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- Q5910432 subject Q7362244.
- Q5910432 subject Q8319682.
- Q5910432 subject Q8523976.
- Q5910432 subject Q8664944.
- Q5910432 abstract "Hot Springs, also known as Boquillas Hot Springs, is a former resort in what is now Big Bend National Park in Texas. They were developed by J.O. Langford from 1909. Langford was a Mississippi native who had contracted malaria as a child. Searching for a cure, he heard of reputedly curative hot springs on the Rio Grande while visiting Alpine, Texas. Langford made a homestead claim, sight unseen. Although other homestead claims on the site had failed, Langford, his wife Bessie and his 18-month-old daughter set out for the site, discovering that it was already occupied by Cleofas Natividad with his wife and ten children. Initially considering the Natividads squatters, the Langfords developed a cooperative relationship with the Natividads. J.O. took a 21-day treatment of drinking and bathing in the spring waters, regaining his health.The site was the first major tourist attraction in the area, predating the establishment of the national park. Before the Langford's development, a small stone tub had been excavated in the local stone for bathing, with a dugout that was renovated by the Langfords as a residence. The Langfords later built an adobe house, a stone bathhouse, and brushwood bathing shelters. The Langfords left in 1912 when bandits made the area unsafe. When they returned in 1927 they rebuilt the bathhouse, but with a canvas roof. They also built a store and a motor court, consisting of seven attached cabins.The structures were built of local stone with wood trussed roofs covered with corrugated metal. Interior walls were plastered. Four of the motor court rooms featured painted murals. A terrace was covered with a long porch or ramada connecting the cabins.The historic district includes petrogylphs left by native American visitors. The springs were visited by Pedro de Rábago y Terán in 1747, who found Apaches farming the area. In later years the Comanche Trail passed nearby. The hot springs remain, at a temperature of 105 degrees Fahrenheit, and may be used for soaking. The spring is frequently submerged by the Rio Grande. The site is accessible by unpaved road, about 2 miles (3.2 km) west of Rio Grande Village, otherwise known as Boquillas.Hot Springs was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on September 17, 1974.".
- Q5910432 added "1974-09-17".
- Q5910432 area "465388.488576".
- Q5910432 location Q1427197.
- Q5910432 nrhpReferenceNumber "74000278".
- Q5910432 thumbnail Hot_Springs_Cabins_TX_NPS.jpg?width=300.
- Q5910432 wikiPageExternalLink soakinthesprings.htm.
- Q5910432 wikiPageExternalLink rpb02.
- Q5910432 wikiPageExternalLink hotsprings.htm.
- Q5910432 wikiPageWikiLink Q102090.
- Q5910432 wikiPageWikiLink Q12156.
- Q5910432 wikiPageWikiLink Q1427197.
- Q5910432 wikiPageWikiLink Q1439.
- Q5910432 wikiPageWikiLink Q1494.
- Q5910432 wikiPageWikiLink Q160636.
- Q5910432 wikiPageWikiLink Q183496.
- Q5910432 wikiPageWikiLink Q3719.
- Q5910432 wikiPageWikiLink Q42195.
- Q5910432 wikiPageWikiLink Q4944218.
- Q5910432 wikiPageWikiLink Q5150524.
- Q5910432 wikiPageWikiLink Q661540.
- Q5910432 wikiPageWikiLink Q7160046.
- Q5910432 wikiPageWikiLink Q7362244.
- Q5910432 wikiPageWikiLink Q8319682.
- Q5910432 wikiPageWikiLink Q8523976.
- Q5910432 wikiPageWikiLink Q8664944.
- Q5910432 wikiPageWikiLink Q935908.
- Q5910432 yearOfConstruction "1909".
- Q5910432 added "1974-09-17".
- Q5910432 built "1909".
- Q5910432 location "W of Rio Grande Village, Big Bend National Park, Texas".
- Q5910432 name "Hot Springs".
- Q5910432 refnum "74000278".
- Q5910432 point "29.1775 -102.99861111111112".
- Q5910432 type Place.
- Q5910432 type ArchitecturalStructure.
- Q5910432 type Building.
- Q5910432 type Location.
- Q5910432 type Place.
- Q5910432 type Thing.
- Q5910432 type SpatialThing.
- Q5910432 type Q41176.
- Q5910432 comment "Hot Springs, also known as Boquillas Hot Springs, is a former resort in what is now Big Bend National Park in Texas. They were developed by J.O. Langford from 1909. Langford was a Mississippi native who had contracted malaria as a child. Searching for a cure, he heard of reputedly curative hot springs on the Rio Grande while visiting Alpine, Texas. Langford made a homestead claim, sight unseen.".
- Q5910432 label "Hot Springs (Big Bend National Park)".
- Q5910432 lat "29.1775".
- Q5910432 long "-102.99861111111112".
- Q5910432 depiction Hot_Springs_Cabins_TX_NPS.jpg.
- Q5910432 name "Hot Springs".