[This morning's "Small Wonder," to be aired on KWIT, 90.3, NPR in Sioux City, Iowa. Tell your smart speaker to listen in at 7:45 a.m. or 4:45 p.m. (or thereabouts). I thought they'd hold it for Halloween, but it's time has come.]
If you look closely into a single, little nook, a tiny corner of
the elegant, spirit-riddled Crescent Hotel, Eureka Springs, Arkansas, you'll
see an arc, I’m told, a portal that’ll usher you right into the fifth
dimension. I walked fearfully through the place.
“Look closely because at this very spot it frequently appears,”
our guide told us. She jerked her arm sideways, in a motion I simply assumed
was conjuration, and I took the picture.
Here it is. You got to look hard, worse than
hard.
The Crescent Hotel is an ancient, five-story, behemoth, built in
1886, a creaking-stairway hotel that has every reason to be haunted. It's seen
more booms and busts than a brothel, and likely was one at least once in its
checkered 135-year history. It's been most everything else in fact, including a
hospital, of sorts, when, in 1937, an Iowa charlatan/crook named Norman Baker
moved his medical humbug from Muscatine to Eureka Springs, to take over the
sprawling old hotel and create a reign of medical tomfoolery that lasted just
three years until Arkansas tossed him in the clink for mail fraud.
Somewhere in the hotel basement, there reportedly was a morgue.
Baker took on dying people and their loved ones by the dozens, even hundreds,
promising miracle cures that never arrived, and gathered, in return $4 million
himself. That some patients died seems more than possible; he kept no records.
Was there a gallery of the dead in the basement? No one knows.
See the ghosts? They’re there all right. Listen closely.
Eureka Springs is itself a monument to delusion and grand, American-style
chicanery. Throughout the sharp wooded hills, sweet natural springs abound,
where mineral water once bubbled, drawing thousands of seekers to the neighborhood
in hopes that drinking that mineral water--sometimes bathing in it--would cure whatever
their ills.
And it did. See the ghosts? Look closely now, very closely--that
arc is the means by which all of us make it into the fifth dimension.
Eureka Springs is a remarkable place with an incredible history.
The scary Crescent Hotel is its capstone, a town officially called "the
Queen of the Ozarks." Trust me--if any place on Mother Earth should be haunted,
the immense Crescent, high above town, high above the valley, should. Some gloomy
midnights, it just has to howl.
If you climb the stairs to the observation deck, you can see,
all over the valley, a hundred--at least--Victorian mansions, and at least
something of the town that's made it's living by sweet promises.
Across the valley, you won't be able to miss the huge
"Christ of the Ozarks," third tallest Jesus in the world, a sculpture
so massive it could dangle three cars from each wrist, so big its feet had to
be cut off lest its holy head require a red beacon to warn off aircraft. So,
this mammoth Jesus has no feet; but then some wry cynics claim the statue is not
work of art at all, just Willie Nelson in a fine, white dress.
Eureka Springs is the home of the world's largest passion play, but
let me play the cynic: I'm not sure the place is all that good for your faith.
There's just way too much of it. Even though thousands come every year to the
see "the greatest story ever told," the town has a history of too much
silliness, too much fraud.
We're all seekers--every one of us, I’d guess, all looking, some
more seriously than others; but all of us itch to find some long-lost goodness,
some hope and joy.
Eureka Spring has been trying for more than a hundred years to
scratch that itch.
Room #218. Be sure to stop there, the most haunted room in the whole
Poe-like Crescent Hotel. Seriously.
Scary.
But if you want to
stay there, you need to book months in advance because #218 is the most
requested room in the entire scary place. Sheesh. Makes me shiver.
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