The springs were used for centuries by local indigenous people for their healing properties. In the early 19th century Spanish ranchers used the area but did not develop the springs. raised funds to build a second hotel, the
Hot Springs Hotel on the land adjacent to
The Adobe Hotel. The new hotel contained two bathhouses – one for hot mineral water soaking and one for mud baths. In 1880, the
Santa Fe Railroad created the Las Vegas Hot Springs Company; the company purchased the Hot Springs Hotel, the surrounding property and the bathhouses. In April 1882, the company completed a
standard-gauge track between Las Vegas and the hot springs, and the first train made the journey on April 5. The company continued to develop the property and later that year opened the three-story
Queen Anne styled Montezuma Hotel featuring 270 steam-heated rooms. In January, 1884, the hotel and bathhouses burned to the ground; within weeks the Santa Fe Railroad and the Chicago-based architectural firm of Daniel Burham and John Root were crafting designs for a new, grander hotel, completed in 1885. Within four months of opening, the second Montezuma Hotel burned, leaving the stone walls of the lower two floors. It was rebuilt for the third time, opening in August, 1886, and formally renamed the Phoenix Hotel, although the name Montezuma Hotel remained in use. Folklore suggests that Billy the Kid and Jesse James used the springs after playing cards nearby. ==Description==