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Monday, November 23, 2015

Road Trips since my last post

I have invested most of my Ghost Town Hunting time into my new Kansas Ghost Town Hunter Facebook page. But I thought I'd make a post on here, for old time's sake. Here is some information on all of my road trips for 2015.
#59: January 17th & 19th: 2015: A two-part road trip to kick off 2015 (Mini)
The original plan was for a larger trip on the 17th but plans changed and we wound up with just five pictures. So I tacked them on to another "micro-road-trip" I took on the 19th on the way back to Manhattan which had just eight pictures. Verdi was a decent Ghost, otherwise not much.

Part 1: January 17th
Punkin Center (NG): The ruins of a garage and a home, along with two farmsteads, mark this former town that used to have a gas station and school back in the early days of auto travel. Online research tells me the gas station closed around 1950 and since then there's been nearly nothing there. Population: At most 10
A country church northeast of Haven
Bentley (ST): Population: 530 (2010)

Part 2: January 19th
Bennington (ST): Population: 672 (2010)
Verdi (NG): An old tin elevator and a few outbuildings are the highlight of this town that hasn't been much for a LONG time; the post office closed in 1913! There appear to be no remaining business buildings and just 5 or so occupied houses. Population: 10-20
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#60: March 22nd, 2015: Missouri Vacation trip #2 and Joel trip #2
On our way home from our Spring Break vacation my stepdad Joel stopped at a few small towns and Ghost Towns in far southeast Kansas. There were a couple good Ghosts!

Baxter Springs (C) Pop. 4,238 (2010)
Cravensville (TG) The "diamond" marking the site was about 3/4 of a mile west of the intersection of US-166 and US-69, but there was nothing there and at the intersection... was a lot more. Two abandoned gas stations, one in ruins and covered with concrete remnants, old gasoline tanks, and other junk, sit on the southwest and southeast sides of the intersection. The one in ruins may have also offered lodging as it was two stories. Very impressive. Pop. 0
Keelville (TG) All that's here is a church and the largely vanished ruins of two houses.
Pop. 0
Melrose (SG) An old store that might still be open and a church sit along US-166 in this tiny place. Pop. 40-50
Chetopa (C) Pop. 1,125 (2010)
Bartlett (SG) Still incorporated, the highlight of this tiny town is what appears to be a WPA Town Hall, which is in poor condition and appears to be used for storage now.
          Pop. 80 (2010)
Valeda (SG) This was the best Ghost of the trip. Visible from the highway, a brick school nearly in ruins and partially collapsed sits on the northwest edge of town. Most of the roof is gone and sits in pieces on the floor. There is also an abandoned store and an active church, and perhaps 15 occupied houses. Pop. 40-50
Independence (BC)
Winfield: A revisit to take a picture of the Cowley County Courthouse.
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#61: March 27th, 2015: Linear Trip #... oh, who's counting anymore?!?! (Mini)
Waiting only 5 days between trips, as I headed from Manhattan to Wichita for a family weekend, I visited a few Ghosts in a familiar area but I hadn't been to (to take pictures). This trip officially revisited every town that was "ruined" on my December 2004 video camera trip.

Gladstone (NG) Marked as "Gladstone Station" in my Atlas, a private family cemetery, one farmstead that is just as private, and a nearby railroad sign bearing the town's name are all that's left. I also took a photo of a nearby ruined house. Pop. Less than 5
Bazaar (NG) Bazaar's business district is completely gone, and just a small handful of houses, a church, a couple large storage sheds and a school a mile west of town are left. Nearly all that was abandoned has been torn down. Population: Approx. 30
Rural (NG) This aptly-named Ghost Town's post office closed way back in 1902! Yet it still appeared on my atlas. An old well & a brick column sat on the property of a large farmstead that was at the site of the town. A short distance south was another farmstead & two abandoned houses. That's it. Population: 5-10
Matfield Green (SG) This is about the 10th time I've been through this town, but this visit strengthened its position quite a lot. For the first time I discovered that the town has an old abandoned school. Plus there were several dilapidated houses I saw too! Unfortunately, downtown was not as impressive. Population: 48 (2010)
Brainerd: A revisit with a (much) more thorough picture taking. Several cool abandoned houses here. No old businesses though.
Hopkins (NG) Marked as "Hopkins Switch" in my atlas, the railroad tracks where the "Switch" would be are long-gone, and just a church, a large transmissions tower, a nearby small cemetery, and a few scattered houses are left here. Population: 10-20
Oil Hill (TG) This was definitely the most interesting Ghost of the trip. Not even marked on my DeLorme Atlas, the town used to be the largest oil company town in Kansas and at one time had over 20,000 people living in temporary "shotgun" houses in the early 1920s. As technology advanced and the oil began to run low, the town was quickly abandoned in the late 1950s and 1960s, all the temporary housing was torn down, and today not much is left to show a town, much less a bustling company town of 20,000, was ever here. A sidewalk is still visible along the south side of 10th Road and a few city streets are still left, but thick overgrowth (plus a few still-operating oil pumps) cover the former town which now has no buildings and nearly no ruins. A couple abandoned buildings, what they were I don't know, still sit just east of the old town. I think it's pretty cool. Population: 0
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#62: April 25, 2015: The first-ever combination Facebook/normal Road Trip (Mini)
What started out as just a Facebook Trip became an official Trip (although a "Mini" one) when I found myself with some extra time and went and visited three more towns. 8 photos were taken as part of the Facebook Trip and 15 more were added later with my digital camera to make this an official road trip. All towns visited were in the Ghost Town spectrum and all towns had been visited before, however all but one had either been visited in the brief pre-photo era in 2004 or in the dreaded "Vivitar" era in 2005, and thus these towns were documented for the first time "officially".

