Garland Mineral Springs

47° 53’ 19” N • 121° 20’ 31” W

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Home » Restore Garland Campaign » Does Restoring Garland Provide a Public Benefit?

Does Restoring Garland Provide a Public Benefit?

June 8, 2026 by Stephen Sharpe

Imagine standing beside the North Fork Skykomish River where mineral water once drew travelers deep into the Cascades. The air is cold, the forest is quiet, and beneath the damaged ground are springs that gave this place its purpose long before cabins, roads, or resort buildings were built.

That is Garland Mineral Springs.

Today, Garland is private property. I want to be clear about that from the beginning. But Garland is also more than private land. It is a historic mineral springs site, a damaged river corridor, a former mountain resort, a former youth camp, and a rare natural water resource with a story that reaches back to the Starr Hot Springs era of the 1880s and 1890s.

The question we are asking is simple:

Can restoring Garland provide a public benefit?

I believe the answer may be yes — not because the public should subsidize private development, but because Garland may offer public value through watershed recovery, historic preservation, conservation, education, outdoor recreation, and protection of a rare mineral springs resource.

Key Takeaways

  • Garland is privately owned, but private ownership does not automatically mean there is no public benefit.
  • The springs are the historic resource. The resort, cabins, pool, and camp existed because people valued the mineral waters.
  • The 2025 flood created more than private damage. It changed the river corridor, threatened the spring area, and damaged a historic landscape.
  • Public-private partnerships are common when private land has historic, environmental, recreational, or watershed value.
  • Garland may qualify for several kinds of review or support, including emergency watershed assistance, historic preservation research, conservation partnerships, and heritage interpretation.
  • The long-term vision is not a large resort. A more appropriate future may be a small, historically grounded, environmentally responsible campground and educational site.

Why We Are Asking for Help to Restore Garland Mineral Springs

Garland Mineral Springs is private property. I want to be clear about that from the beginning.

But Garland is not just another piece of private land tucked away in the Cascade Mountains. For nearly a century, it has been part of Washington’s mountain history. It was once a mineral springs resort, a family retreat, a youth camp, and a place where generations came to experience healing waters in the forest above Index, Washington.

Today, Garland is in trouble.

The North Fork Skykomish River has changed the property in a way that is difficult to fully explain unless you have stood there and seen it. The 2025 flood event swept away the remaining cabins, tore through the riverbank, removed trees and topsoil, and pushed the river across areas that once held the mineral springs, old camp structures, and geothermal well sites.

What was once a historic mineral springs property is now also a damaged river corridor, a flood recovery site, and a fragile piece of local history at risk of being lost forever.

That is why we are exploring whether Garland may qualify for public-private partnership, emergency watershed assistance, historic preservation support, conservation tools, or heritage funding.

This is not about asking taxpayers to simply improve private property. It is about asking whether a historically significant and environmentally damaged site may deserve help because it carries public value beyond the boundaries of ownership.

What Public Benefit Could Mean at Garland

When people hear the phrase “public benefit,” they may think only of public ownership, tax revenue, or a public park. But public benefit can be broader than that.

At Garland, public benefit could mean:

  • Watershed protection: understanding and addressing flood damage along the North Fork Skykomish River corridor.
  • Historic preservation: documenting the Starr Hot Springs era, the Garland resort years, and the Sharpe family camp history.
  • Mineral springs protection: preserving a rare natural water resource that gave the property its historic identity.
  • Conservation: protecting riverbank, forest, habitat, and floodplain values in a sensitive mountain valley.
  • Education: teaching future visitors about geology, mineral water, geothermal exploration, floods, and Cascade history.
  • Outdoor recreation: supporting hikers, campers, anglers, and visitors already drawn to the upper North Fork Skykomish region.
  • Community memory: preserving a place where generations came for healing, retreat, worship, family, and time in the mountains.

Garland does not need to become public land in order to serve a public purpose. The question is whether the property can be protected, interpreted, and carefully used in a way that benefits more than the owners alone.

