Berkeley Springs, West Virginia

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“George Washington slept here” may be the foundational lie of American tourism marketing — a claim easy to make and difficult to disprove. But Berkeley Springs, West Virginia has a more novel claim: “George Washington took a bath here.”

Unlike many assertions about the hospitality record of the big dog of American history, this one appears to be true: Diary entries establish that as a young surveyor of what was then considered the American west Washington visited the mountain hamlet known as Bath.

There, clear mineral springs flowed at 74.3 degrees Fahrenheit all year. This attracted not only the native residents who’d been coming for thousands of years but many 18th-century travelers who simply wanted to wash off the road grime.

Washington returned many times, sometimes over the years bringing with him various founding fathers to take the waters believed to have healing powers. This put Bath on the map, literally and figuratively, and it became what may be America’s first spa.

George Washington Bath Tub in Berkeley Springs, West Virginia
George Washington’s Bath Tub in Berkeley Springs, West Virginia. Photo by Craig Stoltz

Berkeley Springs State Park

At the Berkeley Springs State Park in the town square park, a sign above a shallow stone rut, around the dimensions of a grave, reads “George Washington Bath Tub.” This claim, at least, is a lie: It’s a 20th-century historic replica. Regardless, it makes very clear just how rough and rustic a warm springs spa was back then.

Best Tips & Tools to Plan Your Trip

And unadorned country spa-going is what Berkeley Springs is all about today. The waters still flow, funneled via various geological ruptures into the town square park at about 1,000 gallons a minute. They feed the main stream that runs through town and the great tiled soaking tubs that are the town’s main attraction. The water flows through spigots, where anyone can grab a gallon for a one-dollar donation.

And they produce a steady stream of visitors — not a flood, happily, but enough to support sufficient food, lodging, and entertainment to make this small mountain town a lovely place to spend a weekend.

Soaking tub in Berkeley Springs State Park
Soaking tub in the Old Roman Baths in Berkeley Springs, WVa. Photo by Craig Stoltz

Taking the Waters of Berkeley Springs

The most important thing to know when planning your visit is to make a reservation long in advance for a session in the Old Roman Baths, which features 750-gallon soaking tubs. This experience is essentially why you should come to Berkeley Springs in the first place. The tubs are filled with genuine spring water, captured from the mountain flow and heated to

101 degrees. The rectangular pools, each in its own snug room, are big enough for a family and private enough for couples. You descend three stairs into the water. It feels soft, barely above body temperature.

It all makes you wish George Washington had been lucky enough to bathe here.

The tubs, operated by the state, are drained, hosed clean, and refilled for each guest. West Virginia also operates the Old Bath House, located just across the park. It features soaks in 150-gallon hot tubs, saunas, massages, and other spa services.

The facilities are clean and simple. Services are provided by friendly, well-trained locals. But if you expect a Danish masseuse skilled in exotic manipulations of obscure tissues, New Age music, and aromatherapy tuned to your yin, you will be disappointed. But you will emerge relaxed, refreshed, and feeling well tended to.

In warmer months folks linger at the stone walls that now contain the springs, rolling up their pants and walking the length. Kids splash around, and others dangle their legs into the flow and watch the minnows nibble their toes. Across the park stands the small Museum of the Berkeley Springs, a simple collection of artifacts, photos, and signage that can absorb another hour if you’re so inclined.

But that’s pretty much it: There isn’t much more to the springs part of Berkeley Springs. But it’s enough.

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The Country Inn at Berkeley Springs lobby
The Country Inn at Berkeley Springs is a lovably worn, family owned hotel right next to the state park. Photo by Craig Stoltz

The Country Inn: A Rustic Berkeley Springs Home Base

This brings us to the Country Inn, another place you should book well in advance of your visit. The hotel abuts the state park, making it an ideal base for a weekend exploring the town. (It is not part of the Country Inn chain of discount hotels.)

The Inn’s several antecedents, each increasing in grandness, hosted various Revolutionary-era potentates, among them — you were about to guess this — George Washington. Splendid balls were thrown, important meetings were held, wealthy families presented their daughters in cotillions, and so forth. In 1898 a fire burned down the 500-room resort that stood there.

The land fell to various uses, among them a carousel and a campground. Today’s inn was built by a local family in 1933 and has been independently operated by various families since then. It has been expanded multiple times.

