The Stair Step Town

Historic houses cling to rocky hillsides in Eureka Springs, Arkansas. Known as ‘The Stair Step Town’ because of the up-and-down paths connecting its winding streets, the entire city is on the National Register of Historic Places.

HISTORY, HEALTH AND HAUNTINGS: EUREKA SPRINGS, ARKANSAS IS A SMALL TOWN WITH A BIG STORY. In the beginning, Eureka Springs, Arkansas, was all about the healing waters. In 1880, the area’s numerous naturally flowing springs were credited with restoring the sight of a woman who had been blind for years. This, and other seemingly miraculous restorations of health, drew thousands of visitors to this narrow valley in the Ozark Mountains of northwest Arkansas. Soon, modest cottages and gracious manors lined steep, narrow streets looping around rocky outcroppings, and at its peak Eureka Springs had a population of more than 20,000. The development of modern medicines in the early half of the 20th century reduced the number of those drawn by the hope of relief from pain and illness. But the town’s natural charms continued to flourish. Today, 2,000 residents welcome more than a million visitors a year who come to admire the architecture and enjoy the galleries, boutiques and restaurants that occupy well-preserved Victorian buildings.

“THE STAIR STEP TOWN.” Eureka Springs Mayor Robert “Butch” Berry said: “In Eureka Springs we have woven our history into the daily fabric of our lives. We are proud of how well our community holds on to the past while looking to the future. The majority of town still appears like it did in 1890, complete with all styles of Victorian architecture, from the Rosalie House, a stunning example of Eastlake and Steamboat Gothic with incredible gingerbread woodwork, to one of the first “tiny” homes, a four-room house on two floors. The commercial district has also remained the same, since the early 1900s. The Basin Park Hotel is in Ripley’s Believe or Not, as being a seven-story hotel with every floor on the ground floor, due to the mountainous terrain of Eureka Springs. You won’t find a single traffic light anywhere in this town. You also won’t find any two streets crossing at right angles that carry the same name. And with over 200 miles of native limestone retaining walls, our past citizens have created a village which gave Eureka Springs one of its nicknames, “The Stair Step Town.”

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