
Explore America’s Ghost Towns
Discover the forgotten history of abandoned towns across the United States
Explore Ghost Towns By Category

Agrarian Ghost Towns
Once-thriving farming communities abandoned during the 1930s agricultural decline. The Great Depression and Dust Bowl forced families from their land, leaving behind empty homesteads, desolate streets, and rural schools. Explore farming settlements that withered as technology advanced and farms consolidated.

Coastal Ghost Towns of America
Seaside communities abandoned to the relentless forces of nature and changing maritime industries. From submerged towns like Bayocean to hurricane-ravaged settlements, these coastal relics tell tales of fishing villages, shipbuilding centers, and beach resorts that flourished before being reclaimed by tides.

Midwest Haunted Ghost Towns
Abandoned communities across America’s heartland with rich histories and spectral residents. From Missouri’s “bloodiest 47 acres” at the State Penitentiary to Wisconsin’s Pfister Hotel, these forgotten towns feature infamous hauntings, unexplained phenomena, and preserved structures from the 1800s.

Appalachian Ghost Towns
Discover towns nestled in mountain hollows, many now submerged beneath man-made lakes. These communities once thrived on coal mining, timber harvesting, and railroad commerce until industry departed. Some, like Proctor, NC, rest beneath the waters of Fontana Lake, visible only during drought seasons.

Colonial Ghost Town Heritage
America’s earliest abandoned settlements, including 17th-century sites like Zwaanendael (Delaware) founded before the United States existed. These colonial-era towns were abandoned due to native conflicts, disease outbreaks, or economic failures, leaving behind centuries-old foundations and archaeological treasures.

Military Ghost Town Sites
Former bases, forts, and defense installations abandoned as military strategies evolved. Explore Cold War relics like Saint Marie, Montana (decommissioned 1976), Civil War-era fortifications, and WWII installations with parade grounds, barracks, and operations buildings slowly returning to nature.

Civil War Ghost Towns
Settlements abandoned during or after the Civil War, including battle-damaged communities at Sharpsburg, Gettysburg, and Chickamauga. These towns bear witness to America’s bloodiest conflict, with stories of phantom soldiers still marching and historic structures frozen in time since 1865.

Forgotten Frontier Ghost Towns
The iconic ghost towns of the American West, where boom-and-bust mining economies created instant cities that vanished just as quickly. Explore over 2,000 abandoned settlements where prospectors sought gold, silver, and copper fortunes, leaving behind saloons, hotels, and mine works when deposits ran dry.

Southern Suburban Ghost Towns
Communities throughout the South that boomed during various economic cycles before declining. From Texas oil towns to Alabama textile communities, these settlements often feature beautiful antebellum architecture, abandoned plantations, and forgotten industrial complexes unique to Southern history.