Waterloo (NG) Visited before photos in 2004, Waterloo has a church, an old church school, an old auto shop and a handful of houses. Not very impressive but I did get the old church school & auto shop as part of the Facebook Trip. Population: Maybe 20
Rago: The only true revisit, I got two photos of an abandoned house and an old church? in the Ghost Town as part of the Facebook Trip.
DuQuoin (NG) This was visited before but I can't remember when. Nonetheless, I had no photos of the town before this trip. The last town in the Facebook Trip, this was the best of the three, as an old abandoned store sits alone as the only remaining building in the old downtown. There is also an old school and a couple abandoned houses. 4 photos taken here as part of the Facebook Trip. Population: 10-15
Rome (NG) All three towns visited in the "official" part of the road trip were previously visited in the dreaded "Vivitar Era" in 2005. Rome was first, and is marked only by a few scattered homes, some abandoned, a large grain elevator, and what looks like an old gas station. One of the occupied homes used to be the town's school and has been heavily renovated. Population: 10-15
Corbin (NG) Corbin was the most impressive Ghost of the entire trip. When I visited in the Vivitar Era, there were a few impressive abandoned grain elevators. Unfortunately those have since been torn down, but the town has three abandoned buildings, overgrown and nearly in ruins, making up its old downtown. A lot of overgrowth and empty lots cover the rest of the town, which also has two brand new homes and a brand new church. Strange. Population: About 30
Perth (SG) Perth's downtown is completely gone, but the town did have two impressive abandoned grain elevators. Otherwise the community has just become a bunch of houses. Population: 50-75
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#63: May 25, 2015: The Memorial Day Linear Trip
On Memorial Day I set out on a risky road trip to Ottawa & Clay counties. It was the day after a rain and more was in the forecast, so I had to dodge muddy roads to visit my Ghosts. But some of them were great, including Idana, in Clay County, which debuts in the Top 20!

Lindsey (NG) A large and very abandoned tin elevator is the highlight of this little place, which has otherwise been reduced to about 5 houses. Population: 10-15
Minneapolis (C) Population: 2,017 (2014)
Alfmil (TG) Not sure if this was ever a town. It may have just been a designation for a railroad stop back in the day. Now the site is covered by storage buildings and a junkyard. The site is less than a mile west of Minneapolis and never had a post office, or really anything that would've made it a town. Population: 0
Wells (SG) Several abandoned buildings sit in this little place's downtown, but none that are really eye-popping. An old school that was converted into a house and then abandoned sits near downtown, but also isn't that impressive. Most impressive is a deteriorating tin elevator east of downtown. Population: 40-50
Vine Creek (TG) One occupied farm sits less than 1/4 mile south of the townsite, but I'm not counting it. Just a cemetery, an abandoned house and a lot of overgrowth marks this old town on an old railroad. Most of the site is not accessible because the old main street has been torn out, but it looks like not much is left. Population: 0
Longford (SG) Looks larger than it is and not much abandoned here. Pop. 78 (2014)
Oak Hill (NG) Also incorporated, but one of the smallest in the state, this was much more impressive. Most of the houses in town are abandoned, and the few buildings left in downtown are as well. The town also has a very large church for its small size, and... an Amish population! Population: 24 (2014)
Idana (NG) By far the most impressive Ghost of the trip. Downtown is compelety abandoned, with all five buildings boarded up and falling apart. A huge two-story brick building, missing all of its windows and some of its roof, sits wide open, as you can see right through. The town also has a unique concrete 2-room school, which has been burned but shows no sign of it from the outside. Population: 20-30
Clay Center (C) Population: 4,239 (2014)
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#64: August 8, 2015: Jake's special road trip... cut short
This trip, specially for my brother, was to visit several very old cemeteries in Lawrence and Leavenworth as well as some national historic sites in those cities and Lecompton... mixed in with a few Ghosts. After finishing the first leg of our trip in Jefferson County & visiting Lecompton, we went to the 1854 Pioneer Cemetery in Lawrence. After leaving, I wanted to see the KU campus and then head to Leavenworth. Just before reaching campus and less than a mile from Pioneer Cemetery, on a side street my right wheel axle SNAPS, causing the tire to lurch inwards and make my car completely immovable. After getting it towed & waiting 4 hours to get it fixed, I made a promise to my mom not to take any more road trips until I get a better car. 27 pictures were taken, so it wasn't a total wash, but this will very likely be my last trip in 2015.
Grantville (VST) Population: About 100
Newman (NG) Has an old school and what might be an old train depot, as well as some homes. Population: At most 20
Thompsonville (NG) Stone steps leading to nowhere (it was a church) is the highlight of this tiny town. Population: About 25
Medina (NG) Medina used to have a school but it's long-gone, now the town just has a few scattered homes. Population: 15-20
Perry (ST) Population: 929 (2010)
Lecompton (ST) A lot of historical buildings here. Population: 625 (2015)
Williamstown (SG) Bigtime bedroom community, has an old school still used for something. Population: 75-100
Buck Creek (NG) An old school and two houses sit about a mile northwest of the "diamond" on my atlas. At the diamond, along the railroad? Nothing. Pop. At most 5
Midland (TG) Notable for not being in my DeLorme Atlas, Midland has an old school, a feed store / gas station, and a large grain elevator complex, but no people. Pop. 0
Lawrence: Revisit to visit the 1854 Pioneer Cemetery. Shortly after leaving the cemetery my car broke down.

