Ghost Town
Guide to the Ghost Towns of
“The
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Treasures Ghost Town USA Column Index for Montana |
For more information
on the ghost towns of
If you join, please
tell them where you found out about the club! I get bonus points for it! Just
tell 'em Gary Speck (The Ghost Town Guru) sent ya! Links to various
Montana Ghost Towns will be incorporated into individual site vignettes where
appropriate, or at the bottom of the page when the site is not featured. Some of the ghost
towns in PLEASE NOTE: Where photos are indicated thusly (PHOTO!), please use your browser’s “BACK”
button to return to this page. More
photos will be added over time. |
ABSHER
|
Mussellshell Co. |
Located about a half mile south of US 12 and the
railroad tracks, in the northeast corner of the county, about a mile southwest
of Queen’s Point, five miles east of Musselshell and 5.3 miles west of Melstone, west of Queen’’s
Point Road and north of the Musselshell River. The post office was active
from Jan 13, 1910 - Apr 30, 1949. A school was also located nearby. ·
Latitude: 46.5583 / 46° 33' 30" N ·
Longitude: -107.9833 / 107° 58' 60" W ·
SE¼ of the NW¼ Sec 2, T18N, R109W, PM (Principal Meridian) |
ALDRIDGE
|
Park Co. |
This class C,
turn-of-the-century, coal mining town is located on US 89, seven miles
northwest of Gardiner, three miles southwest of Corwin Springs (which in
itself is a ghost town). The town was divided into two sections...Downtown
and Happy Hollow. |
BANNACK
(AKA...Grasshopper
Diggings) |
Beaverhead Co. |
This class C
ghost is located on Grasshopper Creek, south of CR 278, about 35 miles west
of Dillon. Started as a placer gold camp in 1862. After the placers were
exhausted, hard rock mining started. From 1875-1881, Bannack
boomed, and 3000 folks lived here. Bannack was both
county seat and territorial capital. The streets were lined with one &
two story wooden structures and the two-story brick courthouse. Many
weathered remnants remain in one of |
BASIN
|
Jefferson
Co. |
This little ghost is
located a mile north of I-15, nine miles northwest of |
CABLE
|
Deer
Lodge Co. |
This gold mining town
boomed and busted four distinct times: 1867-1869, 1873-1878, & 1883-1891,
1902-1940. Cable's ghostly remains are located off SH 1, about a dozen miles
northwest of Anaconda. |
CUSHMAN
|
Golden
Valley Co. |
The crumbling remains
of this ranching town are south of SH 12 and the Mussellshell
River, 30 miles southwest of Roundup, southeast of the center of the county.
In 1980 only seven folks remained. |
ELECTRIC
(AKA...Horr) |
Park Co. |
This was an 1898-1945
coking town, supported by the coal mines of Aldridge. It was two miles
downhill from Aldridge, and on the west side of the |
|
Jefferson
Co. |
North of SH 69, near
Elkhorn Peak, 20 miles northeast of Boulder and 28 miles south of Helena. This was our Ghost
Town of the Month for Jun 2004. This is
one of the towns featured in my newest book, GHOST
TOWNS: Yesterday & TodayTM. For more details see our Elkhorn
page. |
GARNET
|
Granite
Co. |
40 miles east of This is
one of the towns featured in my newest book, GHOST
TOWNS: Yesterday & TodayTM. ·
Latitude: 46.8252097 / 46°
49’ 31” N ·
Longitude: -113.3389643 / 113°
20’ 20” W ·
E-Ctr
Sec 3, T12N, R14W, Principal Meridian |
GRANITE
|
Granite
Co. |
A classic class C
silver mining town four miles east of Philipsburg. Granite is another of
these old towns full of chocolate colored, ragged wooden buildings that once
housed saloons, general stores, hotels and several thousand people. Over $40
million in silver came from Granite's mines. Granite enjoyed a pair of boom
periods from 1883-1893, and 1898-1904.
