This Virtual Tour Of A Maryland Ghost Town Will Feel Like You're Really There

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Jamie Alvarenga

Jamie Alvarenga is a writer and editor who loves all things Maryland.

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Are you fascinated by abandoned places? The Old Line State has a handful of deserted spots that you can explore, including an entire town! Right now due to the COVID-19 Pandemic, we’re not able to get out and go adventuring BUT you can enjoy this abandoned Maryland town from the comfort of your couch. Check out this incredible drone footage that’s like a virtual tour — you’ll feel like you’re there! Sit back, relax, and enjoy the historic and somewhat spooky sights of Daniels, Maryland.

Be sure to check out the full video at the bottom!

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You can learn more about the abandoned Daniels area by visiting the Patapsco Valley State Park website .

Speaking of virtual tours, don’t miss out on the Live Otter Cam at Maryland’s Calvert Marine Museum . It’s the cutest way to pass the time!

OnlyInYourState may earn compensation through affiliate links in this article. As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.

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3800 American Ghost Towns You Can Visit on One Map

By shaunacy ferro | oct 26, 2018.

Geotab

Not every city is destined to survive forever. In the 19th century, plenty of towns established during mining, oil, and railway booms flourished for a few decades, then shriveled up when their single source of economic support dried up, leaving entire towns abandoned. Geotab recently mapped out more than 3800 of these ghost towns across the U.S., diving into what areas have the highest concentration of long-abandoned settlements.

When you click on each state, pop-ups will reveal how many ghost towns that state is home to, which county has the highest concentration of them, and which city features the most in a 25- or 50-mile radius around it.

The image above is from Berlin, Nevada, a one-time mining town established in the 1880s. The mine shut down after a strike in the early 1900s, and was abandoned by the 1910s. Many of the original buildings remain standing today, though. It's now part of Berlin-Ichthyosaur State Park.

Below is Harrisburg, a ghost town in Utah established in 1859. Settlers struggled to farm on the rugged land, and floods and other disasters eventually drove them to relocate elsewhere. It was abandoned by the 1890s, but remnants of some of the stone buildings are still around.

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While we often associate ghost towns with Western locales like California (where there are 346 ghost towns), there are a striking number of them in Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas, where the Dust Bowl and the Great Depression left 308, 236, and 511 towns abandoned, respectively. Florida is also full of ghostly remains of cities, with 257 of them across the state. States in other parts of the country have strikingly few ghost towns. The Northeast is particularly bare: Rhode Island, Connecticut, and Maine have one, four, and five, respectively.

Explore the entire project here . If you don't have the time for a road trip to see all 3800-plus ghost towns on the map, you can take a virtual tour of the now-abandoned 19th century town of Bodie, California here , or check out our list of 10 specific ghost towns in the U.S. to visit. Though of course, if you really love ghost towns, you could just buy your own .

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Visit the most haunted places in the U.S. right from your couch

Staying in this Halloween? Embark on these virtual ghost tours of the most haunted places in the U.S. from the safety of your home.

Halloween isn't cancelled yet. Across the U.S., we've seen haunted houses adapt to the times with drive-in events and socially-distanced fun. But if you're staying inside this October 31st, you can still have a spooky good time. Haunted places throughout the country, including the Winchester Mystery House and Eastern State Penitentiary, offer virtual tours. If you're feeling gutsy and won't get spooked by a few apparitions—though we can't guarantee you'll see 'em—we suggest checking out these cool virtual ghost tours right from your couch. Rather have an in-person experience? Rent these seriously haunted Airbnbs in the USA . 

RECOMMENDED:  The spookiest haunted hotels in America

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Virtual ghost tours

Winchester Mystery House

1.  Winchester Mystery House

Sarah Winchester spent 38 years intricately remodeling her home into the sprawling 24,000 square-foot mansion . There was seemingly no architectural rhyme or reason to the property's design—there are unfinished staircases, misplaced windows, a door that leads nowhere. However, it's believed that this labyrinth-like layout intended to confuse the spirits of those killed by the Winchester Repeating Arms' guns (the company Sarah inherited from her husband's family). Finding your way out of this confusing attraction might be more challenging than finding spirits.