Friday, February 6, 2015

My 20 favorite Ghost Towns

NOTE: These just cover the areas of Kansas I have visited. The majority of Kansas I have visited is within a two-hour drive of Wichita. I have not gotten to far western, northeastern or southeastern Kansas.

Through 10 years, 59 road trips and close to 500 towns visited, with so many of them being Ghost Towns, it's very difficult to narrow down to my personal favorites. These 20 towns all had something that just sticks in my mind, or they hold an important place in my road-tripping life. All 20 towns are must-visits. NOTE: Generally, towns officially became "Ghost Towns" when their post offices closed, but this is not always the case
#20: Keighley
County: Butler
Classification: Near-Ghost
Population: At most 20
Visited: 2009, 2014
Info: Post office closed in 1943
Keighley is unique for more reasons than one. First, it has a Rural Water District (RWD) watertower on the west edge of "town" but if you drive west past the watertower, on the other side it says "KEIGHLEY"! The former town has been reduced to a handful of houses spread out over a good 100 acres, as well as an old school and the "Keighley Barn" a convenience store that operated when US 400 ran right next to it, and apparently still operates today even though the highway has been moved 100 feet south. But I find it unique that a virtually dead town still has its own watertower, still proudly displaying the town's name on it (on one side at least). The town's old main street still exists, although the buildings are gone except for one newer house. There is one visible foundation amidst a lot of overgrowth. The old school sits about a quarter mile south of this old main street along old Highway 400. It's in decent shape but appears to be unused. The town apparently used to be a tiny hamlet until the oil boom of the 1920s, then quickly grew into a roaring town of a few hundred people before quickly dying in the 1940s. It's an interesting Ghost that should be visited.
#19: Gem
County: Thomas
Classification: Semi-Ghost
Population: 88 (2010 census)
Visited: 2014
Info: Post office closed very recently, in March 2013 or 2014
Gem was visited in December 2014 on "Joel's Trip" to Rexford, which is just a few miles away from Gem. The town is notable for having possibly the most impressive abandoned school I have ever seen on my road trips. It can be seen for miles as you're approaching the town on US-83. Nearly every window is broken, and you can see right through the building in several places. The building now sits on private property and is fenced off, but you can still get very close to it. The rest of town is good too; two abandoned churches sit just a couple blocks from each other on Main Street, and the town's downtown, while mostly gone, has several abandoned buildings. But the town is definitely worth visiting just for the school alone.
#18: Sitka
County: Clark
Classification: Near-Ghost
Population: 3
Visited: 2007, 2013
Info: Post office closed in 1964, town once had 300 people
Online research has confirmed that Sitka has a population... of three. They all live in one house. This Ghost is one that must be looked at closely to realize how great of one it is. Few vacant buildings are left standing (there are four at last check; two houses and the old restaurant, as well as one in a field that's partially collapsed), but the remnants of sidewalks, foundations, collapsed houses, trees where buildings were, and even dirt tracks that were streets are still visible in this dead town. Unfortunately, crane your neck (and zoom your camera) from US 183 or the parking lot of the former restaurant, because most of the town is on private property. However, you should definitely still pay a visit.
#17: Gerlane
County: Barber
Classification: True Ghost
Population: 0
Visited: 2013
Info: Had a recorded population of 10 in 1940, post office closed in 1943
Gerlane is an impressive True Ghost south of Medicine Lodge. A dilapidated shed greets you to the Ghost from the east, but if you continue west you find a track that appears to have been an old city street. A couple sheds sit in empty lots, and you can see a few asphalt remains. Further north an old bridge connects another track to land to the north. I believe this used to be an oil town, and there were a few houses and oil wells where today nothing remains but empty lots and ruins. Still, a very cool ghost and one that deserves the Top 20.
#16: Adamsville
County: Sumner
Classification: True Ghost
Population: 0
Visited: 2005
Info: Town was not even established until the 1920s. A post office ran for 6 years, from 1925 to 1931.
Adamsville was the first ever True Ghost town I documented in my road trips. It was very impressive: An old tin elevator and it's office sat about 100 feet back from the road, rusted and abandoned. A whire circle, possibly from an old can of paint, surrounded the top window of the elevator. An old wooden building, thickly hidden behind overgrowth yet right next to the road, also sat falling apart. This might've been a school. Further east sat two houses, a ways back from the road and also hidden in overgrowth. This was a very cool little Ghost, but not even my favorite in the county, as you will see later.
#15: Antelope
County: Marion
Classification:Near-Ghost
Population: At most 10
Visited: 2004, 2013
Info: Post office closed surprisingly recently, in 1988
Antelope was first visited in early evening on the failed "video camera experiment" trip in 2004. Fortunately, I did snap a few pictures. I returned in November 2013 for a more thorough picture taking and that's when I decided to put this town in my Top 20. Just 3 or so houses are occupied in this town that lies all on one road, next to the railroad. An old tin elevator (there used to be 2) and a number of grain bins sit wasting away on the north side. But the signature building in the town is the old Nienstedt store. Still with its sign on the front, the building, which has obviously been vacant for decades but appears to be taken care of, sits alone on the corner. A picture I took of it is my cover photo on Flickr and has gotten praise from several people. One other vacant business sits further west, and that's about it for this little hamlet. The old store is the primary reason why this is in my Top 20.
#14: Clements
County: Chase
Classifcation: Near-Ghost
Population: Less than 5
Visited: 2007
Info: Post office closed in 1988
Clements is a very impressive Ghost Town, complete with an empty city block lined with house ruins and an old store in the former downtown that sits alone. The building is in decent shape, but obviously abandoned. One occupied farmhouse sits on the east edge of town heading out towards the Cottonwood river. About 1000 feet southeast of town lies the old Clements Stone Bridge, which is on the National Register of Historic Places. However, the Ghost Town itself is one ghost town hunters should surely visit!
#13: Croft
County: Pratt
Classification: True Ghost
Population: 0
Visited: 2013
Info: Post office closed in 1961
To date, Croft is the most complete True Ghost I have ever visited. There is still a sign to the town off of US 54, but coming into town you can tell that it's completely ghostly. An old school sits just off the road on the far north edge of town. There are just two roads: Croft Road and the north-south numbered road. Two grain elevators and their weigh stations, all abandoned, sit looming over a railroad that has long-since been abandoned & the tracks pulled up. In between the school and the elevators sit two houses, one with a bunch of junk in the front yard, and several ruins and foundations. Both houses appear to be unoccupied, and after posing the question on Facebook in 2013, a Pratt County local said he believes the last resident left or died about a year prior. This is a must-visit for any ghost town hunter wanting to see a real, true Ghost Town.
#12: Wonsevu
County: Chase
Classification: True Ghost
Population: 0
Visited: 2011
Info: Post office closed in 1907, last resident moved out in 2000
Visited on road trip #39 in 2011, this town is still fresh in my memory. And what a memory it is. The entire town lies on two roads. Coming in from the north, you pass an old school on the east side of the road and what appears to be an old baseball field on the west. At the intersection, on the south side about 50 feet west is an abandoned church and directly south is a small building that could have been a house or just a shed. Just further east is a thick growth of trees where a foundation is visible, and about 100 feet further east is  single vacant house. On the north side of the road are the ruins of a second house. Information online tells me the last resident left/died in 2000. This is one of the most complete True Ghosts I have ever visited.

