Private Collection > The Homestead, Hot Springs, VA
 
 
  The Homestead, Hot Springs, VA
A luxury resort located in the beautiful mountains of Virginia, offers both a relaxing spa and championship golf. A great destination for those seeking rest and relaxation or sporting pleasures
409 guestrooms with mini-bars, daily maid service, plush terry bathrobes, in-room safes, hairdryers, iron & ironing board
78 suites, many with sun porches, working fireplaces and walk-in closets
Virtually every room offers views of the surrounding Allegheny Mountains
Relaxing Spa
Championship Golf
Activities include: golf, tennis, lawn bowling, leadership “ropes course”, outdoor and indoor pools, skiing, ice skating, bowling, horseback riding, carriage rides, adult trout fishing, fly fishing school, children’s fishing pond, skeet, trap and sporting clays, Cascades Gorge walk, supervised children’s program – The Homestead Kids Club, theater, shopping
17 miles from Bath County Airport for private and charter flights. Shuttle service will meet passengers at all the surrounding airports. Advanced reservations required
   
  Contact: Miranda Everett: 540.839.1766; miranda.everett@thehomestead.com
  Concierge: 540.839.7741;
stay@thehomestead.com
  Reservations: 800.839.1766
www.thehomestead.com
DINING:
Restaurants:
  • Homestead Dining Room
  • 1766 Grille
  • Casino Club Restaurant
  • Sam Snead’s Tavern
  • Presidents Lounge
  • Martha’s Market
  • Rubino’s at the Cascades
ACTIVITIES:
  • The Jefferson Pools at The Homestead: Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, the mineral springs are in the Allegheny Mountains.
  • Facts: The hotel has hosted 21 presidents throughout the years.  Thomas Jefferson stayed at The Homestead for over three weeks in 1818, soaking in the Gentlemen’s Pool House three times day.
  • Civil War Trails: Five intertwined trails contain over 400 Civil War sites – battlefields, cemeteries  prisons, homes, museums and forts.
  • Virginia Indian Heritage Trail: There are more than two-dozen sites to discover the historical and interpretive perspectives of Virginia’s eight state-recognized Indian tribes.
  • The Wilderness Road: This is also known as the Heritage Migration Route.  Visitors can learn about the hardship settlers endured seeking their new life westward.
  • Blue Ridge Parkway: This is the nation’s longest parkway and deemed “America’s Favorite Drive” with countless points along the way to learn about local history.  It is also where two national parks are linked, Shenandoah in Virginia and the Great Smoky Mountains in North Carolina.
  • Coal Heritage Trail: 300-mile byway offers a hike to the floor of an operating tunnel and guided tours of the underground Pocahontas Exhibition Coal Mine.
  • Captain John Smith Water Trail:  Retrace parts of Captain John Smith’s 1608 exploration when he set out on his open boat for 120 days.
  • George Washington Memorial Parkway: A 25-mile route, along side the Potomac River, follows the path on which George Washington rode horseback between his farms and Mount Vernon.
  • The Journey Through Hallowed Ground: 175 miles from Charlottesville, Virginia, to Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, with many historical stops that recount three centuries of America’s intense battles for democracy, freedom and equality.
  • The Crooked Road: Through the Appalachian Mountains, Virginia’s Heritage Music Trail links the birthplace of country music to the roots of Bluegrass.
 
 
 
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