THE Utah Hot
Springs (also originally called Ogden Hot Springs) was actually in Pleasant
View and closed in about 1970, after more than 80 years of operation.
Native Americans had used the hot springs,
probably for hundreds of years before the pioneers came to the area, in the
late 1840s.
The 180-acre resort began in the late 1884,
founded by Rason H. Slater, a “horse doctor,” who lived in Salt Lake City. He paid
the U.S. Government $400 for the title to the hot springs. His motto for the
resort was “The greatest cure of the West,” as he believed its hot mineral
waters offered cures for pain and even disease. (Some people called the hot spring water, “medicated
fluid.” The spring waters were naturally heated to as much as 130 degrees.
Slater also secured endorsements on the water’s
health benefits from several Ogden area doctors.
Located about 8 miles northwest of Ogden, the
resort had railroad service in 1892 by the Oregon Short Line and Ogden Rapid
Transit Railways, for 30 cents a trip, usually about 30 minutes long. However,
at unpredictable times, herds of sheep in the area would delay trains for long
periods of time.
A fire in the early 1900s completely
destroyed the original resort, but it was quickly rebuilt. On September 12,
1914, it suffered a transformer fire too.
The resort changed ownership several times in
the late 1920s, selling for $30,000 the first time and $40,000 the second time.
Old story in the Ogden Standard-Examiner on the resort's history.
By the 1930s, the resort scaled back in acreage, but offered a 40-room hotel, cafĂ©, dance hall and saloon, with beer 5 cents a glass – besides the hot springs. Gambling for nearby horse races also centered around the resort.
There were even bicycle races staged from
Ogden to the Hot Springs, in the 1920s and 1930s. The hot springs attracted
bathers from not just Utah, but Idaho and Nevada too.
Ironically, few residents of Pleasant View or North Ogden visited the resort during its first 50 years, perhaps because of its gambling and saloon. It was outsiders who kept the resort in business.
By the 1950s, the resort boasted both and
indoor and outdoor swimming pool and the latter featured a tall slippery slide.
In that later era, the resort was more of a swimming resort, than a hot springs
and patrons came by automobile.
What seemed to doom the resort were efforts by government officials to want to chlorinate the mineral waters. That liability, plus a downturn in the public wanting to use such hot pools, eventually caused the hot springs to permanently close.
Some of today's greenhouses on the old hot springs property.
Soon after, the hot springs were used to heat greenhouses year-round. By the late 1990s, there were 40 or more greenhouses on the property. (However, the mineral water is so salty, that plastic pipe is used in the greenhouses, instead of metal.)
A railroad line still operated on the east side of the old hot springs and some of the heated waters would overrun in the spring, near those tracks.
Note that some newspaper reports of old confused
this hot spring with the hot springs near the mouth of Ogden Canyon (today
owned by Rainbow Gardens). Ironically, Rainbow Gardens also operated indoor and
outdoor swimming pools and they closed within a few years of those at the Utah
Hot Springs.
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