#11: Diamond Springs
County: Morris
Classification: Near-Ghost
Population: At most 10
Visited: 2007
Info: Post office closed in 1930
Diamond Springs has historically been considered one of the best ghost towns in all of Kansas, with its associations to the Santa Fe Trail and the stunning age of the ruins in town, with the three old stone buildings rumored to be 140 years old. For extensiveness, Diamond Springs is not that impressive, because these 3 stone buildings are all that's left. The cemetary sits about a half-mile north, and there are a handful of houses in the town area. The impressive remains of the old stone buildings are what gives this town the ranking of #10 on my Favorite Ghost Towns list.

#10: Teterville
County: Greenwood
Classification: True Ghost                      
Population: 0
Visited: 2006
Info: Post office closed in 1962, town only existed for 40 years as an oil town, town once had over 600 people
Teterville has no buildings. A very old black-and-white sign points you off the main road to a beat-up gravel path that passes by a rusty oil tank and two foundations. So why is this town #10? The path ends at a 20-foot high stone pillar named Teter Rock that sits atop a hill where you can see for ten miles in any direction in the Flint Hills. Teterville was apparently founded in the 1920s as an oil boomtown and quickly abandoned in the 1960s when the oil began to run out. The rock was planted during the town's heyday and left behind as the town became a Ghost. I consider it the most scenic sight I've ever seen on my road trips.

#9: Drury
County: Sumner
Classification: Near-Ghost
Population: Approx. 20
Visited: 2005, 2009
Info: Post office closed in 1921
Drury was visited on two separate road trips: first in 2005 in the "Vivitar Era" and second in 2009. Just west of town is a vacant motel covered in vines and other overgrowth. The old sign is still visible on the building. Along the Chicaskia river, which passes immediately west of town, three large concrete pillars, formerly a railroad bridge, rise out of the river about 200 feet north of the road. Along this same road lie four different vacant business buildings, all of them looking as if they had been vacant for 50 years. Along the only street that bisects the main road sits an old school with an old-fashioned merry-go-round sitting in the yard. This street ends at the old railroad, where an old tin elevator sits rusting away. North of the main road sits mostly grass, with a few trees sticking out. The grass is mowed, giving it the appearance of a park. A cul-de-sac of sorts goes west from the side-street, and three occupied houses sit here. One or two more sit on the main road. Despite little photographic evidence of this town it is still one of my all-time favorites.

#8: Lerado
County: Reno
Classification: Near-Ghost          
Population: 5 at most
Visited: 2006, 2009
Info: Post office closed in 1904
Lerado is a rare example of a town whose status was greatly strengthened after the second visit. On the first visit in January 2006, the only thing I paid attention to was the church. But on the revisit in 2009, Lerado became one of my favorite Ghosts of all time. Approaching from the south, one of the first things you see is a huge brick general store, still intact but looking like it hasn't been in use in 50 years. Hidden in the trees next to the store are the ruins of another building. Across the road is a solitary house: a second one is on the north edge of "town" near the cemetary. Right at the intersection, ruins of two buildings are visible in the trees. An old schoolbuilding-turned-community building still sits in good shape. The old town is full of history and is one of my favorites.

