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          |  Home :: Schedule ::Donations :: Hotel :: Grooming :: RV Parking :: Auction |  
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                  |  | Host Hotel
  Holiday Inn at Six Flags
 4901 Six Flags Road
 Eureka, MO 63025
 
 (636) 938-6661
 Remember to tell them you are  with the Giant Schnauzer Club of America Specialty Shows and you will get a  special rate of just $99.00 per night (if reserved by August 25, 2011).
 located in   Eureka, Missouri southwest of St. Louis on Interstate 44. Take Exit 261, Six   Flags Road.
 
                      Located adjacent to the Six Flags St. Louis  amusement and water park.
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                                A backup hotel would beTravelodge Diamond Inn
 Interstate 44 & Highway 100, Gray  Summit, MO 63039
 1-800-782-8487 or 636-742-3501
 
 Both hotels will be charging a pet fee
 $30 one time, non-refundable for up to 4 dogs per room
 Other lodging:
 “area lodging “ on right side of  of page 
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                              | About our host hotel...
                               Who would ever believe that   after almost 200 years of serving as a resting place for weary travelers and   horses, this 65 acres of land would continue its tradition and become the site   of a beautiful resort, complete with guest rooms, an in-house restaurant,   meeting and banquet rooms, and an indoor swimming and recreation   area.  |  
                              |  At the turn of the 19th century the Indians who   dwelled in this portion of Missouri dug deep springs on the present Holiday   Inn at Six Flags  acreage to be used in times of drought. Later, as more and   more people traveled by stagecoach, the land became known as the “Deep Springs   Stagestop,” an oasis for weary travelers seeking their first “good water”   outside the city of St. Louis.. |  
                              |   In the meantime, St. Louis’ population grew and   many impoverished people began to move West. To help ease some of the   problems, the county purchased the land and laid it to build a   farm for people escaping the growing city.  Irish stone masons were   employed to build a large rock building intended for a dormitory. The original   structure, a two story L-shaped barn with handcrafted limestone walls up to 36   inches thick, still stands today, and serves as the center of the complex,   housing the Hay Market Restaurant , and spacious meeting and convention   and banquet facilities. |  
                              |  The construction of the building progressed   slowly and then stopped altogether during the Civil War, after financial   difficulties occurred. In 1894, an eminent St. Louis veterinarian, Dr. Charles   Crowley, bought the land and converted the barn into an up-to-date “horse   hospital,” boarding stables, and a horse stock farm which bred many fine race   horses. The farm also served as a rest and watering place for cattle and sheep   heading East to the National Stockyards in East St. Louis. |  
                              |   After Dr. Crowley’s death in the 1930’s, the land   changed hands several times. For one period the barn housed the champion sire,   Bar Money. The Deep Springs site was purchased by the Eckelkamp family in   1975 and was developed into the resort facility that you now enjoy, opening in   1981. A complete property renovation took place in 2003. |  
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