Americans love their ghost towns...
America's ghost towns are unique relics of folklore and legend. They recall how good times turned bad and how dreams became nightmares. Most resulted from greed and the depletion of natural resources. Others resulted from environmental disasters and economic downturns. Current and recent events havedemonstrated how often history repeats itself and how modern American ghost towns, once rare in the US, have become more commonplace. Much of America's Gulf Coast region remains uninhabited following the poor governmental response to Hurricane Katrina while past ad-nauseum denials of the current economic recession (and endless attempts to prevent it) almost brought about another Great Depression. Ironically, as more and more of America's most fabled ghost towns become tourist attractions, the paramount lessons learned from them are being ignored as America's standard of living steadily diminishes. "Ghost Towns of America" features the greatest ghost towns from all over the United States, including America's Old West. Also included are restored ghost towns and haunted ghost towns. The greatest American ghost towns have compelling histories...
Welcome!
- It is a formerly inhabited area containing random debris or dense overgrowth
- It has structures which have been partially destroyed
- It is an abandoned community containing buildings which have been sealed off
- It is an inhabited community containing many abandoned buildings
- It is an historic community whose economy and population is much smaller than it once was
- It is a restored historic community that was once abandoned or almost abandoned
American ghost town folklore is usually associated with the Wild West... and Tombstone, Arizona represents the ultimate American ghost town. True ghost towns, however, are just memories and Tombstone was never abandoned. America's landscape is dotted with thousands of abandoned towns and, if they could speak, they'd be screaming colorful tales of broken promises and shattered dreams.
Of course, ghost towns have existed all over the globe since cave man days, and America's ghost towns are not limited to the Old West.
Most of the towns lining historic Route 66 from Chicago to Los Angeles suffered greatly when they were bypassed by the Interstate highway system during the last few decades. Many became ghost towns in the blink of an eye. The rediscovery of Old West ghost towns and Route 66 marks a turning point. Americans are realizing that their future lies within their past.
That startling revelation has immense implications for America's future as communities have recently been abandoned due to natural disasters, environmental poisoning, and political dysfunction.
Ghost Town Factoids:
- Saloons far outnumbered schools, churches, and businesses in many western ghost towns. It was common for a town with a population of 20,000 to have 50 saloons
- Upon the abandonment of many western towns, wooden buildings were dismantled and railroad tracks pulled up from the ground so that they could be reused during the establishment of new towns
- Water was more expensive than liquor in many western desert towns
- The most common reason that American communities have become ghost towns is that they were either bypassed by transportation routes, their sources of income & water were exhausted, disasters occurred, their post offices closed, or they were not given county seat status
- "Ghost towning" is a gaining in popularity as a hobby
- Ghost towns east of the Mississippi River seem to be more susceptible to hauntings and other paranormal phenomena than ghost town located west of the Mississippi River
- Most American ghost towns are former mining towns or former logging towns
- Many western ghost towns had a Chinatown section
- Although there are hundreds of ghost towns east of the Mississippi River, most American ghost towns lie west of the Mississippi
- California has almost twice as many ghost towns than any other state
- The 1849 California Gold Rush established San Francisco as the west's financial and cultural capital
- The 1859 Colorado Gold Rush created Denver, Colorado
Click here for Amusement Parks of America's Past and Present
Click here for The Route 66 Off-Ramp
Click here for American Classics
Click here for Roadside Adventures
Click here for All-American Vacations
Recommended Links:
Ghost Towns (General):
Abandoned Places (General):
Abandoned Roads:
Abandoned Railroads:
Forums:
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Tons of tips and tricks for creating amazing Old West themed parties and treasure hunts!
Other Ghost Towns Links (By State):
Arkansas:
Florida:
Georgia:
Hawaii:
Idaho:
Illinois:
Maine:
Maryland:
Mississippi:
Missouri:
New Hampshire:
New York:
Rhode Island:
South Carolina:
Vermont:
Virginia:
West Virginia:
This page was last updated on: November 20, 2009
Web site created by Alan J. Ageloff
Copyright 2009 Alan Ageloff. All rights reserved.
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AMERICA'S FUTURE LIES WITHIN ITS PAST
AMERICA'S FUTURE LIES WITHIN ITS PAST