A four-wheel drive,
or other high-clearance vehicle
is required to reach this town. This is
one of the towns featured in my newest book, GHOST
TOWNS: Yesterday & TodayTM. ·
Latitude: 46.3174258 / 46°
19’ 03” N ·
Longitude: -113.2445049 / 113°
14’ 40” W ·
SE¼ of the NE¼ Sec 32,
T7N, R13W, Principal Meridian |
|
Sheridan
Co. |
A crumbling class D
agricultural town on County Road (CR) 350, a mile east of the Fort Peck Indian
Reservation boundary, and a mile west of SH 16, at a point 28 miles south of
Plentywood, in the southwestern corner of the county. |
JARDINE
(AKA...Bush) |
Park Co. |
This gold and arsenic
mining town was first called Bush, then the name
changed in 1902. The gold mining period ran from 1865 through 1926. In 1926
arsenic was discovered, and the company town produced that mineral until
1946. This class C town sits on a dirt road six miles northeast of Gardiner. |
|
KIRKVILLE (AKA... |
Clark Co. |
This was a class C,
1890s milling center, a mile south of Philipsburg. In 1888 a huge 100 stamp
mill was built to work the ore from Granite. Population probably reached
nearly 2000, as there were 500 workers at the mill alone. |
|
LORING |
Phillips
Co. |
Another crumbling class D
agricultural town. In 1980 15 folks still lived here. Loring
is located on CR 242, and a spur line of the Great Northern RR, 16 miles
south of the Canadian border. |
MAIDEN
|
Fergus
Co. |
A class C
gold mining town in the Judith Mountains 20 or so miles northeast of
Lewistown. In 1883 it had 150 buildings. |
|
Madison
Co. |
A class C/F (reconstructed) 1860s
gold mining town in Alder Gulch, two miles west of |
PONY
|
Madison
Co. |
A class D,
1877-1920s era gold mining town, on east side of |
RED BLUFF
|
Madison
Co. |
This 1870s gold mining
town once had 1000 people. It is located on Hot Springs Creek and SH 84,
northeast of Norris. |
RUBY
|
Madison
Co. |
This is an 1864-1922 gold mining town with a population of 500. It
is located in Alder Gulch, east of Alder, and west of |
SILVER GATE
|
Park Co. |
This tiny town is
located on US 212, north of the northeast corner of |
SOUTHERN
CROSS
|
Deer Lodge Co. |
A deep sadness has
befallen Ghost Town USA
with the loss of this once magnificent little ghost. On Oct 31, 2000, the last resident was
evicted, and the town was dismantled.
It is now only memories
and photos.
For other recently
departed ghost towns, visit our ANOTHER
ONE BITES THE DUST page. |
STRAWBERRY
|
Madison
Co. |
This gold mining town
was located two miles "upstream" from Pony, and was the original
site of Pony. It began in 1875 then died in 1877, when Pony was founded. |
TOWER
|
Granite
Co. |
This is a crumbling double-boom
town. Tower's first boom was gold in the 1870s, then from 1910-1940 for
manganese. The class C mining town is located east of Philipsburg. |
|
Madison
Co. |
This class D/F
(restored) 1864-1920 gold mining town once had 10,000 people. It is located on SH 287, 14 miles west of
Ennis. This classic near ghost is similar to its |
WINNETT
|
Petroleum
Co. |
A class D
agricultural town and current county seat.
Not a true ghost, as 200 people still live in this badly faded
town. It is at the junction of SH 200
and CR 244. |
|
YOGO |
Judith
Basin Co. |
Former gold mining
town south of |
ZORTMAN
|
Phillips
Co. |
Gold mining town west
of US 191, and south of the Fort Belknap Indian Reservation. It is located in
the northeastern part of the state about 45 miles southwest of |
MORE INFORMATION
|
Historians estimate that there may be as many as
50,000 ghost towns scattered across the Gary B. Speck Publications is in process of
publishing unique state, regional, and county guides called The Ghost Town Guru's
Guide to the Ghost Towns of “STATE”™ These original guides are designed for anybody
interested in ghost towns. Whether you are a casual tourist looking for a new
and different place to visit, or a hard-core ghost town researcher, these
guides will be just right for you. With over 30 years of research behind
them, they will be a welcome addition to any ghost towner's
library. Thank
you, and we'll see you out on the Ghost Town Trail! For
more information on the ghost towns of Ghost
Town E-mailers, PLEASE NOTE: Due
to the tremendous amount of viruses, worms and “spam,” out there, I no longer
open or respond to e-mails with unsolicited attachments, OR messages on the subject
lines with “Hey”, “Hi”, “Need help”, “Help Please”,
“???”, or blank subject lines, etc.
If you do send E-mail asking for information, or sharing information, PLEASE indicate the appropriate location AND state name, or other topic on the
“subject” line. THANK
YOU! :o) |
IMPORTANT These listings and historical vignettes of ghost
towns, near-ghost towns and other historical sites in MONTANA above
are for informational purposes only, and should NOT be construed to grant permission to trespass,
metal detect, relic or treasure hunt at any of the listed sites. If the reader of this guide is a metal detector
user and plans to use this guide to locate sites for metal detecting or relic
hunting, it is the READER'S
responsibility to obtain written permission from the legal property owners.
Please be advised, that any state or nationally owned sites will probably be
off-limits to metal detector use. Also be aware of any federal, state or
local laws restricting the same. When you are exploring the ghost towns of Ghost Towner's
Code of Ethics. |
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FIRST POSTED: June 2000
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