Seven Minute Spring
~ Manitou Springs, Colorado ~
Article by Thomas Baurley, Leaf McGowan, Techno Tink Research
The Seven Minute Spring was man-made and drilled in 1909 near the former Manitou House Hotel. The drilling hit a limestone cavity of ancient carbonated waters that created a geyser that would erupt every 7 minutes giving a label to its current name.
In 1920, the spring was owned by a curious and concessions that tried to cash in on it by promoting “Mansions 7 Minute Spring” enclosed by a run-down shack. By the 1930s, new owners gave it a more rustic appearance by fencing it in with a rectangular log structure, although it was commercialized with trinkets, gifts, and curios as well as a miniature railroad that circled the property. By the 1940s, the property fell into disrepair and saw a history of various attempts to restore the spring.
By 1993, it had been turned into 7 Minute Spring Park. Local artisans Don Green, Maxine Green, and Bill Burgess created the fonts at the spring, the Pavilion, and tourist attractions for the site. The current gazebo is stylized to incorporate the design of the original 1880s structure that once sheltered Ute Iron Spring. It features an outdoor amphitheater and sculpture garden and encases a panoramic view of the mountains.
Bill Burgess, Don Green, and Maxine Green created the fonts for the spring. Don Green designed the font through which visitors could fill up water bottles and is located within the building. Maxine Green designed the ceramic components of the two font designs. Sun Water Spa offers cedar hot tub soaking services in waters coming from Seven Minute Spring. You can learn more about their services at http://www.sunwaterspa.com/soaking/.
Mineral | Amount | |
Alkalinity | 1,310 mg/L | |
Calcium | 303 mg/L | |
Chloride | 96.4 mg/L | |
Copper | – | |
Fluoride | .64 mg/L | |
Iron | .54 mg/L | |
Lithium | .277 mg/L | |
Magnesium | 82.6 mg/L | |
Manganese | – | |
Potassium | 19.5 mg/L | |
Silica | 22 mg/L | |
Sodium | 159 mg/L | |
Sulfate | 96.7 mg/L | |
Zinc | .34 mg/L | |
Total Dissolved Solids | 1,560 mg/L |
Mineral spring comparison chart
The little touristy village of Manitou Springs is most famous for its mineral springs, which well up through eight (previously 10, upwards of 50) fonts peppered throughout the town. These springs are free to visit, and each holds its own variation of minerals, magic, folklore, and healing properties that visitors have sought throughout the ages. Each has its unique flavor, natural carbonation, and effervescence.
This valley was originally heavily frequented by various Native American tribes who visited Fountain Creek and its natural springs for their healing magic, offering homage and great respect to the spiritual powers that dwell here. They believed these magical springs were the gift of the Great Spirit Manitou, after which the town and valley were named. They brought their sick here for healing. The aboriginal inhabitants and visitors of the area called the “Great Spirit” as “Manitou”, and felt these mineral springs was its breath, as the source of the bubbles in the spring water. This made the waters and grounds extremely sacred.
The Ute, Arapaho, Cheyenne, and many other tribes came here to partake of the great spirit’s breath. They would heal their sick here, collect the waters, stay for winters, and share in the waters as an area of peace where no conflict was allowed. There were believed to have been ten natural springs in the valley. The Euro-Americans caused conflicts and skirmishes with the Natives, pushing them out so they could utilize the valley for business, resort, tourism, and commerce. It is said after the Natives left, they cursed the area for the Whites and that no company will ever succeed there since it has been an ever-changing valley with businesses coming and going, failing and closing, with new ones coming in and replacing those that left.
Stephen Harriman Long was one of the first white explorers to record the waters in 1820. The expedition’s botanist and geologist, Edwin James, detailed the healing nature of the waters. The explorer George Frederick Ruxton wrote in his travel about these “boiling waters” as well and that “… the basin of the spring was filled with beads and wampum, pieces of red cloth and knives, while the surrounding trees were hung with strips of deer skin, cloth, and moccasins”. This is a common practice to leave such similar objects, items, and cultural artifacts around the world at magical and healing springs, wells, and bodies of water.
Nearly 50 years later, Dr. William Abraham Bell and General William Jackson Palmer made plans to develop a health resort here during the Civil War with “a vision of dreamy summer villas nestled in the mountains with grand hotels and landscaped parks clustered around the springs” that they called “Fountain Colony” and “La Font”. It became Colorado’s first resort town. By 1871, white settlers began developing the area for tourism, health care, and profit.
A resort was soon developed here, taking advantage of the waters and incorporating them into medicinal and healing water therapies. This brought great prosperity to the region. By 1873, a developer named Henry McAllister, who worked for Palmer, spread the news about the medicinal benefits of the Springs and pushed for it to become a spa resort with an “incomparable climate and scenery” as its backdrop.
Then came various medicinal practitioners, such as Doctor Edwin Solly, who pushed the area as a resort for healing and therapy, preaching the combined waters to drink, soak in, and breathe of the pure air mixed with the sunny climate would be the most effective prescription to treat tuberculosis. The commercial businesses began to claim the various springs, enclosing some of them as the village grew. The first of which was the Cheyenne Spring House was established as a red sandstone bricked conical roofed structure.
Immediately after, over 50 wells and springs were drilled, many of which were enclosed. Once popularity disappeared and “dried up,” many of these springs were capped, paved over, and closed. However, as the fad died and medical centers and hospitals around the United States improved, Manitou became forgotten and suffered abandonment.