#7: Englewood
County: Clark
Classification: Semi-Ghost
Population: 77 (2010 census)
Visited: 2013
Info: Post office is still open but is in danger of closing, town once had 2,000 people
Englewood once had 2,000 people in its heyday around the turn of the century. Today it has about 4% of that number. The downtown is completely abandoned, and 5 buildings in various states of collapse sit rotting away on the old main street. The only businesses left are a grain elevator, a post office, and some gas pumps on the south side of town. Large, wide open empty lots, some holding vacant buildings, most not, sit all over the expansive town, which covers about a square mile but only has 80 people. A must-visit for any ghost town hunter.

#6: Freeport
County: Harper
Classification: Near-Ghost
Population: 5 (2010 census)
Visited: 2006
Info: Post office is still open but is in danger of closing, town has been the smallest incorporated town in Kansas for 30 years
Freeport is famous for being the smallest incorporated town in the state of Kansas, with a population of 5 in the 2010 census (it could possibly be even lower today, as every resident is over the age of 50). For it's size, the town covers a wide area. Most of the old lots have been replaced by farmland, but several buildings still remain. Among them: A corner brick building containing the town's post office (west), bank (corner) and a vacant store (north). As far as I know the bank has closed recently, the branches in Harper & Anthony are still open. Other buildings in the town's expansive area includes an operating grain elevator and church, a "stick" watertower, three occupied houses, an old school building still in decent shape, a vacant grain elevator near the operating one, and approximately four vacant houses in various states of ruin. The town is full of history and is a good town for ghost town hunters.

#5: Wellsford
County: Kiowa
Classification: Near-Ghost
Population: At most 10
Visited: 2010
Info: Post office closed in 1955, town briefly held the title of smallest incorporated town in Kansas, with a 1970 census population of 9, town was unincorporated in 1975
This town is perhaps the most expansive ghost town I have ever seen. The town is large enough to support at least 200 people, yet these many city blocks are filled with overgrowth and countless foundations and ruins. No visible downtown remains, however the shell of one building that looks like it was a business sits on the north side of town. Thick trees cover the vacant lots, and numerous foundations and ruins are visible from the streets. A small wooden church sitting out in a wheat field is still in use, and the "Wellsford Flea Market" apparently is as well, but otherwise, other then the rare occupied house, this town is totally dead. This town gets little coverage when good Kansas Ghost Towns are mentioned, but I recommend exploring this one.

#4: Hitschmann
County: Barton
Classification: (likely) True Ghost
Population: (likely) 0
Visited: 2014
Info: School closed mid-1960s, cannot find any info on a post office, not even from KS Historical Society! Unknown if one house closest to the elevator is occupied, otherwise every house in town is abandoned
That's right, this town is (by a mile) the most extensive True Ghost I have ever visited. The entire town occupies just one large rectangular block, with the grain elevator, the only building still operating in the town, just off to the north and west. There is no sign of a former downtown area, and due to the fact that the town sits in oil country, plus the school looks like it was built in the 1930s or 1940s, I'm going to say this town probably never was much more than a collection of houses, a store or two, and the school that sprang up in the 1920s (or later) during an oil boom. The town probably gradually declined from 50 or so people to zero from the 1960s to present. But what's surprising is that hardly anything has been torn down; the town is surprisingly intact given how long most of the houses look like they've been abandoned. An old gas station, looking like a strong wind could blow it over, sits on the southeast side, with an old gas pump still in front. VISIT THIS TOWN, if you want to see a Ghost Town like they depict in the movies. You don't ever see those in Kansas, but this one pretty closely fits the bill.

#3: Manchester
County: Dickinson
Classification: Semi-Ghost
Population: 95 (2010 census)
Visited: 2014
Info: Despite sizable population, the post office closed in 1993
Manchester's downtown looks like something straight out of a movie. About 10 buildings, lining both sides of Main Street for two blocks and all abandoned, sit in disrepair. Some are two stories and look like they were fine buildings at one time. Now, they all sit abandoned. The rest of the town is very impressive too, with numerous abandoned houses and empty lots. There are almost no businesses in this little community, just a rural fire station and a watertower. This town doesn't even have a post office! The downtown alone makes this a must-visit for a ghost-town hunter wanting to see something that really looks like a ghost town!

#2: Elgin
County: Chautauqua
Classification: Semi-Ghost
Population: 89 (2010 census)
Info: Post office closed in 1976, town once had over 1,000 people and still had 500 as late as 1930
Elgin, being incorporated, is large enough to be classified as a Very Small Town. But that would just do the old town injustice. The town sits virtually on the Oklahoma line in southern Chautauqua county. Passing through town on the main road, you might see several empty lots and a few vacant houses, but nothing standout-impressive. Go into town, and if you're a true ghost-town hunter, your jaw will drop. The sheer, stunning amount of vacant buildings and ruins visible in town is larger than I had ever seen before. No less than 7 vacant business buildings sit rotting away on a very wide brick Main Street. Some buildings have lost their roofs, some look in fairly reasonable shape, but all have weathered the ravages of time. Just west of downtown a huge watertower sits rusting away, apparently unused for decades. Most of the occupied houses sit on the road into town from Oklahoma (the southernmost street in town IS the Oklahoma border). Numerous vacant houses and ruins dot the empty blocks, and empty brick streets with grass growing out of them cover town. The only businesses that remain occupied are the city hall, a community building, and a couple churches. A must-see town for any ghost town hunter.

