Springs on the site were originally described by Native Americans as "worromontogus" (sometimes translated as "place of the mineral spring").[1] The 134-room Togus Springs Hotel was built on the site in 1858 by Rocklandgranite dealer Horace Beals.[1] Beals constructed a stable, large pool, bathing house, race track, and bowling alley on the site in an effort to duplicate the success of the Poland Spring Hotel.[1] Beal's investment of one-quarter-million dollars failed to attract the anticipated number of visitors, and the facility closed when receipts failed to cover expenses.[1]
The hotel was purchased by the federal government for US$50,000 in 1866.[1] Togus began operations on October 6, 1866 (1866-10-06) as the Eastern Branch of the National Asylum For Disabled Volunteer Soldiers.[1] The first veteran admitted was James P. Nickerson of Company A, 19th Massachusetts Volunteers.[2] Two hundred veterans were living at Togus during the summer of 1867, and a new barracks, hospital, and chapel were under construction.[2] A fire in a main building on January 7, 1868, displaced 270 residents.[2] Three 3-story brick dormitories and an amusement hall recreation building were built in 1868.[2] Togus resembled a military establishment where the men wore surplus blue army uniforms and were subject to military discipline including confinement in the guardhouse for infractions of the rules.[3] The residents signed over their federal pension in return for their care.[3]
Those who were able to work could earn money working at the shops or farms raising much of the food consumed at Togus.[3] Three Holsteindairy cattle were imported from the Netherlands in 1871 to form the first registered herd of the breed in Maine.[4] In 1872 the name was changed to the National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers.[5] New buildings included a bakery, a butcher shop, a blacksmith shop, a brickyard, a boot and shoe factory, a carpentry shop, a fire station, a harness shop, a library, a sawmill, a soap works, a store, and an opera house theatre.[6] President Ulysses S. Grant visited Togus on August 13, 1873 to review the men who had served with him during the Civil War.[3] There were 933 men living at Togus in 1878.[7] Most were Civil War veterans, but some had served in the Mexican–American War or the War of 1812.[7]
On July 8, 2010 a veteran, with ongoing health issues, had an armed confrontation with police and a Maine game warden in a wooded area of the campus after calls were placed to authorities regarding gunshots. The veteran was shot and killed by police.[12]