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- Chick_Springs abstract "Chick Springs is a mineral springs in present-day Taylors, Greenville County, South Carolina, which from the mid-nineteenth to the early twentieth century served as the focus of a small Upstate South Carolina resort community.The healing power of the mineral waters was known to Native Americans living near the Enoree River, and several early European visitors commented on them, including the architect Robert Mills, who in 1826 described the perfectly clear water as smelling strongly “like the washings of a gun barrel” and claimed it to be useful in “curing ring worms and other cutaneous disorders.” In 1840, planter Burwell Chick opened a resort at the location, building a “large and commodious hotel.” He also allowed some individual \"cottages\" to be built on the property. After Chick’s death in 1847, the enterprise continued under two of his sons, Pettus and Reuben. By the 1850s, when the railroad had reached the Upstate, the resort attracted hundreds of visitors at a time and boosted the local economy, farmers “for ten and twenty miles around” finding a market for their livestock and produce.A visiting Catholic priest found the resort “like all watering-places,” largely “patronized by those in quest of pleasure or matrimonial alliances.” A reporter in 1854 noted “the whole house busy” with “five or six tables of whist parties below the piazzas, two or three card tables employed in the drawing room, two pianos accompanied by sweet voices, one billiard table, at which the balls were constantly cracking, a nine-pin alley, and a great many outsiders and lookers on busily engaged in smoking their cigars. Some were walking to the spring, and at the spring house some were pitching quoits for exercise after drinking the sulphur and chalybeate water.” The reporter further noted the dissection of a fresh watermelon and evening dances that often lasted until midnight.The Chick brothers sold the property in 1857. On the afternoon of November 4, 1862, the hotel caught fire and burned to the ground. In 1868 the Chicks repurchased the property, then in 1885 sold it to George Westmoreland, an Atlanta lawyer, who put up a new hotel and several cottages.Westmoreland’s venture appears to have been unsuccessful. In 1903, he sold the property to prosperous Greenville grocer and entrepreneur James A. Bull, who greatly enlarged the hotel. In 1905, Bull had 4000 guests from May to October. The grounds of his 117 acres included pavilions, croquet grounds, tennis courts, and golf links. Guests could participate in bowling, archery, target shooting, swimming, and horseback riding. The hotel featured telegraph and long-distance telephone lines, and New York and Washington newspapers could be purchased on the evening of publication. Bull also bottled the spring water for sale.In December 1907, Bull’s hotel also burned, although Bull had his own firefighting apparatus and saved most of the outlying buildings and cottages. In 1914, Bull completed an even larger $100,000 hotel “of Spanish architecture, three stories in height, fireproof, and with all the modern equipment and facilities.” Bull’s venture was unsuccessful, and the property briefly served from 1916 to 1917 as a military academy. Bull then promoted a combination hotel and sanitarium under the direction of a graduate of the University of Georgia, Dr. Benjamin Broadus Steedly, an enterprise that closed shortly after Steedly’s death in 1932.Bottling mineral water from the springs remained profitable, and in 1927, the Chick Springs Ginger Ale Company was incorporated to manufacture carbonated beverages. The Company also constructed a swimming pool and opened a park that included picnic facilities and a large dance floor. The business failed during the Depression, and the acres around the mineral spring reverted to the Bull family.By the 21st century only the spring house and a picnic gazebo remained of the former resort. A Chick Springs Historical Society was organized in 2008 with the goal of purchasing and preserving as a park the seven-acre site around the springs.".
- Chick_Springs country United_States.
- Chick_Springs isPartOf Greenville_County,_South_Carolina.
- Chick_Springs isPartOf South_Carolina.
- Chick_Springs thumbnail ChickSpringsHotel.jpg?width=300.
- Chick_Springs type Mineral_spring.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageID "31498380".
- Chick_Springs wikiPageLength "8361".
- Chick_Springs wikiPageOutDegree "34".
- Chick_Springs wikiPageRevisionID "612457402".