Public Investment in Private Property Is Not Unusual When There Is Public Benefit

At first glance, some people may ask: “Why should public agencies help with private land?”

That is a fair question.

But there is a long history in America of public funds being used on private land when the public receives something meaningful in return. That public benefit can include historic preservation, watershed protection, flood mitigation, conservation, public access, cultural interpretation, or protection of important natural resources.

In many cases, the public does not buy the property outright. Instead, support may come through grants, easements, partnerships, emergency stabilization work, nonprofit sponsorship, or preservation agreements.

That is the kind of path we are trying to understand for Garland Mineral Springs.

1. Emergency Watershed Protection and Flood Recovery

The most urgent issue at Garland is the river.

The 2025 flood did not simply damage a few old buildings. It changed the landscape. The river scoured the property, removed soil and trees, destroyed the remaining cabins, and pushed into areas where the mineral springs and geothermal well heads are located.

This raises questions that go beyond private ownership:

  • Is the altered river channel creating an ongoing hazard?
  • Could future flooding carry more debris downstream?
  • Is erosion threatening the mineral springs, geothermal wells, or nearby public lands?
  • Could stabilization help protect the broader watershed?
  • Is there a role for Snohomish County, a conservation district, or another public sponsor?

Programs such as the USDA NRCS Emergency Watershed Protection Program are designed to help communities recover after floods and other natural disasters. These programs often require a local public sponsor, such as a county, conservation district, city, or tribe. That means Garland may not be able to apply alone, but it may be eligible to be part of a sponsored recovery effort if the damage creates a broader public concern.

Why Garland might qualify: the damage is not cosmetic. It is river damage, watershed damage, and flood-channel damage. If restoring stability at Garland helps protect the North Fork Skykomish River corridor, downstream resources, public infrastructure, or nearby lands, then there may be a legitimate public interest in helping.

2. Historic Preservation Support: The Springs Are the Historic Resource

Garland Mineral Springs has a story worth preserving, but that story does not begin with the cabins, the lodge, or the old resort buildings. It begins with the springs themselves.

The reason people came to this remote mountain location was the mineral water. Long before my family became involved, and long before the Garland resort buildings were constructed, these waters were already known as something rare in the North Fork Skykomish River valley.

One of the most important early accounts comes from Carrie Starr Weismann, who wrote in 1928 about her experience at what was then known as the Starr Hot Springs near Index, Washington. According to her account, Dr. J. N. Starr first learned of the springs in 1889 after hearing from an Englishman who had been in the woods near what is now Index. The man described springs so charged with gas that a bottle would not hold the water, and he compared them favorably to the waters at Baden-Baden, Germany.

Dr. Starr then traveled by pack train into the North Fork Skykomish River valley to find the springs. After locating them, he built cabins and prepared the site so Carrie Starr could be brought in by horseback over the rough mountain trail from Sultan and Index. Carrie later wrote that after bathing in the spring waters daily, the swelling in her knee disappeared, and she credited the waters with her recovery.

Whether a modern reader views that account as medical testimony, personal memoir, or frontier-era belief in mineral-water healing, it is historically valuable. It shows that the springs were not an afterthought. They were the reason people endured difficult travel into the mountains. They were the reason cabins were first built. They were the reason the land was claimed, titled, visited, and remembered.

Dr. Starr and Carrie Starr eventually secured title to the land where the springs were located. Carrie wrote that the grant was signed by President Grover Cleveland in May 1896. That connection gives the springs a documented history reaching back to the late 1800s, before the property became widely known as Garland Mineral Springs.

That is an important distinction. Garland is not simply a former resort site with some old buildings that happened to be near water. Garland is a historic mineral springs site. The buildings were evidence of the public’s interest in the springs, but the springs are the original historic resource.

In the 1930s, the site was developed further as a mineral springs resort because people continued to believe the waters had therapeutic and restorative value. Visitors traveled into the Cascades to experience the springs, the mountain air, the river, and the quiet forest setting. Cabins, a lodge, stables, and a pool were added because the springs gave the place its purpose.