The Inn’s be-columned facade doesn’t quite prepare you for the rambling, lovably worn old place inside, which earns every one of its three stars. The lobby has a comfortable area for gathering and conversation and a gallery on local history.

Historical markers at Berkeley Springs State Park
The history of Berkeley Springs is easy to learn from signs in Berkeley Springs State Park. Photo by Craig Stoltz

Spa and Restaurant Experience

There is a country restaurant, a bar, and a full-service spa. At the spa you can of course bathe in mineral water piped in from the springs.

If you can score one of the rooms in the main inn building (about $150 to $200 per night), I recommend it. The spaces are comfortable and largely modernized without sacrificing their rusticated charm, including imperfectly matched antique furniture and appointments. Our family once stayed in the newer buildings out back, and they just didn’t have the same wayback appeal.

On our most recent visits, my wife and I enjoyed a pleasant early dinner at Morgan Tavern, the Inn’s richly paneled pub just off the lobby. The bar was full of day-drinking locals, one of whom said he returned at least once a week for the Reuben sandwich. The menu, which also serves the adjacent full-service, white-tablecloth restaurant, was strangely eclectic. And that afternoon, so were we: We had General Tso’s Cauliflower and Tuscany Flatbread. The food and drinks were perfectly serviceable, the company a delight.

Inspired Chaos retail shop in Berkeley Springs, West Virginia
The Inspired Chaos shop is an attraction in the small downtown area of Berkeley Springs, West Virginia. Photo by Craig Stoltz

The Town of Berkeley Springs: Proto-cool

You may read that the town of Berkeley Springs is a hip little mountain town, an up-and-coming star in the mid-Atlantic region.

Well: As someone who has visited many such towns, I can tell you that’s a generous interpretation.

It’s true that you can spend a pleasant hour strolling several blocks around the park.

On the main drag, North Washington Street, you’ll see the historic Star Theater with a wonderful preserved marquee and an old-school big screen that still shows movies; the Naked Olive, a gourmet foods retailer attached to a bar and restaurant; an art gallery; an utterly unexpected Himilayan gift shop; a tony private spa; and Inspired Chaos, a frisky, funny housewares and clothing store in a sprawling old house one street back from North Washington, said by a certificate on the wall to be among the best small retailers in the state. Back one street on the other side of the street you’ll find Hunter’s Hardware, a longtime community retailer of tools, appliances, and guns that makes no attempt to be cool and therefore is. Around the corner, there’s a small antique mall.

Lot 12 Public House exterior in Berkeley Springs, West Virginia
The Lot 12 Public House farm-to-table restaurant could put Berkeley Springs on the regional culinary map. Photo by Craig Stoltz

Other Fabulous Restaurants in Berkeley, West Virginia

The best meal we had in Berkeley Springs was at Lot 12 Public House, the area’s first cheffy, farm-to-table restaurant. It’s a few blocks away, up in the residential quarter. For dinner, it offers a three-course fixed-price menu, at $75 per person. We had tasty, well-plated entrees of scallops and coq au vin, and glasses of wine from the small but well-curated list. All of it was well-sourced and -executed. Lot 12 could easily compete with its counterparts in bigger cities.

This could also be a breakthrough for tiny Berkeley Springs.

Restaurants like Lot 12 can become area magnets for sophisticated travelers and can spur the development of additional upmarket eateries and attractions. Who knows? Berkeley Springs could actually become a hip little town, an up-and-coming rising star in the mid-Atlantic region. Whether that would be a good or bad thing is a topic for another time.

In the meantime, it’s a lovely place to spend a weekend just as it is.

If You Go

Berkeley Springs is in the Eastern Panhandle of West Virginia, about an hour from its more famous mountain town counterpart, Harper’s Ferry. It’s about an hour and a half from Washington, D.C. and Baltimore, and is manageably drivable from the Richmond, Charlottesville, Pittsburgh, and Philadelphia metro areas.

The area around Berkeley Springs offers quite a few things to do, including rafting, tubing, and hiking, along with the kind of countryside antique stores, vineyards, distilleries, and microbreweries you’ll often find around most small towns that attract seasonal visitors.

For information on activities, accommodations, and restaurants, visit the Berkeley Springs website. 

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Author Bio: Craig Stoltz, former travel editor of the Washington Post, has written about food, drink, and travel for the Post, Travel Awaits, Savory Traveler, and other publications. His website is eatdrinkgosmart.com.

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