#1: Saffordville
County: Chase
Classification: Near-Ghost
Population: 5 or less
Visited: 2007, 2013
Info: Town was the subject of the paper I wrote for my history class that helped get me the Chapman Center internship, post office closed in 1957, town had a population of nearly 200 when it was destroyed by 1951 flood, population declined to less than 20 after the flood
What else would be #1? I WROTE about this town in my history class! Without this town, I might not have gotten my internship. Compared to Elgin, Saffordville has quite a lot less in the way of vacant buildings. However, the expansiveness of the ghost town is just incredible. City blocks are still driveable, however the streets have been reduced to strips of grass. Supposedly, the town had a population of 200 before it was flooded in the disastrous 1951 floods. Most of the displaced residents never came back, and the town today is almost completely dead. No one lives off the main road, so the eerie feeling of going down these totally empty streets is almost surreal. Coming into town on old Highway 50, first you pass a rusting away old tin elevator and a few other rusty buildings. After crossing the tracks, the first thing you come upon is a dead-end dirt street, turn left on it, and the first thing you see to your left is the shell of a big stone business building. Just the walls remain intact, and trees are growing out of the building. A few hundred feet further east, you see the ruins of a house. Continue on the main road and you see one of the "grass strip" streets. Take it a block west and you see pieces of old sidewalk plus a few more ruins sticking out of the trees. Continue further south on the main road and you pass by empty lots filled with bricks and pieces of concrete. At the south edge of town sit two occupied houses and a huge school building, still in great condition. That's the only sign of life in this ghost town.
Update: As of 2013, sadly, the old city streets have become private property and are no longer accessible without permission.


A description of my "8 categories of towns"

Over my 10+ years of taking road trips and visiting towns of all sizes in Kansas, I have recently divided these towns into 8 categories: Big City, City, Small Town, Very Small Town, Semi-Ghost, Near-Ghost, True Ghost, and Total Ghost. Each category of town is defined by population and incorporation status, but the line separating these categories is a lot fuzzier than just population. Here's my 8 categories by description.

Big City (BC): Population: 5,000+
As a small town/ghost town hunter, Big Cities serve little purpose other than maybe to find a place to eat, get gas, or stay the night. Visiting one of these towns on a road trip, I might snap a quick picture of downtown & maybe one or two others, but because these towns generally don't have anything that appeals to ghost town hunters, their priority list for me is at the bottom. Examples: Newton, Salina, McPherson

City (C): Population: 1,000 - 5,000
Cities, again, are primarily for finding a place to eat or get gas. However, I might snap a few pictures in downtown & do a little more searching than in a Big City, especially when these towns are county seats in counties that have a lot of ghost towns. Examples: Marion, Belle Plaine, Herington

Small Town (ST): Population: 250 - 1,000
Small Towns are the largest Towns that I will actually spend some time in looking for old historical buildings. Some of these towns can have vacant buildings, but generally these towns are full of occupied structures that have historical value (example, buildings on the National Register of Historic Places). Cool-looking business buildings and churches are targets in these towns. Examples: South Haven, White City, Galva

Very Small Town (VST): Population 100 - 250
Very Small Towns are the smallest towns that don't begin to creep into the Ghosts categories. And some of these towns may look quite ghostly. Unlike Ghosts, these towns still have a sense of infrastructure (for example, a post office, a bank, a restaurant, a few churches). Many of these towns are gems and have a lot of vacant buildings and empty lots, but don't quite yet take on the appearance of a ghost town. Examples: Preston, Viola, Ramona

Semi-Ghost (SG): Population 25 - 100
This is the broadest category of towns with the fuzziest lines separating the categories next to it. Generally, a semi-ghost town is one where there's faint vestiges of an infrastructure left, but the town has basically become a collection of houses. What's in these towns varies widely: Some are expansive, with many empty lots and a scattered collection of houses; some occupied, some not. Some may be all on one or two roads, with little abandoned structures or foundations to be seen anywhere. Some may have a few businesses, some may only have a church. Some have old, dilapidated buildings and sidewalk remnants characteristic of a ghost town, and some may be very tidy and resemble a small village. Examples: Parkerville, Cedar Point, Castleton

Near-Ghost (NG): Population 1 - 25
Perhaps my favorite category of towns, Near-Ghosts can vary widely, from a spectacular ghost town filled with dilapidated structures, foundations, and old sidewalks, to a solitary occupied farmhouse sitting across the street from a vacant building and a foundation. Many of these towns would be considered real ghost towns from common people, but the only requirement is that there be at least one occupied house inside the town area, thereby preventing it from becoming an "actual" ghost town with no people. Most of my favorite ghost towns are near-ghosts.
Some near-ghosts are referred to as "doubles" or "triples" because there are only 2 or 3 buildings in town and nothing else. These are not very noteworthy locations.
Examples: Lerado, Saffordville, Wellsford, Buttermilk (triple)

True Ghost (TG): Population: 0
Surprisingly, True Ghost towns are a little rare to find in Kansas, because there's almost always someone living on the site of the town. True Ghosts differentiate from Total Ghosts in that there are substantial enough remains to warrant this designation, whereas Total Ghosts usually have nothing or very, very little remaining.
Examples: Basil, Adamsville, Wonsevu, Croft

Total Ghost (GT): Population: 0... Remnants: Very little to none
The "GT" stands for "Ghost Town" because that's what these are. Most Total Ghosts have been vacant for so long that there are no remains, in some cases there may be a solitary foundation or a couple trees, but many Total Ghosts have so little left that a good picture isn't even available.
Examples, Alameda (Kingman Co.), Mingona (Barber), Stubbs (Barber), Cameron (Cowley), Bedford (Stafford), Vera (Wabaunsee)

Sunday, February 1, 2015

Check out my new Facebook Page!

