Veronica Springs | |
---|---|
Veronica Medicinal Springs | |
Location | Arroyo Burro Open Space, Santa Barbara |
Coordinates | 34°24′40″N119°44′30″W / 34.4111°N 119.7418°W |
Veronica Springs, also Veronica Medicinal Springs, was a cluster of natural springs along Arroyo Burro creek in Santa Barbara County, California, United States. Veronica spring water was not a therapeutic spa water or a table water but a medicinal mineral water with high magnesium levels. The waters had a yellowish tinge and a strongly purgative-laxative effect (similar to commercial preparations of milk of magnesia), and beginning around 1887, the water was bottled and sold as a health tonic. Veronica Water peaked as a brand in the 1910s. The springs were capped off in 1962.
Veronica Springs was located about 3 miles (4.8 km) west of downtown Santa Barbara "in a wooded canyon that extends from Hendry Beach to Modoc Road," [1] in what is today a city-owned park called Arroyo Burro Open Space and was known in the early 20th century as Veronica Valley. [2] [3] In addition to the Veronica Medicinal Springs, other adjacent springs with similar water profiles bottled and sold their water as well. In 1901, there were Bythenia Springs and Santa Barbara Springs, the latter located on "the mesa adjacent to the same territory." [4] The Santa Barbara Springs were also known as Pinkham's and were owned by S. C. Pinkham. [5] Pinkham's bottled 1,500 US gallons (5,700 L; 1,200 imp gal) annually as of 1917. [6] Bythenia was owned by J. M. McNulty, and located on the Hope Ranch. The Bythenia water was bottled in San Francisco. [7] Circa 1917 a man named Thomas W. Moore owned an unexploited similar spring on the east side of the valley, where water flowed from "soft clay below a limestone ledge." [6]
The waters were known to indigenous people, including the Chumash, who reportedly "not only drank the water but heated rocks and used it for bathing when ill." [1] [8] One account stated that Indians camped at Veronica Springs "twice yearly," in the spring and in the fall. [9] Another account had it that remote communities would send messengers to the springs to collect waters to dose ailing villagers. [10] After European colonization, the springs were named in honor of Saint Veronica by the Catholic friars of Mission Santa Barbara. [11] Another version has it that Veronica was the baptismal name of "an Indian girl who administered the water...and thereafter the water was called 'Veronica water'." [8]
The naturalist Thomas Nuttall is believed to have made a number of his Santa Barbara-area collections of 1836 "in sandy woodland probably about Veronica Springs." [12] Booster and journalist Charles Nordhoff mentioned "numerous hot and cold springs" in the Santa Barbara area in his writings about California in the 1870s. [13] [11]
As a regional history told it in 1917, "About the year 1870 a gentleman who had married the daughter of one of the early Californians and through her, had learned the value of Veronica Springs water, sought to interest the white man in commercializing the same but without success, until about the year 1880, when a couple of prominent Santa Barbarans agreed to finance the proposition in a small way, as they had but little faith in its merits. They opened offices in San Francisco, from which began the sale of Veronica water. A young man who had enjoyed a remarkable cure as a result of the use of this water decided to spend the remainder of his life furthering the interests of Veronica water. In 1895 he went East with the first carload of it and opened offices in Philadelphia, and from this small beginning Veronica water has found its way around the entire world." [14] Bottled Veronica water that was shown at the 1892 Santa Barbara fair by one Henry Clifton was said to have "wonderfully curative properties" and to look as "clear and limpid as a moonbeam." [10]
More straightforward accounts credit the Hawley family with beginning the commercialization of the water. [1] The Hawleys moved to the Santa Barbara area in 1885, [15] and the sons initially sold farm equipment. [16] The father, Walter N. Hawley, had real estate investments including "the upper and lower Hawley blocks," the Arlington Hotel, and a subdivision called Hawley Heights "on the Riviera". [15] [17] Sons Walter Augustus Hawley, Theodore S. Hawley, and Albert E. Hawley (and partners) incorporated the Veronica Springs Mineral Water Company with a $100,000 stock offering in 1893, [18] and incorporated again in 1898 under the name Medicinal Springs Water Company with $300,000 in stock. [19] W. A. Hawley and T. S. Hawley were manager and president of Veronica Mineral Springs in 1901, with offices at the Hawley Block. [20] W. A. Hawley remained "for many years the largest stockholder" in Veronica Water. [21]
In 1907 a promotional booklet published by California boosters described Veronica as one of five most significant springs in Santa Barbara County. [22] Veronica was one of 44 mineral-water springs that bottled water in California in 1909. [23]