Pittock Mansion

2.  Pittock Mansion

Henry and Georginia Pittock, who made their fortune in the newspaper industry, had plans to retire and revel in Portland's panoramic views. They began construction on an impresive French Renaissance-style château, which was completed in 1914. However, they only lived there for four years until they passed away. Relatives inherited the home, which was later abandoned and eventually damaged in the Columbus Day Storm in 1962. But residents fought to keep the property open after the destruction, and two years later, the Pittock Mansion relaunched as a museum. Some say the Pittocks are still there—after all, they truly didn't have too much time to enjoy the grounds. Don't be alarmed though: Visitors claim to see apparitions of the husband and wife duo, but they are supposedly friendly spirits. Well, that's … reassuring. 

Eastern State Penitentiary

3.  Eastern State Penitentiary

The world's first penitentiary—and most expensive, at one time—housed dangerous criminals like Al Capone, Leo Callahan and Freda Frost. Now, the menacing gothic structure is empty, though many claim there is still plenty lurking in the abandoned cellblocks. 

Lizzie Borden Bed and Breakfast Museum

4.  Lizzie Borden Bed and Breakfast Museum

The quaint Victorian home in New England seems innocent enough, but its history is far from rosy. Back in 1892, a young woman named Lizzie Borden was accused of murdering her father and stepmom with an axe, though she was never proven guilty. If you're brave enough, you can even crash here overnight.

The Queen Mary

5.  The Queen Mary

Not all of this famed ship's passengers had a comforting experience. Just take it from the Lady in White and the man who was believed to have met his fate in the Queen Mary's boiler room, who are said to haunt the vessel to this day. Think you can hop aboard for a peek with their spirits still roaming? You're brave, dude. 

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Virtual tours of America's national parks

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Virtual tours of U.S. museums

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Ghost Towns

New Mexico Ghost Towns

"They are ghost towns now. But in the late 1800s, each had a moment of glory that blazed and died like a sudden flame."

Most were mining towns, where men lusted after the earth’s riches — gold, silver, turquoise, copper, lead and coal. A few were farming communities that flourished for a time and mysteriously fell silent. Literally hundreds of towns not only died, they vanished.

By some estimates, New Mexico is home to more than 400 ghost towns — most are nothing more than a few foundations and some occasional mining equipment.

But traces of many linger on, haunting ties to days that used to be. They molder into oblivion, their shells of buildings like specters against the sky, these towns that witnessed some of America’s most romantic and rapacious history.

And if you listen, you can hear the names of fabled mines whispered on the wind: Bridal Chamber , Confidence, Little Hell, Calamity Jane, Hardscrabble, Mystic Lode, North Homestake, Little Fanny, Spanish Bar. If you look, you can read the names of legendary people written in the dust: Johnny Ringo, Russian Bill, Toppy Johnson, Roy Bean, Butch Cassidy, Madame Varnish, Black Jack Ketchum, Mangas Coloradas, Billy the Kid , James Cooney.

More than a score of these towns have enough life in spite of the ravages of vandals and weather to be interesting to the special breed of human whose eyes light up at the mention of them. Quite a few towns have a number of inhabitants. Please respect their privacy. Many are on private property.

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Printable Ghost Town Map

Central region ghost towns.

HAGAN (East of I-25, east of San Felipe and west of Madrid guided tours only)

Over 100 adobe structures were built by Adobero Abenicio Salazar of Bernalillo with a team of 100 laborers and 60 masons over a period of three years, in the Pueblo Revival style which was popular at the time.

North Central Region Ghost Towns

CERRILLOS  (28 miles south of Santa Fe on State Road 14)

The lore of the Cerrillos hills is rich with legends of mines, being worked there for a thousand years. Turquoise has religious significance to many Indian people, nearby Mount Chalchihuitl is known to have contained a great lode of the precious gemstone and stone tools found there seem to testify to the truth of the legends.

MADRID  (30 miles southwest of Santa Fe on State Road 14)

Although Madrid still likes to consider itself a ghost town, it represents a unique example of resurrection. In the 1920s and 30s, Madrid was as famous for its Christmas lights as for its coal, and airlines used to reroute traffic during the holidays to show passengers the sight. 

