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Here is a picture of Alice Sliger (front row, center) with the owners and some players of the San Francisco Giants in front of the Buckhorn Mineral Baths in the mid-1960s. Hall of Fame pitcher Gaylord Perry is pictured in the back row, fifth from the left. Perry’s father is pictured on Sliger’s right.
Here is a picture of Alice Sliger (front row, center) with the owners and some players of the San Francisco Giants in front of the Buckhorn Mineral Baths in the mid-1960s. Hall of Fame pitcher Gaylord Perry is pictured in the back row, fifth from the left. Perry’s father is pictured on Sliger’s right.
Former Gov. Rose Mofford and Alice Sliger at Cactus League exhibit in February 2010.
Former Gov. Rose Mofford and Alice Sliger at Cactus League exhibit in February 2010.
Alice Sliger, whose name is synonymous with the Buckhorn Mineral Wells and Wildlife Museum in east Mesa for decades and played a role in luring baseball teams to Arizona for spring training, died Tuesday.
Every time I return to the Buckhorn Baths to do a story or column, I’m captivated.
The effort to preserve the historic Buckhorn Baths should stay on track despite owner Alice Sliger’s death, according to those working on the plans.
Alice Sliger spent most of her 103 years amassing a priceless collection of Western art and iconic baseball memorabilia from players who wintered in her Buckhorn Baths resort in Mesa.
Mesa’s Buckhorn Mineral Baths. Did Elvis Presley sleep there? And does his ghost haunt the premises of the 15-acre roadside landmark at the northeast corner of East Main Street and Recker Road?
Architect Ron Peters spent years trying to get Mesa’s Buckhorn Baths Motel onto the National Register of Historic Places, so it’s fitting that he was one of the first in town to learn it was listed.
Architect Ron Peters spent years trying to get Mesa’s Buckhorn Baths Motel onto the National Register of Historic Places, so it’s fitting that he was one of the first in town to learn it was listed.
Mesa’s Buckhorn Mineral Baths.
Mesa voters have approved a $70 million bond for the city to make a myriad of improvements, according to unofficial results
The 27 stone tubs at the Buckhorn Mineral Wells and Wildlife Museum haven't provided relief to those weary of life's aches and pains since 1999, but there's much more to the northwest corner of Main Street and Recker Road.
Mesa's Buckhorn Baths Motel is no stranger to historic and endangered lists. But this time, it's topped a new one - as the No. 1 pick on the Ten Most Endangered Roadside Places list released this week by the Society for Commercial Archeology, a national preservation organization based in Wisconsin.
Summer already is a month old, and one of Mesa’s leading ladies has not been able to take a dip into the pool, much less do what she’s best known for — take a dive.
Mesa is considering buying the historic Buckhorn Baths to preserve the place where some of baseball’s most legendary players came for decades to sooth themselves in hot mineral water.
The large black wool banner with the words "New York Giants" in orange lettering was packed away folded inside a closet of Robert Steckner's den for decades.
After experiencing a downturn for the past few years with its historical amenities and watching its landmarks deteriorate as their futures remained uncertain, preservation officials in the city of Mesa now have the means to renovate them in the near future.
Nearly $2 million was spent by the Riverview at Dobson campaigns, with project supporters spending nearly three times as much as the opposition.
Nearly $2 million was spent by the Riverview at Dobson campaigns, with project supporters spending nearly three times as much as the opposition.
Where is The Diving Lady of the Starlite Motel? And when will she return to the springboard?
A film crew that has spent weeks in the East Valley with the likes of Burt Reynolds, Raquel Welch and Charles Durning was set up in the parking lot of Mesa Centennial Center on Tuesday with yet another big-name star.
A film crew that has spent weeks in the East Valley with the likes of Burt Reynolds, Raquel Welch and Charles Durning was set up in the parking lot of Mesa Centennial Center on Tuesday with yet another big-name star.
Arizona State University may have done a nice job restoring its Old Main building, but the demolition of a former Valley National Bank branch with an unusual geodesic dome early this year has put the university in bad odor with historic preservationists.
Guest Commentary by Michael Carroll
Guest commentary by Phil Kerpen
By Mark Heller, Tribune
By Mark Scarp, contributing columnist
By Jerry Brown, contributing columnist
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