Frederick Horace Kimball, [24] known as Captain F. H. Kimball, took charge of Veronica Springs in 1913, and rapidly increased the company's sales volume in an era that was later recalled as the brand's peak. [25] The company bottled and shipped about 500,000 bottles annually during the 1910s, [26] and "Veronica water found its way into about every community in the country." [1] Kimball capitalized on the iconography of the nearby Santa Barbara Mission and started including stylized missionary padres "taking the waters" in Veronica Water ads, under the tagline "health's missionary." [10] Under Kimball, the company also leaned heavily on testimonials, placing ads that included lengthy positive reviews from specific customers. [10] The World War I era was ironically a high point for California mineral waters, in part because druggists were trying to replace products that could no longer be obtained from Europe. [10] As of 1917 Veronica Medicinal Springs were "the most commercially important springs" in Santa Barbara County. [2]
There was talk of building a resort. [27] One account reported, optimistically, that there was "an exquisite hotel site just above the springs on a hill and but for the war there would now be a hotel on that hill." [9] But nothing ever came of the sanatorium scheme. [10] In 1923, Veronica Medicinal Springs controlled five springs on the west side of the valley, on a property totaling 140 acres (57 ha). [28] The brand was sold in 1928. [29] The company's headquarters were on Brannan Street in San Francisco in 1928. [30] By the 1930s, the water was no longer bottled locally but "shipped in railroad tank cars to San Francisco and bottled by the Shasta Water Co., which distributed the water from there to the wholesale trade," and the springs were sold by the Kimball estate in 1944. [1] Owners after Kimball were first Frank Cole and then Harold H. Mackie. [31] The springs were still producing water after World War II, [32] and there were plans to offer "hydrotherapy" treatments at the site for people with arthritis or high blood pressure. [3] By the 1960s the springs were no longer used. [33] The Veronica Springs were reportedly capped off in 1962 "because of complaints about the odor from nearby residents." [34] In February 2016 the city of Santa Barbara bought the remaining undeveloped land in "Veronica Valley". A restoration of the riparian habitat surrounding Arroyo Burro creek is underway, and the land is now a natural area open to the public. [34]
The major analysis of the Veronica Springs water was done in 1903 by the U.S. Bureau of Chemistry and published in Bureau of Chemistry Bull. No. 91. [35] As of 1959, chemical analysis of water yielded the same results "as in 1903". [13] U.S. government geologist Gerald A. Waring described Veronica Springs in 1915 as "situated on the sides of the wide drainage channel of San Roque Creek, about three-quarters of a mile northward from the ocean. The principal springs are on the western side of the creek, but water from about 12 springs, half of which are on each slope of the drainage channel, has been piped to collecting tanks in a warehouse at the principal springs. As the yield of the springs is small and the bottled product consists of the combined flow from a number of springs whose composition probably varies with the season, differences in any two analyses of the water would be expected. The remarkably high content of magnesia...seems to have been produced by concentration of the material from the ocean water by some means which is not clearly understood but which probably involved the evaporation of the water of lagoons to a bittern...The flat-topped hills on whose flanks the springs issue are composed of shales of late Tertiary age that probably belong to the Fernando formation, which has been described by Arnold. The mineralized water is said to seep from a yellow clay of the consistency of cheese." [36] The water itself was said to be a "rich golden brownish yellow". [9]
Physician William Edward Fitch included Veronica in his 1927 book Mineral Waters of the United States and American Spas, and described the medicinal effect of the water: "This is a highly mineralized, sodic, magnesic, sulphated, and muriated, saline water, possessing diuretic and purgative properties, due to the magnesium and sodium sulphates; the ingestion of this water stimulates intestinal peristalsis, increases the flow of bile, dissolves and liquefies the mucus of the intestinal tract and biliary passages. This water has been prescribed by the profession for more than 25 years for the relief of constipation and general sluggishness of bowel action." [37]
Mineral water is water from a mineral spring that contains various minerals, such as salts and sulfur compounds. It is usually still, but may be sparkling (carbonated/effervescent).
Castle Crags is a dramatic and well-known rock formation in Northern California. Elevations range from 2,000 feet (610 m) along the Sacramento River near the base of the crags, to over 6,500 feet (2,000 m) at the summit of the tallest crag.
El Presidio Real de Santa Bárbara, also known as the Royal Presidio of Santa Barbara, is a former military installation in Santa Barbara, California, United States. The presidio was built by Spain in 1782, with the mission of defending the Second Military District in California. In modern times, the Presidio serves as a significant tourist attraction, museum and an active archaeological site as part of El Presidio de Santa Barbara State Historic Park.
San Marcos Pass is a mountain pass in the Santa Ynez Mountains in southern California.
