White Sulphur Springs, resort city, Greenbrier county, southeastern West Virginia, U.S. It lies in the Allegheny Mountains at an elevation of 1,880 feet (573 metres), just east of Lewisburg. Settled about 1750, it developed as a health spa in the 1770s when a woman reputedly was cured of her rheumatism after bathing in the springs. The springs themselves are on the grounds of the elegant Greenbrier Hotel, which was built by the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Company in 1913. The White Sulphur Springs Hotel (1854), known as the “Old White,” preceded the Greenbrier and served as headquarters and hospital to both sides during the American Civil War. The President’s Cottage (1835) housed presidents throughout the 19th century and since 1932 has served as a historical museum. From 1961 to 1995 the hotel contained a secret bunker that was designed to hold members of the United States Congress in the event of a nuclear war.
Blue Bend and Lake Sherwood recreation areas and Greenbrier State and Jefferson National forests are nearby. Organ Cave, where gunpowder was made during the Civil War, is about 10 miles (16 km) south. One of the first American golf courses was laid out in the 1870s at Oakhurst, immediately to the north. Inc. 1839. Pop. (2000) 2,315; (2010) 2,444.