GOLDEN  (10 miles south of Madrid & 15 miles north of Tijeras on NM 14)

Golden was inhabited by Native Americans and Spaniards long before American settlers came to the area. However, it began to boom when gold was discovered in 1825. Years before the California and Colorado gold rushes, the site of Golden became the first gold rush west of the Mississippi River.

Elizabethtown

ELIZABETHTOWN  (five miles north of Eagle Nest on State Road 38)

Elizabethtown began in 1866 with the founding of area gold mines and the Mystic Copper Mine. It was New Mexico's first incorporated town. 

Northeast Region Ghost Towns

COLFAX  (15 miles northeast of Cimarron on US 64)

Colfax may be said to have ridden to prosperity on the coattails of Dawson in the late 1890s, when Dawson mushroomed as a coal boomtown. Dawson is dead and gone, but Colfax, however clings to mortality.

DAWSON  (17 miles east of Cimarron on US 64 and A38)

In 1901 the Dawson coal mine opened and a railroad was constructed from Dawson to Tucumcari and the town was born. The Phelps Dodge Company bought the mine in 1906 and increased development.

LOMA PARDA  (30 miles, give or take north of Las Vegas)

Loma Parda became the town where soldiers could go for wild nights. Saloons, gambling, dance halls and women of ill repute put Loma Parda on the map; especially if you were a soldier bored with your isolated existence at Fort Union.

MONTOYA  (Just west of Tucumcari on Old Route 66)

The town of Montoya, in Quay County, was born as a loading point for the Southern Pacific Railroad in 1902. Primarily serving the cattle ranches of the area, an old store, built of solid stone, carried goods and supplies for the villagers.

Southeast Region Ghost Towns

ANCHO  (24 miles north of Carrizozo, Located west of the Lincoln National Forest 2 miles east of U.S. Highway 54.)

With the arrival of the railway in 1901 and the discovery of gypsum and clay, the Ancho Brick Plant was established and began producing bricks.

DURAN  (54 miles southwest of Santa Rosa on NM 54)

In February 1902, the El Paso & Northeastern Railroad finished the “Arrow Route,” a stretch of track between El Paso and Santa Rosa, where a connection to Leadbelly’s Rock Island Line awaited. Blas and Espiridón Durán, two brothers, owned wells in central New Mexico which could provide water to railroad work crews. So, the railroad built repair shops and even a wooden roundhouse in what became Duran.

LINCOLN  (57 miles west of Roswell and just south of the Lincoln National Forest.)

Lincoln was at the center of the Lincoln County War, 1876-1879, and is the historical home of Billy the Kid. The village holds an annual festival in August featuring an open-air enactment of The Last Escape of Billy the Kid.

Orogrande​  ( 36 miles south of Alamo­gordo and 49 miles northeast of El Paso, Texas, on U.S. 54.)

Jarilla Junction, once a station on the El Paso and Northeastern Railroad, was renamed Orogrande when a gold nugget the size of a man's finger was discovered in 1905. Prospecting had started as early as 1879 in the Jarilla Mountains but the 1905 discovery started a gold rush and gave birth to the town of Orogrande.

WHITE OAKS  (Three miles north of Carrizozo on US Hwy 54)

Three miles north of Carrizozo on US Hwy 54 is the turn-off to the “ghost town” of White Oaks.  White Oaks is not your typical flat-roofed adobe New Mexico historical experience.   It's more cowboy/frontier than adobe Disneyland. There were no Conquistadores bringing the word of God to the native population. It was a frontier wild west cattle community right up until gold was discovered... an almost pure vein going down into Baxter Mountain; then everything changed.

Southwest Region Ghost Towns

Lake valley.

LAKE VALLEY  (17 miles south of Hillsboro on State Road 27)

Lake Valley became an important railhead and prospered until the silver panic of 1893. Two or three houses and a few other buildings remain today.

Shakespeare

SHAKESPEARE  (3 miles south of Lordsburg)

Now off the beaten track and privately owned, Shakespeare had a tenuous beginning as Mexican Springs in the 1850s as a stop on the Butterfield Overland Stage line. In 1870, prospectors discovered samples of very rich silver ore in the surrounding hills and they went hunting for financing to develop their new mines. 

