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Gregory House
Bodie State Historic Park,
California - A deserted Gold Town
While the park is open all
year, this area has been known to get 12 feet of snow, and is accessible
only by snow mobile or skis. The park is staffed by park rangers and volunteers,
some of whom live in the houses in Bodie.
Location:
Bodie is part of Bodie State
Historic Park, consisting of 500 acres on a spur range of the Sierra Nevada,
at about 8000 feet above sea level. The land that the community was built
on is high, dry, sandy ground that supports sage brush and antelope brush,
but no trees. It is truly in the middle of nowhere, about 26 miles from
Bridgeport, 15 miles off road from highway 270.
History / Description:
Near the Nevada - California
border, Bodie was home to 10,000 people in its heyday, in the late 1870's.
In 1849, a W.S. Bodie, and his partner, Black Turner discovered large
gold deposits in the hills near where Bodie was destined to be built.
In 1870, investment money from New York, funneled through contacts in
San Francisco, was used to build shaft and tunnel mine systems, improving
the mines' harvest of gold. The town of Bodie bloomed and grew tremendously.
Being a mining town, it had its share of violence, pain, greed and immorality,
though it also had its civilized side as well. It's nick name was "Big
Bad Bodie."
The booming economy revolved
around these 30 gold mines in the hills above the town, which supported
70 saloons, 3 breweries, 3 newspapers, several whorehouses, churches,
pine slat homes, banks and one school.
As is the case in other mine
towns, the population became less and less numerous as the mines petered
out. What helped to quicken the demise of the town was a devastating fire
in 1932 that destroyed 95 percent of the buildings, caused by a child
playing with matches.
However, people still lived
there until after World War 2, when the last producing mine, Lucky Boy
was shut down. Only 6 people were left in town. 5 of the six died untimely,
strange deaths, relating to one of the men shooting his wife. When his
wife died, three of the other men killed the man who shot his wife. They
in turn died of strange diseases after the ghost of the man they killed
appeared to them and shook his fist at them.
Today, 168 of the town's
buildings and homes are still standing, and in good shape. Some date back
all the way to 1849. The houses have the original owners' private possessions,
and give the visitor a good idea about what it was like to live here.
There is a museum of artifacts from the town's history, located in the
Miner's Union Hall building. The main streets are intact, with a saloon,
a bank, a livery stable, various buildings, an inn, a school and a church.
The graveyard is also still
in good shape. The mines are also still there, though collapsed. One can
see them by tour only.
Manifestations:
Around 12 ghosts, plus an
apparition of white mule in the mines, still call Bodie their home.
Some individual homes, and
the areas around them are haunted for a variety of reasons.
Gregory House
An apparition of an old woman
has been seen rocking contently in a rocking chair there, working on an
afghan. Sometimes the rocking chair rocks back and forth all by itself.
Still Haunted?
Yes indeed.
They co-mingle amiably with
visitors and the rangers and aids who work in Bodie, with the exception
of the Chinese maid who has a bad attitude toward adults living in the
Cain House.
Picture Taken by Tom Carr
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