Traditional lands of the Cosna Band of the Upper Koyukon Dene. In 1902 a
prospector, John Karshner, discovered several hot springs in the area. He began a
homestead and vegetable farm. In the same year, the United States Army built a
telegraph station. The area became a service and supply point for miners in the
Tofty and Eureka mining districts. It was known as Baker's Hot Springs, after nearby Baker Creek. Farming and livestock operations in the area produced fresh meat, poultry, and produce for sale. In 1903, Sam's Rooms and Meals, now called the Manley Roadhouse, opened. The
roadhouse was owned by Robert E. Lee, who was also the town's postmaster until his death in 2010. In 1907 a miner named Frank Manley built the Hot Springs Resort Hotel. The resort was a four-storey building with 45 guest rooms, steam heat, electric lights, hot baths, a bar, a restaurant, a billiard room, a bowling alley, a barber shop, and an Olympic-size indoor swimming pool which used heated water from the hot springs. During the summer, the hotel's private boat transported guests from steamers on the
Tanana River. In the winter, an overland stagecoach trip from
Fairbanks took two days. The town was renamed
Hot Springs. The resort and the mining in the area caused the town to prosper. It had a store, a newspaper, a bakery, clothing stores and other businesses. The population of the area in 1910 was more than 500. In 1913 the resort burned to the ground. Mining activity was also in decline and by 1920 only 29 residents lived in Hot Springs. The town's name was changed to Manley Hot Springs in 1957. In May 1984, a newcomer to the town,
Michael Silka, killed nine people in the area. Since 1950, the population of Manley Hot Springs has slowly increased. In the
2020 census, the population of Manley Hot Springs was 169, up 90 percent from 89 in
2010 census. ==Climate==