I'm not going to do a Ghost Town of the Week this week, as I am trying to maintain my quickly growing Facebook page! Check it out at https://www.facebook.com/pages/Kansas-Ghost-Town-Hunter/314980155786

Sunday, January 25, 2015

Ghost Town of the Week: January 25th, 2015: Portland

DISCLAIMER: I visited Portland way back in 2005, so this might not be the same today
I visited Portland on one of my first road trips, way back in July 2005. It was the first of many Ghost Towns I visited on the trip, but Portland has virtually no coverage online, so I decided to write about it today. The town is about a mile north of US-166 in southeastern Sumner County, about a mile and a half east of the Kansas Turnpike. The town has apparently been pretty ghostly for quite a while, as its post office closed in 1940! Coming into town from the south, you can tell a town definitely used to be here, but now it just looks... empty.
Portland from the north. The town has been reduced to an old school and grain elevator, 3 or 4 houses (mostly trailers) and a lot of empty treeless lots.
There is still a street network left in the town, although the streets have very generic county names: 145, 146th and 148th St. South and Prairie Road. Looking at a 1902 plat map of the town, none of those names were the original street names. On that 1902 plat map it shows a community with two churches, a train depot, a post office and a few houses, but not much else.
The most notable remnant of the old town is the Guelph Township school.
Portland's old Guelph Township school still appeared to be in good condition in 2005. It might still be used as a community building (for what community there is here).
Behind the school sits a dilapidated outhouse. Note that I am right in the middle of the told town; looking in the background you can tell how empty the old town has become.
A large looming grain elevator sits on the northeast side of town. I don't think it's still in use.
Their old elevator was still in OK condition, but if it's in use at all it's by local farmers.
Across Hydraulic Road is what looks like the scale house for the elevator. This building is definitely not in use anymore. I found it unusual that a major county road would separate a grain elevator and its scale house.
There is no remnant of a business district in the town. There may be 10 people left; a couple of the houses were shabby looking trailers and one large farmstead covers the whole northwest side of town. Looking at Google Maps, something I missed in 2005 was that there are several ruins to the west; I don't know if they're publicly accessible but I found that interesting. It's not that hard to find, so check the town out.

Monday, January 19, 2015

Ghost Town of the Week: Week of January 18th, 2015: Mitchell

I've been trying to promote Ghost Towns that have not received any coverage online. Unfortunately, I'm already running out of Ghost Towns that have much of anything left! So I'm going to cover Mitchell today, which has already been written about, but I'll provide my input.
Amy Bickel with The Hutchinson News does an excellent job wring about Ghost Towns near Hutchinson on her Blogspot, which can be found at http://kansasghosttowns.blogspot.com/ . She wrote quite a lot about Mitchell in 2011, and that can be found here:
http://kansasghosttowns.blogspot.com/2011/02/blog-post.html
An old church in Mitchell. It closed quite a while ago, however the building is being taken care of.
Mitchell's post office opened in 1882 and closed in 1953. The town comprises four square blocks and most buildings are now gone, however several houses are left and the old church, school and grain elevator do remain, however are not publicly used. The town is in central Rice County and not very far from Lyons; it's just a half-mile north of US-56 and the grain elevator is visible from the highway.
Like the church, the old school closed in the 1960s but is still being taken care of. I would imagine both buildings are probably used for storage now.
Maybe 20 people live in town. There are a few ruins but most of the town is wide-open and empty. The town's business district is nearly completely gone, except for this:
The town's old bank failed in the Depression and now just the vault stands on its foundation. This is about all that's left of the town's old business district.
Inside the vault: not much; about the same overgrowth that covers the rest of the foundation.
I'll leave this short and sweet, as this town has already been covered, but it's pretty cool and it's worth a visit.

Sunday, January 11, 2015

Ghost Town of the Week: January 11th, 2015: Oketo

Unlike my previous towns I've posted, Oketo still has some life; it's still an incorporated town and had a population in the 2010 census of 66. But it's declined rather rapidly in population over the last few decades and I consider it a Semi-Ghost Town. And it's pretty cool.
Oketo's tiny downtown. Most buildings are unused but still preserved as part of a historical museum.
Oketo is located in far northern Marshall County and is just two miles from the Nebraska line. The town still has a number of well-preserved limestone buildings in its downtown. I think only the post office and one other building are still in use as active businesses, but the rest appear to have been turned into a historical museum.
The landmark building in the town is their old bank, which appears to be the headquarters of the town's museum now.
The town doesn't have a whole lot of dilapidated abandoned buildings as a lot of them have been torn down. Marshall County must have some money, because the little town has a brand-new fire station.
Oketo's brand-new Fire Station. The building is surrounded by empty lots.
Their limestone Post Office, one of the very few buildings still in use in their old downtown.
The town's not attractive to people who want to see abandoned dilapidated buildings, but the history with the old downtown is really cool in my opinion. Check out the little quiet place sometime.
Oketo's little watertower, set in front of empty farmland.

