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Aqua Geo Traditional Cache

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offline.cacher: CO and cache seem to have disappeared.

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Hidden : 2/17/2008
Difficulty:
2 out of 5
Terrain:
1 out of 5

Size: Size:   other (other)

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Geocache Description:

A refreshing cache if you choose to partake.


 

Bear Lithia Spring is a natural feature that figured in the earliest chapters of the European settlement of Rockingham County. Shenandoah Valley historian John W. Wayland records that in 1741 the spring was acquired along with 820 acres by the German-born Adam Miller (circa 1700- circa 1780), whom Wayland regarded as apparently “the first settler of Rockingham and adjacent sections of the Valley.”

Adam Miller, who appears to have been the first settler of Rockingham and adjacent sections of the Valley, was probably born at Schreisheim, Germany about the year 1700. He came early in life to Lancaster County, Pa., with his wife and an unmarried sister.  Later, going to Williamsburg, Va., he heard of the beautiful valley between the mountains from some Spotswood knights, and followed their path westward, crossing the Blue Ridge at Swift Run Gap. 

He secured first the “uppermost of the Massanutten lots,” near the present Page County line. Adam Miller was living on this tract in 1764 when he sold 280 acres thereof to his son-in-law, Jacob Bear. Here Adam Miller lived till he died about 1780.  Adam Miller was a soldier in the French and Indian War, as shown by the military schedule for 1758 in Hening’s Statutes.  In religion he was a Lutheran, and was probably buried at St. Peter’s Church, four miles north of Elkton. 

By the late 1860s the spring had come into the possession of Jacob Bear’s grandson Adam Clark Bear (1820-1906), who owned it as part of a tract of just over 289 acres. The tract was described as “Bon Air” or “Bon Air Springs”, named after the nearby house known as Bon Air (circa 1870). The spring was known as such until the 1890s when the name changed to “Bear Lithia Springs.”

In 1887 Adam and his wife, Susan (Long) Bear, leased Bear Lithia Spring to Harrisonburg attorney William B. Compton and an associate, John R. Jones. The arrangement with Compton and Jones was one of several the Bears made to market the spring water, which was sold in vessels labeled with a bear insignia. In 1899 Adam Bear granted a thirty-year license to the Bear Lithia Water Company to sell the water.

The company, headed by A. G. Dickenson of New York, erected a bottling plant beside the spring and began shipping water out in 1906. According to Elkton historian R. B. Hutton, “A special glass lined tank car was made to ship the water to New York.” The proximity of the Norfolk and Western (now Norfolk & Southern) rail line, which was constructed through the tract in 1881, was key to the success of the operation, and in fact a spur line was built up to the spring to facilitate shipping.

A 1936 Works Progress Administration report on the spring and its “pure limpid crystal water” described it as a treatment for “different diseases such as kidney and bladder trouble and dyspepsia, nervous dyspepsia, gout, rheumatism, bright disease and several other diseases.”

The nearby house, Bon Air, was home to summer boarders, the most famous of which was Confederate General John Singleton Mosby (1833-1916). Mosby was a frequenter of spring resorts and, like many of his contemporaries, believed in the therapeutic properties of water. At the end of his life he suffered from a skin complaint and constipation, conditions that were treated by imbibing or bathing in mineral-rich water. In June 1913 he lodged at the Elkton Hotel in Elkton and wrote to a grandson “I am improving in health every day.” The hotel stationery on which he wrote claimed that Lithia water from a spring in Elkton was “used in the Hotel for all purposes.”

Also nearby is the Bear family cemetery, in which Jacob Bear is said to be buried. He died May 17, 1827 aged 61 years, 5 months, and 17 days. Also, 20 privates and one officer of the Union Army are said to have been buried there, having died in the Battle of Port Republic in June of 1862.

Bear Lithia Spring was covered by a low cylindrical concrete enclosure built by then owner Coors Brewing Company. The enclosure was constructed above a circular stone curb dating to the historic period. Today the spring, which is generally reported to have an output of about three million gallons a day, and the cemetery are owned by the Town of Elkton.

Bring your own bottle for an on-premises drink or for some to go. Many locals still do. I remember well my Grandfather, Basil Miller, taking trips from Shenandoah to the spring in his 60-something Chevy Impala to fill the glass bottles of spring water that always graced his icebox. Try it for yourself. It's permissible and refreshing.

There may be some daytime activity of local water haulers, but there's enough for you to look at while they fill up. Why not sit a spell on the old bench and sip the aqua geo.

You will need a pen or pencil. This is a nano. The trick to getting the log back in is to put the log in the lid first, not the container.

A bonus history gem is the cemetery located at 38o  26.083 N     0780 37.107 W. Buried there are descendants of the Miller and Bear families. It looks risky to trod through the field, but the Town of Elkton owns a right of way to it directly from the cache site.

This cache is off limits after 11:00 p.m.


Additional Hints (No hints available.)