Jump to content

Keough Hot Springs

Coordinates: 37°15′15″N 118°22′35″W / 37.2541°N 118.3765°W / 37.2541; -118.3765
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Keough Hot Springs
View from Keough Hot Springs resort looking southwest in Owens Valley (LADWP Historic Photo Collection)
Map
LocationInyo County, California
Coordinates37°15′15″N 118°22′35″W / 37.2541°N 118.3765°W / 37.2541; -118.3765
Elevation4,209 feet (1,283 m)
Keough Hot Springs is located in California
Keough Hot Springs

Keough Hot Springs is located in the Owens Valley of California, about seven miles south of the city of Bishop on US Highway 395.

History

[edit]

The area around this hot springs was originally inhabited by the local native Paiutes, who considered the waters sacred. Today there is a very small community of homes, and a commercial resort featuring a large swimming pool which was built and first opened in August 1918 by Philip P. Keough, a former local superintendent of the Wells Fargo stage company. Keough's resort was very popular in the 1920s and 30's and was designed to be a complete health resort. The resort reportedly continued to be a very popular social gathering site for residents of the nearby communities up until the World War II era.

Inyo-Mono County Resorts, Hotels, Etc. (1926)

In 1926 the City of Los Angeles purchased the property as a part of its famous water-rights land grab in the Owens Valley. The City's Water and Power Department allowed the resort to remain open under its direction, but absentee management led to a decline in the resort's viability. Leases were offered to various operators, but with only a five-year term. The pool was closed to the public in 1934, but was reopened a few years later by another operator. A new lessee in 1955 performed renovations and the pool once again regained its vitality as a public swimming and recreation area until insurance considerations dictated that it become a membership-only club in 1985.[citation needed]

Sources

[edit]
  • "Keough's Hot Springs | Bishop California | History". Keoughshotsprings.com. Retrieved 2017-04-10.
  • Jeff Cook. "Keough Hot Springs, Once Upon A Time" (PDF). Owensvalleyhistory.com. Retrieved 2017-04-10.