Utah Ghost Towns

United States Utah   Utah Ghost Towns

Ghost Towns of Utah
A ghost town could be many things; a near ghost town, semi-ghost town or completely vacant buildings or ground. These towns have greatly diminished from their once robust times. Some towns may still be quite active and residents may not favor the classification of a ghost town for their community. The definition of a ghost town is a town with big declines in population and activity. They could be stagecoach stops, railroad camp town, mining community, military post or agricultural towns. When a gold or silver strike happened, towns would spring up, seemingly overnight and just as quickly fade away.

Once they were bustling with activity, becoming boom towns, then when the source of their posterity ebbs, they begin to fade and sometimes eventually die. Some have remaining buildings, a few have a ‘skeleton crew’ that stayed behind to watch over things, and others disappear completely. Clusters of Ghost Towns dot Utah.

How To Classify Ghost Towns
Philip Varney, the author of several popular ghost town books defines these old communities as: "any site that has had a markedly decreased population from its peak, a town whose initial reason for settlement (such as a mine or railroad) no longer keeps people in the community."

Type:
 * Mining towns – Mining operations brought in settlers that lived close to the mine. Utah miners dug for silver, copper, coal, lead, zinc, and tungsten.
 * Agricultural towns - the most numerous type of Utah’s ghost towns. Most were established during the initial colonization by Mormon Settlers.
 * Railroad towns - established as the Transcontinental Railroad was built. Hundreds of temporary camps were set up along the way. Most disappeared but some eventually developed into permanent settlements.
 * Miscellaneous types - towns whose origins don’t fall into one of the above three types.

Ghost Town Records
Check the closest city for public records about your ancestor. If not the neighboring city, try the local county offices. Try the following sources in neighboring communities. Try state wide resources for information on this formally busy town:
 * Court House
 * Libraries
 * Genealogical Societies
 * Cemetery Records
 * Utah Court Records
 * Utah Church Records
 * Utah Land and Property
 * Utah Archives and Libraries

Town’s Time Line
The opening and closing of a Post Office would give you approximate dates that the town was a thriving community.
 * The Post Offices of Utah lists Utah Post Offices both past and current. It provides the dates of establishment for each post office and if a post office was discontinued. This source gives the date and the new post office designated to receive the mail.

Suggested Reading

 * Colorado and Utah ghost towns
 * Ghost towns of the mountain West : your guide to the hidden history and Old West haunts of Colorado, Wyoming, Idaho, Montana, Utah, and Nevada
 * Some Dreams Die: Utah's Ghost Towns and Lost Treasures
 * The American West : Overland journeys, 1841-1880
 * The Historical Guide to Utah Ghost Towns. A history of towns that no longer in exist in Utah. It gives the approximate dates each town was settled and then deserted.

Ghost Town Names by County

 * Five Hundred Utah Place Names This book provides the history and origin of the name of each place, including names of places and landmarks that no longer exist. It also includes Native American residences.
 * Origins of Utah Place Names This source documents when places were settled, former names, altitude and population in 1941. There is information on the creation of each county and boundary changes, including square miles. It also includes a list of extinct counties.

Websites

 * Boomtowns
 * Transcontinental Railroad
 * Guide to the Ghost Towns of Utah
 * Ghost towns in Utah
 * Old West Ghost Towns
 * Boom Town