Chinese name: Baishajing, alias: Baishajing, which belongs to Changsha, Hunan, China, and is honored as the first spring in Changsha
During the reign of Qing Qianlong, Jin Shi Kuang Min Ben and You Gong Zhang Jiusi wrote Records of Baishajing and Records of Baishajing, claiming that their springs are "sweet and fragrant, cool in summer and warm in winter" and ". The people of Changsha have been drinking this water for generations, and the people who come to fetch it are endless. Even the residents in Xicheng District and north city have come by buckets. "It's a surprise." There are many poor families who draw water here and sell the whole city for a living. After the end of the Qing Dynasty, people who sold sand and water mostly lived by wells, and the area around Baishajing became increasingly teeming, thus forming Baisha Street. Baisha ancient well can be said to be the spring of life in Changsha. Because of this, since the late Qing Dynasty, officials, gentry and bullies have tried their best to monopolize Baisha well water. During the Guangxu period of the Qing Dynasty, the magistrate of Shanhua County once erected a monument behind the well, "showing a metaphor", classified Baishajing as an official well and a civilian well, and made a water use charter. In the early years of the Republic of China, another warlord set up a "notice" monument beside the well, engraved with the words "Take a picture of Baisha well water, the four wells have clear boundaries, sell water and draw water from each well, and the official well is for the official army". In the old days, there was also a "water-fetching meeting" in the local area. Anyone who sold sand water had to pay a few yuan to join the club and obtain a receipt before taking water. After liberation, Baishajing returned to the people's hands, and people really enjoyed Baishajing freely. In 1951, in order to protect the ancient well, the Municipal People's Government allocated special funds to repair it, set up stone fences and paved the ground, making Baisha Ancient Well the earliest place of interest to be restored after the liberation of Changsha.