Thursday, January 1, 2015

Happy New Year 2015! - Saffordville

Happy New Year everyone! Before I get into this town, I would like to give everyone a not-very-lengthy list of websites I have provided input into over my ten years of Exploring Kansas.
My Flickr Page - I am gradually putting my old 4X6 photos I have stockpiled from my old road trips onto my Flickr site. I'm almost done, and now have more than 1,600 photos of Kansas Towns I'd like to share with you.
GhostTowns.com - Kansas -  I have put a few towns into this long list of Ghost Towns in Kansas. There's not a lot of good information on this site though.
My Article on this town through Kansas State University - There's a reason I'm choosing this town as my first of 2015. Most of the information online about it was written by me.

Saffordville is located in far eastern Chase County, in the Cottonwood River valley. It's located just a half-mile south of US-50, although all you can see from the highway is an old falling-apart tin grain elevator and the elevated railroad line. But the story of this town is why I've become fascinated with it ever since I visited it first in 2007.
Mapquest view of Saffordville. Google Maps wouldn't remove the stupid "labels" that got in the way of showing the town's old street network, so I went to Mapquest instead. US-50 is at the very top of the picture. Old US-50 parallels the railroad.
Upon visiting Saffordville in 2007, there was something strange about the town. The town's road network was still largely intact and driveable, but there were nearly no buildings. There were a few scattered ruins, a couple old outbuildings and old sidewalks, but no major buildings. But the fact that the town's road network still remained fascinated me. Going down these eerie empty streets gave the town a true Ghost Town feeling I just hadn't felt before. And so, when I entered my Lost Kansas Communities class at Kansas State University in Spring 2013 and we were assigned to write about a Ghost Town, I chose Saffordville. And after finding the history about this town, I can now say that Saffordville is now my favorite Ghost Town in all of Kansas (so far).
The town has become very overgrown, and while little is left, the most notable ruin is this burnt shell of an old business, the last remnant of a business building in the town.
Saffordville was founded as Safford in 1872 along the already-established Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad. When mail was accidentally being sent there addressed for the city of Stafford, in Stafford County, the town changed it's name briefly to Kenyon, before returning to Safford and then becoming Saffordville in 1888. The town reached 200 people by 1910, and had quite a few businesses, including a bank.
This photo of a bustling downtown Saffordville was taken around the turn of the century.
The town started to go downhill during the Great Depression, as the bank closed and people began moving away, but there were still about 100 people left in the little town when disaster hit. And, as it is well-known throughout eastern Kansas, that disaster was the Great Flood of 1951.
This aerial photo of Saffordville taken just two days after the Great Flood of 1951 shows the stunning aftermath of the flood. The entire town was covered with up to five feet of water and destroyed, except for the school, which sat on higher ground.
Saffordville sits just a mile north of the Cottonwood River in the heart of the Flint Hills. It wasn't the only town to be heavily affected by the flood, as every town along the river in the county - Elmdale, Clements, and of course Cottonwood Falls - suffered damage as well, but because the entire village sat in a little square area, the entire village was destroyed by the floodwater. Most people didn't rebuild; they moved to higher ground in the nearby town of Toledo, which still remains today as a small collection of houses. The post office stayed open another six years before closing in 1957, and the school continued to serve the surrounding rural area until consolidating in 1966. By that time Saffordville was a Ghost Town.
The town's old school is still in good condition and is still in use as a community building.
Today three buildings are standing in Saffordville: the town's old school, still in use as a community building, and two houses, both occupied. All three buildings sit close together on the south side of the Ghost Town. A number of ruins are visible in the overgrowth on ZZ Road, which is the main road through town.
The ruins of a house sit in the overgrowth in the old town.
It's possible that another bad flood struck the area and pushed the house off its foundation, the remnants of which can be seen here.
When I visited in 2007, the town's road network, albeit reduced to dirt and grass strips, was still driveable.
This strange building skeleton sits on the northwest side of the old town.
Just across the street from the odd building remnant, a peek of old sidewalk still remains in the heavy overgrowth.
Unfortunately, upon my return to the town in 2013 for my class project, I found that the old streets had been fenced off from the road and "No Trespassing" signs were posted on the gates. Which makes sense because surely someone owns the land now and they have made it private property.
A few trees and other miscellaneous markers still remain on the east side of ZZ Road. There used to be buildings here.
Old US-50 still exists as a narrow concrete road that parallels the railroad. This impressive abandoned grain elevator sits along it just before you reach the intersection with ZZ Road (and new US-50). I would imagine the elevator fell out of use shortly after the flood as well.
Saffordville is a Ghost Town that must not only be visited, but carefully analyzed and explored, to learn just how a town can grow, flourish, and then become a Ghost Town in an instant. If you're ever in eastern Chase County, check it out. Look at the old empty lots. Imagine a town of 200 people here, and then imagine it under five feet of water. It's sad.
There will be no Ghost Town Of The Week on January 4th, so enjoy this post and go check out Saffordville. I'll be back with a new Ghost Town on January 11th!