Curtis Howe Springer was a charismatic radio evangelist and self-proclaimed doctor who founded the Zzyzx Mineral Springs and Health Resort in California’s Mojave Desert, operating it as a fraudulent health retreat from 1944 until his eviction in 1974.
Early Live

Curtis Howe Springer was born on December 2, 1896, in Birmingham, Alabama, though verifiable details about his childhood remain scarce due to his propensity for fabricating personal history. Springer often embellished his background, claiming to have served as a boxing instructor during World War I, campaigned against alcohol alongside politician William Jennings Bryan, and worked at a school in Florida. He also asserted attendance at a college in Chicago and possession of multiple advanced degrees, including an M.D., Ph.D., and N.D., some purportedly from nonexistent institutions like the “Springer School of Humanism” or the fictitious “National Academy.” In reality, no records exist to confirm any formal education or medical training, marking the beginning of a lifelong pattern of deceit.
By the 1910s and 1920s, Springer had emerged as a prohibition crusader and self-proclaimed Methodist minister, despite lacking official ordination. He transitioned into roles as a radio evangelist and lecturer, blending Christian gospel with health and hygiene advice. During this period, he worked as an insurance salesman before fully embracing his persona as a “doctor” and promoter of dubious remedies.
Rise as a Radio Evangelist and Quack Practitioner
In the 1930s, Springer traveled extensively through the Midwest, delivering sermons and selling homemade elixirs and cure-alls, often without disclosing ingredients or efficacy. He positioned himself as “the last of the old-time medicine men,” hawking products like homeopathic treatments for hair loss, hemorrhoids, and other ailments in exchange for “donations” to his ministry. His charisma propelled him onto the radio waves, following in the footsteps of figures like Aimee Semple McPherson and Father Charles Coughlin. By the mid-1930s, he was broadcasting from Chicago, falsely presenting himself as a licensed physician and promoting “miracle cures” that promised to make listeners “internally, externally, and eternally clean.”
These claims drew scrutiny; a 1936 paper by the American Medical Association, titled “Nostrums and Quackery and Pseudo-Medicine,” debunked his practices. Undeterred, Springer relocated to Pittsburgh and continued his radio empire, eventually syndicating shows to over 300 stations in the U.S. and abroad at its peak. He emphasized Christian doctrine intertwined with physical fitness, mental alertness, and spiritual soundness, while selling products such as Antediluvian Desert Herb Tea, Acidine, Hollywood Pep Cocktail, Manna, O-M-R, RE-HIB, Zy-Crystals (containing Epsom salts and salt from Soda Dry Lake), Mo-Hair, and F-W-O. In the early 1940s, he retired to Los Angeles, where he sought a permanent base for his operations.
Establishment and Operations of Zzyzx in the Mojave Desert
In 1944, Springer discovered the remote site of Soda Springs (also known as Fort Soda Springs) in the Mojave Desert, about 200 miles east of Los Angeles. On September 13, 1944, he filed mining claims under the General Mining Act of 1872 for 12,800 acres of federal land, intending to “mine” salt crystals but with no genuine mining plans. He renamed the area Zzyzx (pronounced “zi-zex”), claiming it to be “the last word in health” to ensure it appeared last in alphabetical listings.
Springer transformed the barren desert into Zzyzx Mineral Springs and Health Resort, starting with tents and expanding through labor from homeless men recruited from Los Angeles’ Skid Row, whom he paid minimally with room, board, and promises of redemption. Facilities included a two-story hotel called “The Castle,” concrete cottages (“Zycott” housing), a dining hall, lecture room, chapel, library, office/recording studio, pool house, goat shed, diesel generator, subterranean rabbit chambers, an artificial lake named Lake Tuendae (falsely claimed to mean “where the waters come together” in Native American), and a private airstrip called “Zyport.” He installed diesel-powered boilers to heat the naturally cold mineral springs from the Mojave River, creating imitation hot springs for “healing” soaks.
The resort operated as a Christian health retreat for nearly 30 years (1944–1974), accommodating over 100 guests nightly. Visitors followed a regimen of detoxification, special diets (including on-site-grown rabbit meat, goat’s milk, fruits, and vegetables), abstention from alcohol, smoking, and quarreling, sunshine exposure, and daily sermons. Springer promoted it via his radio broadcasts, newspaper ads, a newsletter called The Elucidator, and a free shuttle service using buses and an eight-door Chevrolet from Los Angeles. Fees were on a sliding scale, with no one turned away for lack of funds, though large donors received land parcels—a practice that later proved illegal. He dubbed the main road “Boulevard of Dreams” and erected eye-catching signage along the highway. At its height in the 1950s and 1960s, Zzyzx was a bustling oasis, blending snake oil sales with salvation.
Legal Battles, Eviction, and Downfall
Springer’s empire unraveled in the late 1960s amid complaints from dissatisfied customers. In 1968, he was arrested by the California Department of Public Health on 65 counts of false advertising and misrepresentation, pleading guilty to eight counts of false advertisement and mislabeling. The American Medical Association condemned him as the “King of Quacks” in 1969, leading to a conviction, fine, and 60-day jail sentence.
Concurrently, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) investigated his land use, suing in 1967 for $34,187 in damages and back rent, deeming him a squatter for failing to conduct actual mining. His sale of land parcels to donors violated federal terms. On April 11, 1974, U.S. District Judge Francis C. Whelan ordered his eviction, granting just 36 hours to vacate. Springer fought the decision but lost, marking the end of his 30-year desert venture.
Later Life and Legacy
Following eviction, Springer retired to Las Vegas, Nevada, where he continued advocating for Zzyzx through writings, including a 1984 editorial titled “The Legal Rape of Zzyzx” in the Baker Valley News. He died on August 19, 1985, at age 88, never regaining his desert domain. (Note: Some sources list his death as January 19, but August aligns with verified records.)
Zzyzx was nearly demolished but was repurposed in 1976 as the Desert Studies Center, a research outpost for California State University campuses, focusing on ecology, climate change, dune formation, endangered species like the Mohave tui chub, and even Mars rover testing by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Today, remnants of Springer’s era—abandoned buildings, signage, and the Boulevard of Dreams—serve as historical curiosities in this now-academic haven, underscoring his legacy as a masterful con artist who turned public land into a profitable mirage.