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink Archery.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink Bowling.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink Category:Destination_spas.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink Category:Greenville,_South_Carolina_metropolitan_area.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink Category:Landforms_of_Greenville_County,_South_Carolina.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink Category:Springs_of_the_United_States.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink Chalybeate.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink Croquet.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink Dermatophytosis.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink Enoree_River.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink Equestrianism.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink Great_Depression.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink Greenville_County,_South_Carolina.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink List_of_counties_in_South_Carolina.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink List_of_sovereign_states.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink Mineral_spring.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink Political_divisions_of_the_United_States.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink Quoits.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink Robert_Mills_(architect).
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink Sanatorium.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink Shooting_sport.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink South_Carolina.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink Sulfur.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink Swimming_(sport).
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink Taylors,_South_Carolina.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink United_States.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink University_of_Georgia.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink Upstate_South_Carolina.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink Watermelon.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink Whist.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLink File:ChickSprings.JPG.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageWikiLinkText "Chick Springs".
- Chick_Springs coordinatesDisplay "display=inline,title".
- Chick_Springs coordinatesRegion "US-SC".
- Chick_Springs imageCaption "The final Chick Springs Hotel, c. 1914.".
- Chick_Springs imageSkyline "ChickSpringsHotel.jpg".
- Chick_Springs imagesize "250".
- Chick_Springs latd "34".
- Chick_Springs latm "55.7".
- Chick_Springs latns "N".
- Chick_Springs longd "82".
- Chick_Springs longew "W".
- Chick_Springs longm "17.4".
- Chick_Springs officialName "Chick Springs,".
- Chick_Springs settlementType Mineral_spring.
- Chick_Springs subdivisionName Greenville_County,_South_Carolina.
- Chick_Springs subdivisionName South_Carolina.
- Chick_Springs subdivisionName United_States.
- Chick_Springs subdivisionType List_of_counties_in_South_Carolina.
- Chick_Springs subdivisionType List_of_sovereign_states.
- Chick_Springs subdivisionType Political_divisions_of_the_United_States.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Commonscat-inline.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_settlement.
- Chick_Springs wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Chick_Springs subject Category:Destination_spas.
- Chick_Springs subject Category:Greenville,_South_Carolina_metropolitan_area.
- Chick_Springs subject Category:Landforms_of_Greenville_County,_South_Carolina.
- Chick_Springs subject Category:Springs_of_the_United_States.
- Chick_Springs hypernym Mineral.
- Chick_Springs point "34.928333333333335 -82.29".
- Chick_Springs type Area.
- Chick_Springs type Mineral.
- Chick_Springs type Place.
- Chick_Springs type PopulatedPlace.
- Chick_Springs type Settlement.
- Chick_Springs type Area.
- Chick_Springs type Resort.
- Chick_Springs type Location.
- Chick_Springs type Place.
- Chick_Springs type Thing.
- Chick_Springs type SpatialThing.
- Chick_Springs type Q486972.
- Chick_Springs comment "Chick Springs is a mineral springs in present-day Taylors, Greenville County, South Carolina, which from the mid-nineteenth to the early twentieth century served as the focus of a small Upstate South Carolina resort community.The healing power of the mineral waters was known to Native Americans living near the Enoree River, and several early European visitors commented on them, including the architect Robert Mills, who in 1826 described the perfectly clear water as smelling strongly “like the washings of a gun barrel” and claimed it to be useful in “curing ring worms and other cutaneous disorders.” In 1840, planter Burwell Chick opened a resort at the location, building a “large and commodious hotel.” He also allowed some individual \"cottages\" to be built on the property. ".
- Chick_Springs label "Chick Springs".
- Chick_Springs sameAs Q5096153.
- Chick_Springs sameAs m.04brbgg.
- Chick_Springs sameAs 4574587.
- Chick_Springs sameAs Q5096153.
- Chick_Springs lat "34.928333333333335".
- Chick_Springs long "-82.29".
- Chick_Springs wasDerivedFrom Chick_Springs?oldid=612457402.
- Chick_Springs depiction ChickSpringsHotel.jpg.
- Chick_Springs isPrimaryTopicOf Chick_Springs.
- Chick_Springs name "Chick Springs,".