Arroyo Burro Beach, also known as Hendry's Beach by local residents, is a public beach in Santa Barbara County, California. Located off of Cliff Drive, it is the terminus of Arroyo Burro Creek, and stands at the foot of the Santa Barbara coastal bluffs of the Wilcox Property, which is adjacent to the east. The community of Hope Ranch is about 1 mi (1.6 km) to the west.
The history of Santa Barbara, California, begins approximately 13,000 years ago with the arrival of the first Native Americans. The Spanish came in the 18th century to occupy and Christianize the area, which became part of Mexico following the Mexican War of Independence. In 1848, the expanding United States acquired the town along with the rest of California as a result of defeating Mexico in the Mexican–American War. Santa Barbara transformed then from a small cluster of adobes into successively a rowdy, lawless Gold Rush era town; a Victorian-era health resort; a center of silent film production; an oil boom town; a town supporting a military base and hospital during World War II; and finally it became the economically diverse resort destination it remains in the present day. Twice destroyed by earthquakes, in 1812 and 1925, it was rebuilt after the second one in a Spanish Colonial style.
The American Film Manufacturing Company, also known as Flying “A” Studios, was an American motion picture production company. In 1915, the formal name was changed to the American Film Company.
Adams is an unincorporated community in Lake County, California. It was formerly Adams Springs, a summer resort developed around a small group of mineral water springs.
Saratoga Springs is a set of springs that was turned into a resort in the 1870s in Lake County, California. At its peak the resort could accommodate 250 people. The resort was closed after the main hotel burned down, but reopened as a retreat in 1991.
Nestlé Waters is a Swiss multinational bottled water division of Nestlé. It was founded in 1992.
Seminole Hot Springs is an unincorporated community in Los Angeles County, California, United States. Seminole Hot Springs is located in the Santa Monica Mountains near Cornell, 3.6 miles (5.8 km) south-southeast of Agoura Hills at an elevation of 932 feet (284 m).
Belmond El Encanto is a hotel in Santa Barbara, California. It was established during the early 1900s as the El Encanto Hotel, when it was popular with artists of the plein air school, celebrities and the "carriage trade" from the East Coast. Guests during the early days of Hollywood included Hedy Lamarr, Clark Gable and Carole Lombard.
Syuxtun is a former Chumash village in Santa Barbara, California, United States. Recognized as Burton Mound, a California Historical Landmark, the site is administered by the city as Ambassador Park. The Native American village was encountered in 1542 by Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo. The village was also visited and documented by Juan Crespí and Gaspar de Portolà. The California Department of Parks and Recreation has acknowledged that Burton Mound has "yielded some of the most important archeological evidence found in California".
Wheeler Springs is an unincorporated community that grew around a set of sulphurated hot springs in Ventura County, California. It is located 6 miles north of the Ojai Valley, within Los Padres National Forest. It is named for Wheeler Blumberg, who founded the town in 1891, and the many natural hot springs.
Lyons Springs, sometimes Lyon Spring, originally Nogales Hot Springs, was a naturally occurring sulphur spring and associated resort in Matilija Creek Canyon, near Ojai, Ventura County, California. Located between Vickers Springs and Matilija Hot Springs, the Lyon Spring resort was established in the 1880s.
Soboba Hot Springs are a historic hot springs and resort in Riverside County, California, United States. The springs issued from the side of a steep ravine "with narrow, precipitous sides, and the rock exposed is largely a crushed gneiss...the thermal character of the springs is due to crushing and slipping of the rocks". The Soboba Hot Springs resort was adjacent to the reservation of the Soboba Band of Luiseño Indians. Soboba means hot water in the Luiseño language.
Gaviota Hot Springs is a geothermal feature in Santa Barbara County, California, United States. The two pools are accessible from the Gaviota Peak trail in Gaviota State Park. Gaviota Hot Springs is sometimes called Las Cruces Hot Springs or Sulphur Springs. The hot springs lie within the Hot Springs Creek watershed, near the junction of U.S. Route 101 and California State Route 1.
Tolenas Springs is a group of natural carbonated-water soda springs in the hills of Solano County, California, United States. The springs emerge from a formation of travertine that has been intermittently quarried for building material. The springs are located on private property and are closed to the public.
Console Springs was a natural spring in Reche Canyon, Riverside County, California, United States. The waters were bottled for sale in the early 20th century.
Alhambra Springs is or was a group of natural springs in the hills of Contra Costa County, California, United States. The six spring vents were located on a hillside south of Martinez, above Alhambra Creek in the vicinity of Briones Regional Park. In the 20th century, Alhambra Springs was a popular locally bottled water in Northern California. The springs are no longer commercialized, but Alhambra remains a brand name, and as of 2008 there was still a "trickle" of water at Alhambra Springs.