Ages ago, there were many Ute Indians who enjoyed life in Middle Park with its plentiful game and lush meadows. They lived in peace and harmony for "as many years as there are hairs on the head."
In spite of this idyllic life, there was one young brave who yearned for more adventure and material goods. He proposed that the Utes attack the Sioux, who lived beyond the mountains on the plains of the rising sun. As victors, they would return in glory with much wealth and many captives.
Spiquet Pah (Smoking Water) was an elderly medicine man who foresaw only grief in the prospect of such a war. He spoke before a council meeting, warning of the devastation that such an action would bring upon the tribe. He foretold " As the North Wind soon brings the snows and death of winter, so will he bring sorrow and death to our own people.....if you do this, strength and peace and plenty will be but for a few; joy will be seen no more."
Disregarding his warning, most of the young men were tantalized with the temptation of the grand adventure of such a conquest. In the autumn of the year, when they usually did their hunting, the young men rallied behind the young brave and followed him over the Great Divide into combat with the plains people. As the fighters departed, a saddened Spiquet Pah went into the heart of the mountain "and pulled the hole in after him."
The young Ute men found the enemy better armed and organized than they expected. Many Ute braves were killed and others were taken as slaves. The prophecy had come true as starvation and disease plagued the tribe as there were too few men to hunt for food. The old man sat on his haunches beside his subterranean fire which he heated water from an underground stream. From the mountain at Hot Sulphur Springs, water flows even today as a reminder of the rash behavior of so long ago.
Another legend holds simply that the Hot Sulphur Springs water acquired medicinal qualities in answer to the prayers of an old chief who has be left by his tribe to die. The old man built fires within the mountain, and after drinking the water and bathing in them, we was restored to health and rejoined his people.
Jan Petite, The Mountain People, Boulder 1990
William N. Byers, Ute Legends, Out West Magazine, July 1873