MOGOLLON  (9 miles east of Alma on State Road 78)

For nearly 60 years after the great gold strike of 1878, Mogollon had a reputation as one of the most wide-open towns in the West. Butch Cassidy and his crowd were once headquartered there, and gunmen, claim jumpers and gamblers kept things lively. Not even Victorio and Geronimo, nor the troops sent in by the governor, could tame Mogollon. 

Pinos Altos

PINOS ALTOS  (8.5 miles north of Silver City)

The town began in 1860 when three frustrated 49ers, Thomas Birch, Colonel Snively and another guy named Hicks, stopped to take a drink in Bear Creek and discovered gold. Word spread like wildfire, soon there were over 700 men prospecting in the area. 

ENGLE  (17 miles east of Truth or Consequences on NM51)

Engle began in 1879 as a stop on the Atchison Topeka Santa Fe Railroad where it was a crucial shipping point for miners and prospectors and served as a water stop. 

ORGAN  (14.5 miles NE of Las Cruces)

The once initial mining camp of Organ was officially established as a community back in 1883, though there had been mining activity since the late 1840s. The town's greatest population was around eighteen hundred at the turn of the century. 

KINGSTON  (26 miles west of I-25 take exit 63 onto NM 152)

Kingston’s history is a tale ripped from the pages of a western novel.  Geronimo’s Apache tribe once roamed the rugged and beautiful Gila wilderness, including the lush creek-fed valley where Kingston was founded. 

MAGDALENA  (28 Miles west of Socorro on US Route 60)

Magdalena was known as the "Trails End" for the railroad/spur line which was built in 1885 from Socorro to Magdalena to transport the cattle, sheep wool, timber and ore.

Read About Magdalena at the New Mexico Magazine

magazine logo 80

PIE TOWN  (84 Miles west of Socorro on US Route 60)

Pie Town is located along U.S. Highway 60 in Catron County. Its name comes from an early bakery for making dried-apple pies that was established by Clyde Norman in the early 1920s.

KELLY  (South of Magdalena off of US 60, ask locally for directions)

The last residents of Kelly departed in 1947, and most of their homes were painstakingly hauled down to Magdalena.

Southwest Region, Mining District Ghost Towns

CHLORIDE  (5 miles southwest of Winston off State Road 52)

The history of Chloride reads like the script for a bad western – silver strike, population boom, Apache raids, salvation by the militia, cattle versus sheep, tar and feathering, even bear attacks. An Englishman named Harry Pye was delivering freight for the U.S. Army from Hillsboro to Camp Ojo Caliente in 1879 when he discovered silver in the canyon where Chloride is now located.

HILLSBORO  (18 miles west of I-25 take exit 63 onto NM 152)

Hillsboro was founded in April 1877, when two prospectors discovered a series of gold deposits on the east side of the Black Range Mountains along Percha Creek. Dave Stitzel and Daniel Dugan staked out the Opportunity and Ready Pay mines. A tent city quickly filled with over 300 miners, store owners, adventuresome women and children.

MONTICELLO  (25 miles NW of Truth or Consequences )

Located along New Mexico Highway 142, Monticello was originally named Canada Alamosa Spanish for "Canyon of the Cottonwoods" and was first settled by ranchers and farmers in 1856.  The town was renamed in 1881 by its first postmaster, John Sullivan, of Monticello, N.Y.

Hanover/Fierro

HANOVER/FIERRO  (8 miles north of Bayard on NM 536)

Mining was mainly Zinc and the big business was the Emerald Zinc mine built during World War I. Copper mining also took place here. Much of the mining shut down for good in the 1970s. Many residences and buildings are scattered throughout the trees and lining the Hanover Creek bed. It is difficult to tell when you have left Hanover and reached Fierro.

New Mexico Ghost Towns Map

Click on the image to download a printable PDF map of the Ghost Towns featured on the Ghost Towns Trail. Note: the map will open in a new window. To download the map right click and save to your computer. The map is 2.5 MB.