In 1953, Rev. Cameron Sharpe and Laura Mae Mooney purchased Garland and continued its public-facing role as a youth camp, church retreat, and family gathering place. But even then, the identity of the property remained tied to the mineral springs. The water was what made Garland different from any other mountain camp or private retreat.

Much of the physical history is now gone. The lodge burned decades ago. The remaining cabins survived for years but were swept away in the 2025 flood. But the loss of the buildings does not erase Garland’s historic value. The springs remain the heart of the story.

What remains today is the land, the mineral spring source, the historic water records, the geothermal exploration history, old photographs, maps, surveys, family memories, and the continuing question of whether this rare mineral water resource can be protected before it is lost to the river.

Why Garland might qualify: historic preservation is not only about saving old buildings. It can also include protecting and documenting historic landscapes, natural features with cultural significance, mineral springs, archaeological resources, historic water sites, and places where people gathered because of a unique natural resource.

Garland may be a candidate for historic research, mineral springs documentation, archival preservation, interpretive signage, oral history collection, National Register evaluation, cultural landscape study, or partnership with a heritage nonprofit.

The case for Garland is simple: the buildings were temporary, but the springs are the reason Garland existed. From the Starr Hot Springs era of the 1880s and 1890s, through the Garland resort period, through the Sharpe family camp years, the mineral waters have been the constant. If there is a historic resource worth preserving, it is the springs themselves and the nearly century-and-a-half human story that grew around them.

3. Washington Heritage and Cultural Landscape Funding

Washington State has programs that support heritage projects, historic landscapes, museums, archives, and cultural interpretation. These programs often work best when a nonprofit, public agency, tribe, or heritage organization is involved.

That may be an important lesson for Garland.

If Garland remains simply a private LLC asking for direct help, the path may be difficult. But if Garland partners with a qualified nonprofit, historical society, university, public agency, or preservation organization, the public benefit becomes easier to define.

A heritage project at Garland could include:

  • A formal history of the mineral springs resort
  • Research and interpretation of the Starr Hot Springs era
  • Digitizing and preserving old photographs, maps, letters, and surveys
  • Creating an online archive for the public
  • Documenting the 2025 flood damage
  • Interpreting the mineral water and geothermal history
  • Developing educational materials about the North Fork Skykomish River corridor
  • Creating future signage or guided public access if the site becomes safe

Why Garland might qualify: Garland is not just land. It is a historic mountain mineral springs site tied to recreation, natural water, family history, faith communities, and the development of the upper Skykomish region. Even if the property remains privately owned, the history belongs to a wider public story.

4. Conservation Easements and River Corridor Protection

Another possible path is conservation.

Garland sits in a sensitive and beautiful part of the Cascades, near the Wild Sky Wilderness region and along the North Fork Skykomish River corridor. The flood damage has shown how powerful and dynamic this river system can be.

A conservation easement or preservation agreement could allow the family to retain ownership while permanently protecting certain public values. Those values might include habitat, floodplain function, river corridor protection, historic interpretation, or limited future public access.

This kind of arrangement is common across the country. Public funds or nonprofit funds are often used to protect private land when the land has conservation, habitat, scenic, recreational, agricultural, or historic value.

Why Garland might qualify: the property is not being proposed for ordinary private development. The more responsible question is whether Garland can be stabilized and protected in a way that respects the river, preserves the mineral springs, and creates a lasting public benefit.

5. Public Access, Education, Interpretation, and Future Outdoor Recreation

One of the strongest justifications for public support is to create public benefit.

That does not necessarily mean opening the property freely to the public tomorrow. At this point, the site may not be safe for general access. The first priorities would be protecting the springs, understanding the river damage, and determining whether the North Fork Skykomish River can be stabilized or reestablished away from the most vulnerable parts of the property.

But public benefit can take many forms, and Garland’s location gives it unusual potential.

Garland sits in a mountain recreation corridor where people already come to camp, hike, fish, explore the North Fork Skykomish River, and access nearby alpine country. Just below Garland, the U.S. Forest Service operates Troublesome Creek Campground, a 25-site campground located along the North Fork Skykomish River and Troublesome Creek. The Forest Service also lists San Juan Campground nearby, a small 8-site campground that offers access to the North Fork Skykomish River area.