The Mineral Springs Foundation was formed in 1987 as an all-volunteer 501(c)3 non-profit to protect, improve, maintain, and manage the springs, targeting the restoration of some springs and promoting their popularity once again. They host walking tours called “Springabouts” every Saturday from Memorial Day to Labor Day, beginning downtown, and can be arranged by visited the Tourist center or calling 719-685-5089. Upon request, the visitor center will provide maps, brochures, detailed content charts, and sampling cups. They can also be found on their website at http://www.manitoumineralsprings.org.
The series of springs has been developed as a National Register of Historic Places district and is located in one of the country’s largest districts of its kind. It was initially called the “Saratoga of the West” and established as a resort community within a spectacular setting at the edge of the Rocky Mountains along the base of Pikes Peak. Numerous bottling companies moved into the area, making a profit on the waters, the most famous of which was “Manitou Springs water,” which was sold globally.
Geology: The waters come from two sources in the Rampart Range and Ute Pass, these “deep-seated waters” travel through limestone caverns and drainage systems created by karst aquifers. The water dissolves the limestone and absorbs carbonic acid, carbon dioxide, and other minerals, making it “effervescent” or slightly naturally carbonated. Volcanic and inner core processes heat it. Through time, the waters return to the surface naturally utilizing an artesian process, rising to the surface, collecting soda, minerals, and sodium bicarbonate upwards. The other water sources are from Fountain Creek and Williams Canyon, snowmelt, rainwater, and surface waters. The warm water then flows into a limestone cavern, where it becomes carbonated and springs forth to the surface in natural and human-drilled locations. Most of these waters take thousands of years to complete their voyage from the mountain snow-capped peaks down to inner earth and back up to the surface – freeing its content and solutions from being affected by industry, development, and atmospheric contamination.
The Springs of Manitou:
http://www.technogypsie.net/naiads/?p=3203
- Cheyenne Spring – http://www.technogypsie.net/reviews/?p=4921 or http://www.technogypsie.net/naiads/?p=3133
This natural sweet soda spring comes up from limestone aquifers and is believed to be over 20,000 years old. - Iron Spring – http://www.technogypsie.net/naiads/?p=3159
The Iron spring is named after its harsh foul iron-tasting flavor and content. It was a man-made spring drilled in the 1800s and prescribed to patients for iron deficiency. - Lithia / Twin Spring – http://www.technogypsie.net/reviews/?p=4881 or http://www.technogypsie.net/naiads/?p=3163
This is a combined location of two man-made drilled springs – Twin Springs and Lithia Springs. It is popular for its Lithium content and its sweet taste, calcium, lithium, and potassium content. It’s popular to be mixed in lemonade. - Navajo Spring – http://www.technogypsie.net/naiads/?p=3127
This spring is a natural soda spring over which commercial development was built. It is now within and beneath the popcorn and candy store. This was the most popular that was frequented by Native Americans and early Euro-American settlers and was the founding spring for the village. It originally fed a large bath house and bottling plant bringing fame to the town. - Old Ute Chief Spring – http://www.technogypsie.net/naiads/?p=3169
- Seven Minute Spring – http://www.technogypsie.net/naiads/?p=3147
A man-made spring drilled in 1909 to enhance the neighboring hotel’s tourist attraction. Its unique carbonization caused it to erupt like a geyser every 7 minutes. It became dormant for many years until the 1990’s when it was re-drilled and the surrounding park was established. - Shoshone Spring – http://www.technogypsie.net/naiads/?p=3151
This was a natural spring that hosted sulfur content and was prescribed by various physicians for curative powers before modern medicine became popular and effective. - Soda Spring – http://www.technogypsie.net/naiads/?p=3217
- Stratton Spring – http://www.technogypsie.net/reviews/?p=4931 or http://www.technogypsie.net/naiads/?p=3139
This is a man-made drilled spring by the Stratton Foundation as a service to Manitou Springs village where tourists could come and partake of its waters, dedicated to early Native American Trails. - Wheeler Spring – http://www.technogypsie.net/naiads/?p=3155
This is another man-made drilled spring that was donated to the city by settler Jerome Wheeler of the New York Macy’s who resided and banked in the town during the mining and railroad period. His former home is located where the current post office is today.
References:
- Gazette 2015 “List Manitou Springs”. Website referenced 12/21/16 at http://gazette.com/list-the-springs-of-manitou-springs/article/1565225.
- Harrison, Deborah 2003 “Manitou Springs”. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7385-2856-4.
- Manitou Springs Chamber of Commerce 2012 “The History of Manitou Springs”.
- Mineral Springs Foundation 2013 “Mineral Springs”. Website referenced 12/21/16 at http://www.manitoumineralsprings.org
- Manitou Mineral Springs 2015 “7 Minute Spring”. Website referenced 12/21/16 at http://manitoumineralsprings.org/7-minute-spring.html
- National Register 2013 “American Dreams – National Register of Historic Places in El Paso County, Colorado.
- Visit Colorado Springs 2016 “Manitou Mineral Springs”. Website referenced 12/21/16 at http://www.visitcos.com/manitou-mineral-springs.
- Wikipedia 2016 “Manitou Springs Mineral Springs”. Website referenced 12/21/16 at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manitou_Mineral_Springs
- Manitou Mineral Springs 2015 “7 Minute Spring”. Website referenced 12/21/16 at http://manitoumineralsprings.org/7-minute-spring.html
- Visit Colorado Springs 2016 “Manitou Mineral Springs”. Website referenced 12/21/16 at http://www.visitc
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