Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Abandoned after a mining boom in the region started in 1900 went away Coleman City: Emily City: San Diego: 1870 unknown: Abandoned Abandoned after depletion of gold deposits in the region Coso: Granite Springs: Inyo
Gold Town (on topographic maps) or OarVille [1] is a former settlement in Kern County, California. [2] It was located 9.5 miles (15 km) north of Rosamond, [3] at an elevation of 2,713 feet (827 m). [2] Today, Goldtown exists only as a grid of dirt roads and a few abandoned buildings and mines in the desert off the California State Route 14.
Eagle Mountain is a ghost town in the California desert in Riverside County founded in 1948 by industrialist Henry J. Kaiser.The town is located at the entrance of the now-defunct Eagle Mountain iron mine, once owned by the Southern Pacific Railroad, then Kaiser Steel, and located on the southeastern corner of Joshua Tree National Park.
DeAnza Springs Resort, 1951 Carrizo Gorge Road, Jacumba Hot Springs; (619) 766-4301. The campground has 311 RV sites and about two dozen rental travel trailers, tiny homes, tent sites and motel ...
The name comes from the fact that the site was once a naturist resort named "Desert Gardens Ranch." [1] It is outside Desert Hot Springs, California and consists of an abandoned kidney bean shaped swimming pool and a few foundations of buildings that used to surround the area. There is no paved road to the Nude Bowl.
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Cabot's Pueblo Museum is an American historic house museum located in Desert Hot Springs, California, and built by Cabot Yerxa, an early pioneer of the Colorado Desert.A large, Hopi-style pueblo, built in the Pueblo Revival Style, it contains artworks, artifacts of American Indian and Alaska Native cultures, and memorabilia of early desert homesteader life.
These huge, abandoned historic homes date back to at least 1850 and are priced as low as $1,000. Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories . Fixer-uppers are all the rage right now.