That matters because it shows that small-scale camping is already part of the public recreation pattern in this valley. Garland’s future does not have to be a large commercial development. A more appropriate vision may be a modest, carefully planned private campground that supports the same kind of outdoor recreation people already seek in this area.

If the springs can be protected, the damaged river corridor stabilized, and the site made safe, Garland could someday provide a limited number of camping sites in a historic setting. A future version of Garland might include a small number of trailer sites, walk-in tent sites, educational displays, spring-history interpretation, and low-impact access for hikers and visitors exploring the upper North Fork Skykomish corridor.

That kind of future would not erase Garland’s history. It would continue it.

Garland began as a place people traveled to because of the mineral waters. It later became a resort, a youth camp, and a family retreat. A carefully designed campground could become the next chapter: a place where visitors learn the history of the springs, understand the power of the river, and use Garland as a respectful basecamp for exploring the surrounding public lands.

A future Garland might include:

  • A limited number of trailer or small RV sites
  • Walk-in tent sites
  • Educational signs about the mineral springs and Starr Hot Springs history
  • Flood interpretation showing how the river changed the property
  • Trailhead-style support for hikers exploring the upper North Fork Skykomish region
  • Long-term study of whether geothermal resources could responsibly support limited on-site energy needs

This is only a vision. It would require engineering, environmental review, family agreement, agency coordination, and careful planning. But it shows why Garland’s restoration could serve a broader public purpose. A protected Garland could become a basecamp for history, geology, river recovery, and outdoor recreation — not just a private property hidden behind a gate.

For Garland, possible public benefits could include:

  • Online access to historic photos, maps, letters, and documents
  • A public history of the Starr Hot Springs, Garland resort, and Sharpe family camp eras
  • Educational material about mineral springs and geothermal exploration
  • Flood documentation showing how the river changed the property
  • Partnership with local schools, historians, recreation groups, or conservation organizations
  • Future guided access if the property can be made safe
  • Interpretive signage or a public-facing restoration journal
  • A small, low-impact private campground that complements nearby Forest Service recreation
  • Future trailhead-style support for hikers exploring the upper North Fork Skykomish and nearby alpine destinations such as Blanca Lake

Why Garland might qualify: the public does not have to own Garland for the public to benefit from preserving Garland’s story. If the site becomes a case study in historic preservation, flood recovery, mineral water protection, watershed restoration, and low-impact outdoor recreation, then the public value is real.

The goal would not be to turn Garland into a high-density resort. The more appropriate vision is a small, historically grounded, environmentally responsible campground that protects the springs, respects the river, and gives future visitors a reason to care about this place.

6. Geothermal and Mineral Water Resource Protection

Garland is also unusual because of its mineral water and geothermal history.

The property contains mineral springs and was the site of geothermal exploration. A deep geothermal test well was drilled in 2011, and the site has long been associated with mineral-rich waters rising from below the mountain landscape.

The current question is whether a smaller, protected well could reach the mineral spring pool underground and provide a clean, stable source of mineral water. That idea is at the heart of the Restore Garland Campaign.

We are not presenting that as a final engineering plan. We are asking whether it is worth studying, estimating, and discussing with qualified professionals.

Why Garland might qualify: natural mineral springs are rare resources. Garland’s water, geothermal history, and cultural history are connected. Protecting the spring source may preserve both a natural resource and a historic identity.

Addressing the Fair Question: Why Should Public Agencies Care?

It is fair for anyone to ask why a privately owned property should receive public attention, public support, or public agency review.

My answer is that Garland should not receive help simply because it is private land that was damaged. It should receive serious consideration only if restoration creates benefits beyond the owners.

That is the standard we are trying to meet.

If Garland’s restoration only improved a private asset, then the public case would be weak. But if restoration protects a historic mineral springs site, stabilizes a damaged river corridor, preserves a rare water resource, creates public education, supports responsible recreation, and helps tell the story of the upper North Fork Skykomish valley, then the public benefit becomes much stronger.

