If you search the travel channel for programs featuring haunted houses or entire haunted towns you’re
not alone. The mystery and nostalgia surrounding ghost towns, with their ever-disintegrating buildings that house the remnants
of lives long gone, beckons many kindred spirits to these forgotten places, languishing away at the end of wind-swept
dirt roads.
It isn’t only the thought, or perhaps fear of encountering a ghostly specter inside one of the eerie
homes or businesses that has captured the attention of thousands of visitors each year. These makeshift mining towns and railroad
stops that sprang up years ago and whose residents suddenly vanished are attracting history buffs, outdoor enthusiasts with
a desire for a smattering of mystery and adventure, and anyone with a penchant for the nostalgic.
You can find them
across the U.S. Western states boast 100 to sometimes over 200 ghost towns in each state, but the west doesn’t have
the monopoly on ghost towns. Eastern states and mid western states also have from 10 to 100 per state. So, no matter where
you live, there are abandoned towns close enough for everyone to visit.
A ghost town is really nothing
more than just the shell of its former self. A mysterious shadowy reminder of lives once lived. Whether it was a bustling
mining town, a burgeoning farming community or railroad stop there are always plenty of unanswered questions for the history
buff and the curious.
Do people live in Ghost Towns? The short answer is yes, but it has to be a town where homes still
exsist. I've seen many ghost towns that aren't more than a pile of old lumber and bricks.
People that visit these places
are usually eager to capture a slice of history with a camera, notebook or Geiger counter. They want to answer the unanswerable. What
made the inhabitants choose this particular location to build? Why did the people leave, where did they go
and how did they live their lives out in such a place? Visitors to these oft-times abandoned towns come in
droves searching for memorabilia they can pass down to their grandchildren, a palpable reminder of our forbears and how
this country once was. Since Americans do not preserve old towns and cities, the photos and writings these visitors record
are things to cherish before the towns disintigrage and fall into oblivion.
Visiting ghost towns became one
of our favorite pass-times a few years ago too. We tried to see everything from accessible towns like the charming Virginia
City in Montana, Jerome in AZ, and Calico and Bodi in CA to the obscure. Favorites were ghost towns that still had residential
homes and businesses still standing. They were an enigma. Looking through dirt-smeared windows and tattered curtains I tried
to get a palpable feel for what it would have been like to live during those times, in that place, in that house. My husband
loved photographing the textures of the wood and interesting angles of buildings.
Several towns we saw listed in books
and on websites were never found. After four-wheeling down dusty, rutted roads for miles we’d finally stop where the
map indicated the town was near. If there was a local nearby we’d ask if they knew of any ghost towns in the area. Often
they looked suspiciously at us. We'd show them the map and they'd scratch their chin and finally nod. “There
was a town here.” Then they’d point. The only vestige of a previous town was a nearly unidentifiable cornerstone
to some long forgotten building surrounded by cacti, dry tumbleweed, rattlesnake tracks and jackrabbit holes in the dirt.
“Gone for years now,” they'd say.
Although some ghost towns were never found either because they had recently
been destroyed or the directions were difficult to decipher, we didn't mind too much because most of the adventure
is in the journey anyway...