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    History of Texas

    A splashy history of the oldest swimming pool in Texas

    Shelley Bueche
    Aug 16, 2017 | 9:00 am

    Imagine silent movies, a Ferris wheel, carousel rides, a diving horse show, a man called the Human Fish, a world-renowned diving baby, a 50-foot diving tower, a 70-foot slide, trapeze swings, and enthralled visitors, along with picnic areas, cabins, and campsites in one of the biggest cities in Texas. This was reality at the Deep Eddy Bathing Beach resort managed by George A. Rowley in Austin in the early 1900s.

    Deep Eddy Pool, or just Deep Eddy as locals call it, is the oldest swimming pool in the state, predating the establishment of Austin's Zilker Park in 1917 and Barton Springs Pool in 1918. The pool was named after an eddy formed by a deep hole in a limestone bed of the Colorado River. A.J. Eilers Sr. bought the property in 1915 and called it Deep Eddy Resort.

    Before the pool opened, folks were shuttled to the bathing beach by electric trolley to enjoy a cool respite, especially during summer months, before air-conditioning was invented.

    In 1935, Deep Eddy was purchased by the City of Austin for $10,000. A mere two weeks after the city purchase, a catastrophic turn of events took place when a flood devastated the entire area and filled the pool with mud and debris. This led to a revamp by the Works Progress Administration. The pool reopened in 1936 as Deep Eddy Pool and Eilers Park.

    Today, Deep Eddy remains an iconic place for locals, as well as those visiting the city. The pool is spring-fed and non-chlorinated. The water temperature varies little, fluctuating between 65 to 75 degrees year-round. For serious swimmers, there is a separate lap pool with designated lanes open daily from 8 am until 8 pm. For recreational and beginning swimmers, there is an open swim area complete with a wading area.

    There is also a grassy knoll leading to the pool that is popular with sunbathers and those seeking shade, reading magazines and books, and watching swimmers without getting their feet wet.

    Next to the pool is Eilers Park, complete with a hike-and-bike trail connecting to Lady Bird Lake, a toddler play area, and barbecue grills. The most popular events at the pool coincide with the summer months. An inflatable movie screen plays family flicks so floating film enthusiasts can watch movies from their pool noodles.

    Friends of Deep Eddy
    Because Deep Eddy has been a beloved fixture for over 100 years, a group named the Friends of Deep Eddy has formed to maintain ongoing repairs and make improvements to the pool, while ensuring the historic integrity of the property. The volunteer, nonprofit organization was established in 2002 to work with the City of Austin aquatics department in maintaining the pool and adding necessary improvements when required.

    "We worked hand-in-hand to improve maintenance, open the pool year round — like Barton Springs — renovate the bathhouse, and plan for our centennial celebration," Leon Barish, an Austin attorney and president of the group, says. "In 2007, we drilled two additional wells for water, and we planned smaller projects."

    In 2002-2003, University of Texas architecture graduate student Hannah Vaughan compiled information on Deep Eddy Pool and applied to the National Park Service for historic designation. Thanks to Vaughan's extensive research, the pool received historic landmark status, due to its rich history and New Deal-era architecture in the famed bathhouse and limestone landscape.

    Today, Deep Eddy remains an iconic pool and landmark for the entire state. In fact, Deep Eddy is such a revered piece of Lone Star history that a country song, "Deep Eddy Blues," was penned by musician Jimmie Dale Gilmore in 1989, and a beloved bar on the Austin property, Deep Eddy Cabaret, opened in 1951.

    Deep Eddy Vodka was founded in Austin in 2010, and its products are sold across the United States; the company is a supporter of the Friends of Deep Eddy. In addition, small and large events are celebrated at the pool, including movie nights, swimming and other sporting competitions, family get-togethers, and more.

    Deep Eddy Pool in 1936.

    Deep Eddy Pool in Austin
    Photo courtesy of Austin History Center
    Deep Eddy Pool in 1936.
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    Houston's IAH flops in new ranking of least stressful U.S. airports

    Amber Heckler
    Dec 11, 2025 | 10:00 am
    George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston
    Photo by Jeswin Thomas on Unsplash
    Flight delays and cancellations at George Bush Intercontinental Airport can be a stress-inducing experience for some travelers this holiday season.

    Houston's George Bush Intercontinental Airport (IAH) has some work to do to improve its stress-inducing environment during the peak holiday travel season, a new study has revealed.

    European tour company Travel by Luxe compared 30 major airports across several stress-inducing flight factors, such as security wait times, flight delays, cancellation rates, passenger traffic, and average airfare prices to determine the least stressful departure points. The airports were then ranked based on which were the "best equipped to keep travelers calm rather than frazzled."

    The No. 1 most stress-free U.S. airport to travel over the holidays is Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport in Arizona, the report said.

    George Bush Intercontinental was dubbed the 27th "least stressful" American airport with longer security wait times and more flight cancellations than most other major U.S. airports.

    According to passenger traffic data from December 2024, more than 2.1 million travelers flew through IAH for the holidays last year. Nearly a quarter of all flights were delayed, and IAH had the fourth-highest rate of cancelled flights (1.18 percent) out of all 30 airports analyzed during the same period.

    Average flight costs at IAH came out to $419.19 in the final quarter of 2024, which the report determined was the 11th most expensive airfare out of all 30 U.S. airports analyzed. However, the report states flight fares are not "the biggest drivers of airport stress," but flight delays and security wait times are.

    Travelers heading out of Houston should always plan extra time to get through Transportation Security Administration (TSA) lines during peak travel times, as the report found travelers waited about 22 minutes on average to get through IAH security lines in December 2023 (where the latest data was available). That's the fourth-highest wait time nationwide.

    The report's author says the 2025 holiday travel season is expected to be one of the busiest on record, and stresses that "choosing the right airport could make or break" a traveler's trip. Nearly 4.6 million travelers are expected to fly through IAH during the final two months of the year.

    "Holiday travel is supposed to be joyful. [T]hink of all the twinkling lights, family reunions and much-needed downtime," the author wrote. "But anyone who has battled chaotic airport lines, last-minute cancellations or a departure board full of red delay warnings knows how quickly that festive spirit can evaporate."

    Elsewhere in Texas, Austin-Bergstrom International Airport was ranked the 9th most stress-free airport in the U.S. Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport was deemed the worst of the airports studied; it ranked at the bottom of the list at No. 30.

    The top 10 U.S. airports with the smoothest travel during the 2025 holiday season are:

    • No. 1 – Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport
    • No. 2 – Salt Lake City International Airport
    • No. 3 – Washington Dulles International Airport
    • No. 4 – Tampa International Airport
    • No. 5 – Harry Reid International Airport
    • No. 6 – Chicago Midway International Airport
    • No. 7 – Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport
    • No. 8 – Philadelphia International Airport
    • No. 9 – Austin-Bergstrom International Airport
    • No. 10 – LaGuardia Airport
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