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Ghost Towns: Lost Cities of the Old West (Shire Library USA)

Ghost Towns: Lost Cities of the Old West (Shire Library USA)

Current price: $14.00
Publication Date: April 17th, 2012
Publisher:
Shire Publications
ISBN:
9780747810858
Pages:
64

Description

Tombstone, Bodie, St. Elmo, Silver City. These are some of the enduring legends of the Old West- ghost towns and mining camps that dot America's landscape and colour the history of the country. Literally thousands of ghost towns are scattered throughout the West, with some states boasting hundreds of these abandoned boomtowns These relics, whether falling down or revitalised, attract thousands of visitors every year. Many of these ghost towns and mining camps are protected by the National Park Service or the Bureau of Land Management, and visits are carefully regulated in order to preserve the history of the once-thriving towns. In Ghost Towns of the Old West, writer and ghost towner Clint Thomsen explains the history of ghost towns, describes the various types of ghost towns, and discusses ongoing research and archaeological study into decaying towns and mining camps.

About the Author

Clint Thomsen is a freelance writer based in northern Utah. Most of his work appears in various publications of the Transcript Bulletin Publishing Company. Thomsen pens a weekly outdoor column for the Tooele Transcript Bulletin, which was named best column in a daily newspaper for 2008 by the Utah Press Association. Clint took second place in UPA's 2009 contest, where he also won an award for best feature story (The Heart of Vernon). In addition, his work and comments have been featured in The Associated Press, U.S. Outdoors Today, and the Dallas Morning News.

Praise for Ghost Towns: Lost Cities of the Old West (Shire Library USA)

“Thomsen writes about the West's forgotten places with the intrepidness of an explorer and the curiosity of a historian -- all in a voice as seasoned as an old Dutch oven. There are no 'ghosts' in these towns, only people from the past made real by his magic.” —Jeff Barrus, Tooele Transcript Bulletin