White Sulphur Springs |
White Springs, Florida |
The banks of the Suwannee River
around White Sulphur Springs have been a place
of refuge and restoration for its visitors and
residents for centuries. To this day, evidence
in the form of shards of pottery, hunting and
cooking tools and even weapons are found in places
where the early visitors to the peaceful region
spent their time.
Timucuan Indians were living on the banks of the
Suwannee River at White Springs when the Spanish
explorers came to what is now North Florida in
the 1530s. The Suwannee River formed the boundary
between the Timucuans on the east and the Apalachees
on the west, and even then it was considered special,
and historic.
White Sulphur Springs was considered
to be a sacred healing ground and warring tribes
could come to bathe in and drink the mineral waters
here while putting aside their disagreements.