|
Legends Home
Site
Map
What's New!!

American History
Ghost Towns
Ghostly Legends
Historic People
Native Americans
The Old West
Photo
Galleries
Roadside
Attractions
Rocky Mtn Store
Route 66
Travel
Destinations
Treasure Tales
Legends Blog
Free E-Newsletter
Facebook
Fanpage
Twittering

Contact Us
Please report
broken
links, missing pictures, or
other problems online by
clicking
HERE or send us
an
email. Thanks!
| |
| |
|
LEGENDARY
GHOST TOWNS
Emerging Ghost Towns of
the Plains |
|

|
|
<< Previous 1
2
Next >> |
|
For
years, newspapers, locals and especially farmers have lamented the
downward spiral that agriculture has taken over the last century. I heard
it as I was growing up in Ulysses,
Kansas. I heard it in the
news when I moved away from that small town. I continue to hear it on
economic updates. But, what I don’t think I ever fully realized, was the
ghost towns
that the agricultural decline has been making. We're all familiar with
mining
ghost towns,
historic cowtowns,
Route 66
ghost towns,
and others that died industrial deaths. Others died when the railroads
were removed as the population moved to automobile travel. But the farming
ghost towns
is something new to me, even though I grew up in the midst of them. To
consciously see these dying towns that litter the vast plains is a whole
other thing all together. I mean – really see them.
My
father still lives in that small town in southwest
Kansas that I grew up in,
which is, fortunately for them, not one of the many
ghost towns
of the plains, as it has other resources such as oil and gas.
|

Dust Bowl farm near Dalhart,
Texas, photo
by Dorthea
Lange, 1938.
This image available for
photographic prints
and downloads
HERE!
|
|
As to the many other towns without
additional economic venues, I’ve passed by them dozens of times on my
way back for a visit, without giving a second glance, much less, a
second thought.
However, that changed recently as I
intentionally set out on a trip across
Kansas
for a more in-depth look at many of
Kansas’
small towns, many of which I have to categorize as "emerging
ghost towns.”
My photographer’s eye sends flutters of excitement through me at the
opportunity for shots of crumbling buildings, old trucks and tractors,
and boarded up businesses. My mind thrills with the anticipation of
learning the history of these old settlements, checking out historic
cemeteries, and as always, wondering about the people that once
thrived in the paint-peeling houses, boarded up buildings, and
crumbling barns.
But, on this trip, the excitement is
dampened as these are "new”
ghost towns.
Those people that once prospered in the now decaying structures might
very well be my father’s friends, they were certainly the parents or
grandparents of people I know, many are still alive – living down the
street watching their towns crumble around them.
Though I love to visit
ghost towns
and photograph old buildings, it’s so much different when you can
actually relate to the people who once lived and still reside there.
Definitely not the same as visiting an old mining town that thrived a
century ago. My heart aches for those people who put their lives into
building businesses, farms, and beautiful homes that now stand, paint
peeling and windows broken without a potential buyer in sight. The
farms are still there – most very big. A few "plots” are small; like
the ‘ole days, but of those, their homes are generally in the same
condition as the towns they are near.
Though this may the first time I’ve really
noticed these emerging "ghost towns,”
this is not a new phenomena. From
North Dakota
to the
Texas
Panhandle, and to the east and the west, small towns of the Great
Plains have been declining in population for 75 years.
During the great days of westward expansion, the
American
West was born not only of
cowboys,
railroaders, miners,
lawmen and
outlaws; but,
more importantly and often overlooked, were the many
homesteaders
and businesses who supported them, who provided the backbone of these
many dying communities.
|
|
|
|

For whatever reasons, I am enamored with old schools
and
playgrounds, so often found in these emerging
ghost
towns. This old playground in Nekoma, Kansas.
sits silent today, as its swings and teeter-totters sway in the
gusts
of the Kansas wind. Kathy Weiser, March, 2009.
|
Rarely, do we hear about those hardy people in modern writings, but it was
their work ethic and values that were primarily responsible for
establishing these many Main Streets, schools, churches, and homes that
too often, sit abandoned today.
The decline of the farmer began in the 1930’s
after the great depression when many lost their land due to heavy debt.
The dustbowl days drove more from their lands, leaving in their wake,
thousands of acres of abandoned land.
On its heels; however, came progress – better
machinery, hybrid seeds, large irrigation systems. With enhanced
technology, those farmers who remained could handle more land than they
could in the past and the farms got bigger and bigger over the years. But
the agricultural operations could no longer support all of the children,
as it took less manpower, and the offspring began to move away.
|
|
When farms get bigger, there are fewer farmers
on the same amount of land. This obviously affects the small towns that
support them – the grocery and hardware stores, the doctors and lawyers,
churches and schools. As the population falls, these operations eventually
close or move to other locations.
Continued Next Page
|
|

Seneca,
Nebraska
hasn't faired well over the years,
Kathy Weiser, July, 2006.
|

Silent buildings stand on the prairie in
Okaton,
South Dakota,
July, 2006, Kathy Weiser.
This image available for
photographic prints and
downloads
HERE!
|
|
<< Previous 1
2
Next >> |
|
From the Rocky Mountain General Store
Legends
Exclusive Custom Products -
Legends of America and the
Rocky Mountain
General Store now provide a number of
exclusive products that you won't find anywhere else! At
our
Exclusive Custom Products Store, you'll find lots of crazy
bumper stickers;
Old West prints, postcards, t-shirts
and more; and our line of exclusive
Route 66 products provides images on
a number of items that you've never seen before! Click
HERE to see the entire line.
|
| |
|