Keep in mind some of the towns mentioned on the map and trail are in remote locations. You should always check locally for weather and road conditions before heading out. Some locations will not have cell phone coverage. Finally please note this map is for entertainment purposes, town locations are approximate. Please observe all signage and ask permission before entering private property.

Read more about ghost towns in New Mexico Magazine

Good Haunts, Ghost Towns on New Mexico Magazine

Abandoned, barely there, or rebounding with new purpose, towns, hotels, and restaurants all across the state hold secret treasures: the stories of past lives.

Good Haunts

InsideMT

Bannack Montana State Park

Bannack State Park InsideMT Media Production Web Development Advertising

InsideMT was contracted by the Montana Office of Tourism and Montana Fish Wildlife and Parks to capture advertising media of Bannack State Park, a real Montana gold rush ghost town.

Embark on an adventure into the Old West when you tour Montana’s Bannack State Park. Stroll the boardwalks of Montana’s best preserved mining ghost town. In 1862, John White discovered a rich vein of gold near Bannack, sparking a mass migration into the region. Bannack’s gold was more than 99% pure, inspiring miners, deserters of the Civil War, businessmen and troublemakers alike to flood into this rugged corner of Montana.

Explore Grasshopper Creek were placer miners drudged out tons of gold at $30 an ounce in 1863 when the town was booming. These nineteenth century mining camps spontaneously erupted overnight throughout Montana and the Wild West.

Bannack was a remote, booming gold town full of fast money and few laws. Henry Plummer arrived in town and boldly assigned himself as sheriff, but not everyone in Bannack saw the security he promised. Allegedly, Plummer organized a posse of locals to hijack caravans laden with gold on their way to Virginia City. Known as one of the deadliest trails in the West, no one was spared during these heartless attacks. Soon enough, Plummer and his gang were locked up by the infamous Vigilantes in the same jail he built before being walked to the gallows on a cold January day.

Take a stroll up the crooked path to the hanging gallows where Plummer and his deputies were lynched (without trial) in 1864. If you listen closely, you can still hear the clattering hooves of Vigilante horses on the frozen ground, and see Plummer’s last breath in the air under the gallows.

InsideMT is Montana Owned and Operated Since 2012

Visit Idaho logo

Explore Idaho’s Ghost Towns

Land of the Yankee Fork State Park has it all. Frontier mining history, ghost towns, an interactive interpretive center, and miles of OHV trails to explore.

Abandoned by the rise and fall of the gold rush, Bonanza, Bayhorse, and Custer are now under the care of Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation and the U.S. Forest Service. Together, the land nestled between Challis and Stanley has been transformed into an area for ATV-riding, hiking, photography, and history, all the while, preserving the ecosystem, the buildings, and the lands.

Bayhorse Ghost Town, Near Challis. Photo Credit: Idaho Tourism

Bonanza and Custer

Located in central Idaho , the sister cities of Bonanza and Custer were tightly aligned in the 1870s—surviving and thriving off one another as the quest for gold drove people to this area. In the 1880s, these towns saw rapid growth as miners found abundant ore. But the gold eventually dried up, and by 1911 these towns were vacated. Visitors to these sites today will find restored buildings, secluded cemeteries, and a history of the miners who flourished here.

Around 1864, Bayhorse was established as a gold mining camp after a few gold veins were found in the area. Nearly a decade later, Bayhorse really began to attract a following when an abundant silver vein was found. The Beardsley and Ramshorn Mines took off in popularity as more and more veins were found. Over time, Bayhorse became the longest-running silver producer in Idaho, but eventually was abandoned in 1915.

Bayhorse Ghost Town

Yankee Fork Gold Dredge

Make a trip to check out the Yankee Fork Gold Dredge while visiting the park. This 988-ton monster barge worked the gravel in Yankee Fork in the search for gold as recently as 1952. Over its time in use, the dredge recovered an estimated $1,000,000 in gold and silver.

Off-Highway Vehicle (OHV) Trails

man with atv

It is uncommon to find OHV trails on state park lands, but Land of the Yankee Fork in an exception.  During the time this area was an active mining site, pre-cut trails crisscrossed the land, spreading for hundreds of miles in all directions making it easier to develop OHV trails for the park visitors.

