Globe > North America > United States > Nevada > Rhyolite Hills > Rhyolite ghost town
Rhyolite ghost town
Odd outsider art installations surround a Gold Rush era ghost town
Category Ghost Towns
Founded in 1904 and dead by 1916, Rhyolite was one of several short lived boom-towns from the late Gold Rush era. People were drawn to the desert on the edge of Death Valley by the promise of gold found amongst quartz in local mines, and by 1906 the town had all the promising indicators of permanence with largest population in the area.
According to the US National Park Service:
"The town immediately boomed with buildings springing up everywhere. One building was 3 stories tall and cost $90,000 to build. A stock exchange and Board of Trade were formed. The red light district drew women from as far away as San Francisco. There were hotels, stores, a school for 250 children, an ice plant, two electric plants, foundries and machine shops and even a miner’s union hospital."
But in 1907, the US financial markets were rocked by a panic that saw closures of banks, businesses, and mines. Rhyolite began to falter. The mine closed in 1911. In 1916, the lights went out forever. Since then it has featured in several Westerns. In 1925 Paramount Pictures restored the bottle house for the film The Air Mail, and it was restored again more recently by locals.
Empty hulks of the three story bank, the general store, and smaller buildings remain. Also there is a great looking train station, as well as some other well-preserved ghost town ruins. One of the most well known houses was constructed using hundreds of glass bottles in the walls from bottles from Adolphus Busch products, more familiar now as Budweiser.
Besides the bottle house, there are a number of weird and bizarre works of art strewn around this ghost town. Part of the Goldwell Open Air Museum, several artists have installed permanent sculptures starting in 1984. Probably the most interesting is the 12 life-sized disciples patterned after "The Last Supper", built in 1984 by the Belgian artist Albert Szukalski. They consist of empty flowing robes (made of fiberglass), so they appear to be ghosts. There is also a 20' tall model of a miner and his Penguin made of metal, and a 20' tall pixellated version of a nude woman made of pink and yellow cinder blocks. Another fiberglass ghost, the Ghostrider, stands next to his bicycle, ready to go for a ride.
Rhyolite is not too far from Beatty, NV, and if you're in the area, definitely worth a visit. Also, nearby is the eastern entrance of Titus Canyon, a one-way-only drive into Death Valley.
See an error? Know more? Edit this place.
- Hours Always open
- Address Rhyolite, Nevada, United States
- Cost Free, on BLM land
- National Park Page
- http://www.nps.gov/deva/historyculture/rhyolite-ghost-town.htm
- Virtual tour and town history
- http://www.rhyolitesite.com/
- Friends of Rhyolite
- http://www.rhyolite.org/
- Wikipedia - the Panic of 1907
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panic_of_1907
- Goldwell open Air Museum
- http://www.goldwellmuseum.org/artists/index.html
Rhyolite is 35 miles from the Furnace Creek Visitor Center on the way to Beatty, Nevada. A paved road heading north (left) from Hwy. 374 will take you to the heart of the the town.
Comments
-
Anonymous
February 7, 2012
Every body knows that humen's life seems to be not very cheap, however we require money for various issues and not every one gets enough money. Thus to get quick mortgage loans or just student loan would be a right solution. -
Anonymous
February 7, 2012
That's good that people can take the credit loans moreover, that opens new possibilities. -
There is a website on Rhyolite, Nevada at http://www.rhyolitenevada.com
-
Anonymous
August 11, 2009
Although Nevada is known more for its large neon lights and copious amounts of <a href="http://www.stationcasinos.com/dining/">Las Vegas dining</a>, I hope websites such as these help to reveal the endless amounts of natural and man-made wonders available to the public.



Post a Comment