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  1. History. 1915 Railroad Map of Sumner County. On the line between Cowley and Sumner counties is a remarkable group of salt springs that each put out 100 to 450 gallons per hour and have been known since the earliest settlement of that region.

  2. Adamsville, Kansas, is a ghost town in Sumner County. The unincorporated town gained a post office on July 15, 1925, and closed less than six years later, on March 31, 1931. It was located along an abandoned railroad from Oxford to Geuda Springs.

  3. Geuda Springs .—On the line between Cowley and Sumner counties is a remarkable group of salt springs that flow from 100 to 450 gallons each per hour, that have been known since the earliest settlement of that section. These springs are situated on a branch of the St. Louis & San Francisco railroad, a little to the north of the town of Geuda ...

  4. Mar 13, 2001 · Connie submits the following about Geuda Springs, and its history. "Geuda Springs takes its name from the Indian word meaning "healing waters" for the seven mineral springs. These springs were once the reason "Geuda Springs" was a famous health resort.

  5. The “Geuda Mineral Springs,” near Salt City, Kansas, soon became quite a popular health resort. The Geuda Springs water was transported to neighboring towns. Seven different kinds of mineral water were offered at Geuda Springs in September 1881 as well as the use of an elegant “Salt Lake” for boating

  6. Geuda Springs. Dates: Between 1880 and 1900. Item Number: 209053. View on Kansas Memory. View of men and women at Geuda Springs, a mineral resort in Sumner County, Kansas.

  7. Find birth, marriage & deaths records; census, military and other genealogical records for Geuda Springs.

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