Meaning there are literally hundreds of miles of trails for you to explore. Whether you’re on a motorbike or a four-wheeler, Land of the Yankee Fork is worth the trip.

To learn more about everything Idaho’s state parks have to offer, click here .

Feature image credited to Idaho Tourism.

Published on May 21, 2019

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The tour was excellent. The tour guide was a local lady, Amanda, and she was great and lots of fun. Her knowledge of Jerome was very good. I would highly recommend this tour.

This tour was full of information! It was so much fun to walk around and learn about Jerome’s history. There are plaques around town with information, but the tour guide provided much more! Very highly recommended.

Our tour guide was awesome. She truly has a passion for her town, and enjoys telling it. We took the tour during the day, and I would definitely want to come back for a night tour someday.

We had a great time. Our guide was very personable, enthusiastic and made it a fun experience. The tour was very informative with a mix of history and ghost hunting. I would definitely recommend this tour!

Our tour guide was wonderful! Not only did she know the "ghost" stories, but she had an incredible knowledge of the history of Jerome and how it came to be. Didn't find any ghosts, but the searching was the fun part. Highly recommend!

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  1. Virtual Museum

    The video gallery contains high quality mpeg video tours of some of the best ghost towns that are still standing. Remember, federal law prohibits taking anything from ghost town sites except pictures. If you have any photography or video that you would like to donate to the virtual museum please send us an E-mail.

  2. Ghost Town Walking Tour

    Just in time for Halloween, I take you around the ghost town of Bannack, MT. It's both a historic, abandoned mining town and a Montana state park. Entry is f...

  3. This Virtual Tour Of A Maryland Ghost Town Will Feel Like You're Really

    The best spot for actually exploring the abandoned town of Daniels is by parking at the Alberton Rocks Trailhead in Windsor Mill. Due to the current COVID-19 Pandemic, we can't physically explore this fascinating area but we CAN take this virtual tour! Google Maps. Now, a little history: Daniels was a bustling little mill town in the mid-1900s.

  4. 3800 American Ghost Towns You Can Visit on One Map

    If you don't have the time for a road trip to see all 3800-plus ghost towns on the map, you can take a virtual tour of the now-abandoned 19th century town of Bodie, California here, or check out ...

  5. 6 Virtual Ghost Tours of Haunted Places Across the USA

    Virtual ghost tours. 1. Winchester Mystery House. Sarah Winchester spent 38 years intricately remodeling her home into the sprawling 24,000 square-foot mansion. There was seemingly no ...

  6. Virtual Museum

    Ghost towns are listed by state and include short biographies, pictures of the ghost towns, and other detailed ghost town information. ... If you have anything that you would like to add to the virtual museum, send us an E-mail. * = Video Courtesy Chuck Lawsen. Click a Photo to take a tour CrownKing, Az 3.1Mb Fort Misery, Az 2.2Mb

  7. 360 Video Tour of Bodie: a California Ghost Town

    Take a 360-degree tour of Bodie State Historic Park, a genuine California gold-mining ghost town. Subscribe: https://on.abc10.com/2IqeUuz Follow John on Face...

  8. Ghost Towns In New Mexico

    They are ghost towns now. But in the late 1800s, each had a moment of glory that blazed and died like a sudden flame. Most were mining towns, where men lusted after the earth's riches - gold, silver, turquoise, copper, lead and coal. A few were farming communities that flourished for a time and mysteriously fell silent. Literally hundreds of towns not only died, they vanished.

  9. 19+ Virtual Ghost Tours: Ideas for 2023

    Take a 13-minute YouTube tour of The Stanley Hotel. 11. Take a Virtual Haunted Tour of New Orleans. Travel by video to New Orleans, a city renowned for its culture, food, and ghost stories. In this 22-minute video, your team will see 5 New Orleans sites known for their ghostly activity.

  10. Bannack Ghost Town

    Embark on an adventure into the Old West when you tour Montana's Bannack State Park. Stroll the boardwalks of Montana's best preserved mining ghost town. In 1862, John White discovered a rich vein of gold near Bannack, sparking a mass migration into the region. Bannack's gold was more than 99% pure, inspiring miners, deserters of the ...

