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  2. Buckhorn Baths Motel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buckhorn_Baths_Motel

    The Buckhorn Baths Motel at 5900 East Main Street at the corner of North Recker Road in Mesa, Arizona was a small mineral hot springs resort which offered a bathhouse as well as both cottages and motel rooms for overnight stays. Beginning in 1936 as a gas station and store, Ted and Alice Sliger developed the property into a resort complex which ...

  3. List of historic properties in Mesa, Arizona - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_historic...

    The Buckhorn Baths Motel was built in 1939 and is located at 5900 Main St. in Mesa. The Buckhorn Baths Motel is a complex consisting of fourteen buildings including a bathhouse, a main office building, and individual room units. The motel was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on May 10, 2005, reference number #05000421.

  4. List of motels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_motels

    This is a list of motels.A motel is lodging designed for motorists, and usually has a parking area for motor vehicles. Entering dictionaries after World War II, the word motel, coined in 1925 as a portmanteau of motor and hotel or motorists' hotel, referred initially to a type of hotel consisting of a single building of connected rooms whose doors faced a parking lot and, in some circumstances ...

  5. Buckhorn Hot Mineral Wells - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buckhorn_Hot_Mineral_Wells

    Mesa Journal-Tribune, 21 February 1941. Golz, Earl. Hot springs resort in Mesa promises to rub you the right way. Mesa Tribune, 18 October 1988. Mark, Jay and Ronald L. Peters, Buckhorn Mineral Baths & Wildlife Museum, Arcadia Publishing, 2017. ISBN 9781467126960; Sliger, Alice. Interview dated 10 September 2002. Mesa Room, Mesa Public Library.

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  7. Wigwam Motel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wigwam_Motel

    Frank A. Redford developed the Village after adding tipi-shaped motel units around a museum-shop he had built to house his collection of Native American artifacts. [3] He applied for a patent on the ornamental design of the buildings on December 17, 1935, and was granted Design Patent 98,617 on February 18, 1936.