The better question is not whether Garland is private. The better question is whether Garland can be restored in a way that serves a broader public purpose.

Why This Matters to Me

My connection to Garland is personal.

My father’s family became part of Garland’s story in the 1950s. I inherited my father’s share, and I now feel a responsibility to help decide whether Garland is simply allowed to disappear or whether we make a serious effort to preserve what remains.

I do not believe Garland can be restored to exactly what it once was. The old resort is gone. The cabins are gone. The river has changed the land.

But I do believe Garland can still have a future.

That future may not look like the past. It may be a protected spring source. It may be a documented historic site. It may be a conservation partnership. It may be an educational project. It may be a small restoration campaign that gives people a chance to help preserve a place that would otherwise be forgotten.

What We Are Asking For

We are asking public agencies, conservation groups, historians, preservation organizations, family members, and supporters to help us answer a few important questions:

  • Can Garland qualify for emergency watershed assistance?
  • Can the flood damage be evaluated as part of a broader river recovery effort?
  • Can Garland’s history be formally documented and preserved?
  • Can a nonprofit or public agency partnership help create public benefit?
  • Can conservation tools protect the river corridor and mineral spring site?
  • Can a clean, protected mineral water source be responsibly explored?
  • Can the public help save the story of Garland before it is lost?

This Is Not Just About Private Land

Garland Mineral Springs is privately owned. But its story reaches beyond ownership.

It is part of the history of Index, the North Fork Skykomish River, mountain recreation, mineral springs, family camps, faith retreats, and the changing relationship between people and wild places in Washington’s Cascades.

The 2025 flood did not just damage a family property. It damaged a historic place, a river corridor, and a living record of nearly a century of mountain history.

That is why we are seeking solutions.

We are not asking anyone to subsidize a private development. We are asking whether a public-private partnership is appropriate to protect a damaged historic mineral springs site, stabilize a flood-altered river corridor, document a nearly century-old public heritage resource, and preserve options for future public interpretation.

If Garland can be saved, even in a new and different form, it will take more than one family. It will take public interest, careful planning, qualified partners, and people who believe that some places are worth remembering.

That is the purpose of the Restore Garland Campaign.

How You Can Help

The Restore Garland Campaign is still in its early stages. Right now, we are asking questions, gathering history, documenting damage, seeking qualified partners, and trying to understand what kind of restoration is possible.

If you believe Garland Mineral Springs is worth saving, here are a few ways to help:

  • Share this post with people who care about Washington history, mineral springs, river restoration, and the North Fork Skykomish valley.
  • Send us historical materials if you have photos, postcards, letters, maps, or memories connected to Garland, Starr Hot Springs, Index, Galena, or the upper Skykomish region.
  • Help us find partners in historic preservation, watershed recovery, conservation, geology, recreation planning, or public-private restoration projects.
  • Encourage public agencies to take a serious look at whether Garland fits emergency watershed, heritage, conservation, or recreation-related support programs.
  • Follow the Restore Garland Campaign as we document the history, the flood damage, and the possibility of a future for the springs.

Garland may never return to what it once was. But with the right partners, it may still become something meaningful: a protected mineral springs site, a restored river corridor, a place of public learning, and a small gateway to one of Washington’s most beautiful mountain valleys.

We are beginning the work of asking questions, seeking partners, documenting the damage, preserving the history, and exploring whether Garland Mineral Springs still has a future.

And we hope you will follow the journey.

Sources and Further Reading

  • USDA NRCS Emergency Watershed Protection Program
  • National Park Service Historic Preservation Fund Grant Programs
  • Washington State Historical Society Heritage Capital Projects
  • U.S. Forest Service: Troublesome Creek Campground
  • U.S. Forest Service: San Juan Campground
  • Carrie Starr Weismann, “The Story of My Infirmity and the Permanent Cure by the use of the Waters of the Starr Hot Springs, near Index, Washington,” 1928

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