  11. Ghost Towns in WA

    Want to know more about the ghost towns that linger in WA? Us too! Join us for this FREE virtual tour of Washington State's ghost towns and learn a little ab...

  12. Explore Idaho's Ghost Towns

    Frontier mining history, ghost towns, an interactive interpretive center, and miles of OHV trails to explore. Abandoned by the rise and fall of the gold rush, Bonanza, Bayhorse, and Custer are now under the care of Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation and the U.S. Forest Service. Together, the land nestled between Challis and Stanley has ...

  13. Rhyolite Ghost Town

    Know Before You Go. From Beatty, Nevada, Take Hwy. 374 West about 4 miles. Rhyolite Road is paved and will be on your right. You will see a BLM sign. Continue 1.8 miles into the center of the ...

  14. Haunted Journeys

    Amazing Technologies have opened the doors to some of the most spectacular and haunted places through virtual tours they are offering publicly. No longer are we limited to on-site physical participation to explore and be enriched with discovering some of the most spooky and spine-chilling places in the world. So hold on tight to your seat, for here are the 13 top virtual tours you can remotely ...

  15. Bodie Foundation Ghost Walk Tours of Bodie State Historic Park ghost

    Bodie Ghost Walks 2024 Four Extraordinary Nights in Bodie, three tours each night to choose from! Tickets go on sale March 15 for members. Please click on the dates below to be redirected to the event registration page for the date you'd like to attend: June 29 Ghost Walk July 20 Ghost Walk August 31 Ghost Walk September 28 Ghost Walk. DETAILS:

  16. 15 Creepy Virtual Haunted House Tours (Online)

    Ghost Hunt in a Haunted Mansion is a fully facilitated online haunted house experience. In this 90 minute virtual activity, a paranormal investigator leads teams on a remote tour of the famous Winchester Mansion. Throughout the event, participants must work together to decipher codes, uncover clues, and solve puzzles.

  17. Attractions

    Goldfield Mine Tours. (480) 983-0333 | Admission $12 adults, $10 seniors, $8 children ages 5-12, 4 and under FREE! (Open 7 days a week!) The Goldfield Mine Tour takes approximately 25 minutes. It is an underground guided tour that takes you back in time to 100 years ago. The guides are well versed on the history of the mine, town, gold mining ...

  18. Calico Ghost Town

    Calico is an old West mining town that has been around since 1881 and was abandoned in the mid-1890s after silver lost its value. The town that once gave min...

  19. New Mexico Ghost Towns and Graveyards Tour

    Enjoy your virtual Ghost Town Tour! Click arrows to continue to next page Please be patient, some photos are large for your enjoyment. Want to take a trip to some New Mexico Ghost Towns? You've lucked out. John and Raman just happen to be spending today on the turquoise trail, hunting for Ghost Towns. ...

  20. Tours

    Keep you on the trail, keep the ghost towns safe, and to save your ass if you do something dumb… tip them well. All Tours are 2 hour or 4 hour. 2hr is $200/per person 4hr is $300/per person. RIGHT NOW!! Groupon partnership rate is $75/person for 2 hour tour. ... Virtual Tours.

  21. Bodie Foundation Public and Private Tours of the Best Ghost Town in

    You will discover how Native people and early residents made a home next to this unique lake. We'll also talk about farms and ranches that sprang up in the Mono Basin to feed surrounding communities and mining camps in the late 1800s. 2024 Pricing for Two-Hour Tours: One to four people - $200 minimum. Each additional person - $50/ per person.

  22. Ghost Town Tours

    At Ghost Town Tours, LLC we present the fascinating history and mysteries of the unique town of Jerome, AZ as well as Cottonwood and Clarkdale! Our haunted and historical tours are the best way to experience Jerome — the largest ghost town in America. When you join us, you enjoy tours that are extremely informative and full of surprises! ...

  23. Ghost Town Fitness

    Website byWebActWebsite Builder. FIND US. 180 Fox Shores Dr. Kauakauna, WI 54130. CONTACT US. (920) 766-0149. [email protected]. Share by: Ghost Town Fitness offers Kaukauna, Wisconsin with a clean, comfortable, fully equipped fitness center. Take are virtual tour today!