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Beehive Archive: Ghost towns: An in-person history fix

By Staff | Apr 10, 2024

Welcome to the Beehive Archive — your weekly bite-sized look at some of the most pivotal — and peculiar — events in Utah history. With all of the history and none of the dust, the Beehive Archive is a fun way to catch up on Utah’s past. Beehive Archive is a production of Utah Humanities, provided to local papers as a weekly feature article focusing on Utah history topics drawn from our award-winning radio series, which can be heard each week on Utah Public Radio.

Did you know that Utah is haunted? Our state has an estimated 100 ghost towns. While reasons for their abandonment vary, ghost towns throughout rural Utah have one thing in common: our desire to idealize a lost past and try to connect to it in real time.

In rural Utah, national and state parks, or even music and art festivals, draw visitors to small towns. But in other areas, haunting remnants of life lure history buffs and paranormal investigators alike to see our state’s famous ghost towns. Ghost towns are what remains after environmental disasters or boom-and-bust economic cyles leave a community deserted. With dilapidated buildings and oftentimes graveyards, ghost towns are real-world museums that can give visitors a visceral connection with the past.

Getting to ghost towns can sometimes be hazardous, and those that are more easily accessed risk being vandalized and destroyed completely. Take Grafton, for example, which lies in the shadow of Zion National Park and was featured in the 1969 film Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. Settled in 1859, Grafton was ultimately abandoned due to unpredictable flooding from the Virgin River. Because of its national spotlight, local community members organized under the Grafton Heritage Partnership Project to purchase the townsite, protect and restore its historic structures, and provide interpretation signs for its thousands of annual visitors.

Some ghost towns find new life as art havens. The Grand County town of Cisco was settled in the 1880s as a transport hub for the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad. But it was never integrated into the US highway system and slow population decline led to its abandonment. In 2015, a Chicago-based artist purchased the town and focused on stabilizing the early-twentieth century buildings. Now Cisco has an artist residency program, Airbnb rentals, and several colorful murals that give a once-desolate Old West main street new life.

Other ghost towns are not so fortunate. Not far from Cisco is the town of Sego, which was originally a base for coal mining, but was abandoned by 1955. At one point, it caught fire, dooming most of its historic wooden structures.

Today, only one stone building remains and hazards like flash flooding and deserted mine shafts make it difficult to visit. Whether it’s a well-preserved outdoor museum, a funky artists colony, or simply a stone building in a wide open field, Utah’s ghost towns are places to visit with respect.

Beehive Archive is a production of Utah Humanities and its partners. Sources consulted in the creation of the Beehive Archive and past episodes may be found at www.utahhumanities.org/stories. 

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