occupying its hollow center is fathomless, and about 200 feet in diameter in a perfect circle! It is always brimming full and running over on all sides ... The hills about it were as sacred to the Indians as those about Jerusalem." Pomeroy recognized the site's commercial potential and went on to predict that a health resort would soon be built in the region.
Within a few years, a man named Burnham constructed a bottling works on the site and began selling the mineral water as a health tonic. He called it ''Waconda Flier''. The sales of ''Waconda Flier'' piqued the interest of an eastern investor named McWilliams, who in 1884 invested in the site and began the construction of a stone sanitarium. The spring was fenced off and completely privatized. The building was completed ten years later, and under the management of G. W. Cooper, Waconda Spring became a hotel and health spa. Sales of ''Waconda Flier'' continued, and by the 1890s it was being sold in all parts of the country. In 1904, ''Waconda Flier'' won a medal for its superior medicinal qualities at the
St. Louis World's Fair
The Louisiana Purchase Exposition, informally known as the St. Louis World's Fair, was an international exposition held in St. Louis, Missouri, United States, from April 30 to December 1, 1904. Local, state, and federal funds totaling $15 milli ...
.
In 1906, G. P. Abrahams purchased the property from McWilliams and continued operating the health spa and bottling plant until his 1924 death. In 1924, the property passed to Carl Bingesser, who had married Abrahams' daughter Anna in 1907. Under both Abrahams and Bingesser, the hotel resort was improved upon and maintained a solid reputation as health spa and place of healing. It continued to do so even as the spa passed on to Carlos Bingesser, the third generation of the Abrahams-Bingesser family to own and operate the spa. The facilities were fully modernized and offered physical therapy, hydro-therapy, electro-therapy, and dietary regimens. Water from Waconda Spring was used for internal and external cleansing of the body. It was piped into every bathtub in the sanitarium, was served with meals, and used for enemas. A popular slogan used to lure tourists to the resort was, "It will clean works until your works work." Waconda Spring was a popular, profitable enterprise for the Bingesser family.
"The History of Waconda".
Retrieved 2010-09-18. Descendants operated the spa until 1964.
Glen Elder Dam
In 1944 the Bureau of Reclamation and the Army Corps of Engineers announced plans for a large earthen dam on the Solomon River near the town of Glen Elder. The plan called for the inundation of Waconda Spring. The Bingesser family fought to stop the plan, but in 1951 greater than normal rainfall in Kansas led to massive flooding in Topeka and other Kansas towns. This led to renewed calls for dams and other flood control projects, including renewed calls for the Glen Elder Dam. A respected hydrologist was brought in to inspect Waconda Spring. The hydrologist concluded that Waconda Spring was unique and possibly the only spring like it in the world. However, commercial advocates in favor of the dam dismissed the hydrologist and dismissively claimed that Waconda Spring was nothing more than a "mud hole."
In the end, the developers won. Construction on Glen Elder Dam began in 1964 and was completed by the end of 1968. Engineers bulldozed the hotel and health spa then dumped the debris into the pool of Waconda Spring. Water from the Solomon River began filling up the valley, and by 1970 it was full. Waconda Spring was lost beneath the waters of the reservoir that now bears its name.
References
Further reading
* Douglas R. Parks and Waldo R. Wedel, "Pawnee Geography: Historical and Sacred," ''Great Plains Quarterly'' vol. 5, no. 3 (Summer 1985): 143–176.
External links
Waconda Springs Kansas Historical Marker
- located about 2 miles east of Cawker City along US-24 highway
Healing Waters: the Legend of Waconda Springs
at th
Kansas State Historical Society
{{Coord, 39, 29, 54, N, 98, 22, 44, W, display=title
Former rivers
Landmarks in Kansas
Recreational areas in Kansas
Native American history of Kansas
Sacred places of the Pawnee
Religious places of the indigenous peoples of North America
Bodies of water of Mitchell County, Kansas
Sacred springs
Springs of Kansas
1968 disestablishments in Kansas