A medical celebrity, best-selling author, magazine editor, skilled surgeon, public health expert, popular speaker and Seventh-day Adventist Christian missionary, Kellogg was a most impressive man. Instead, it became a world-renowned destination of health and healing thanks to the charismatic ministering of its director, John Harvey Kellogg, MD.
Unlike the warm mineral baths at Wiesbaden or the saintly waters at Lourdes, the Battle Creek Sanitarium (affectionately known as “the San”) possessed no natural physical charms for restoring health. The Battle Creek Sanitarium became a world-renowned destination of health and healing thanks to the charismatic ministering of its director. Washington and Sojourner Truth, nursing wounds fresh from fighting the war against racism. Harding, before embarking on his presidential run and Booker T.
Rockefeller Jr, fleeing from the disastrous events in his family’s coal mines at Ludlow, Colorado Thomas Edison and Henry Ford, whenever they were in need of a tune-up or recharge from the stresses of industrial gigantism Amelia Earhart, before her important flights Warren G. Passing under the station’s arches of rough-hewn gray granite and Lake Superior brick, between 1870 and well into the Great Depression, were such luminaries as John D. It was built to accommodate the multitude of health-seeking pilgrims flocking from all over the United States and Europe to “take the cure” at the town’s luxurious Battle Creek Sanitarium, which, although founded in 1866, officially opened its doors as the Western Health Reform Institute on Sept. In 1888, the powerful Michigan Central Railway erected a Romanesque train station in a remote hamlet in southwestern Michigan called Battle Creek.