Episodes

  • Chappells
    Jul 9 2024

    The ghost town of Chappells is located in the southwest corner of Newberry County, South Carolina. The town was first known as Chappell's Ferry, then Chappell's Depot, then just Chappells. When the new Highway 39 bridge over the Saluda River was built, it bypassed the main street of the town, dooming the remaining businesses.

    Blog posts:

    • Exploring Chappels
    • The Sad Fate of Chappells
    • More on Chappells
    • Return to Chappells

    Farmer's Bank of Chappells

    Chappells Depot

    Chappells Ruins

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    18 mins
  • Phoenix
    Jun 25 2024

    The community of Phoenix in Greenwood County, South Carolina was the site of an election riot in 1898. The riot pitted black citizens who wished to vote against the white citizens and Jim Crow era laws.

    • Blog post
    • Benjamin Mays Site

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    22 mins
  • Bonus - Lost Towns under South Carolina Lakes
    Jun 18 2024

    This bonus episode is the audio from a presentation given at the Mauldin Branch of the Greenville County Library.

    Link to presentation slides

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    1 hr and 15 mins
  • Samish-Atlanta
    Jun 11 2024

    Samish Island is nearly 3000 miles from the Carolinas, but it has close ties to our region, especially Western North Carolina. This is the story of two ghost towns on the island that waged their own version of the Civil War.

    • Blog Post - PNW Connections - The Lost Cause
    • Blog Post - PNW Connections - Tar Heel Land
    • Tales of the Magic Skagit
    • Skagit County History Museum

    George Washington Lafayette Allen

    Plat for the town of Atlanta

    Plat for the town of Samish

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    21 mins
  • Henry River Mill Village
    May 28 2024

    The Henry River Mill Village in Burke County, North Carolina, is an abandoned village used as the setting for District 12 in the movie The Hunger Games. Here are the links to resources linked in the episode:

    • Blog Post
    • Henry River Mill Village
    • In with the Old

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    26 mins
  • Willington
    May 14 2024

    In this episode I talk to Scott Withrow, who co-taught a course on Lost Communities with me at Furman University. Scott lends his expertise on the ghost town of Willington.

    Leegstadt Scale for Ghost Towns, developed by Dave Baker

    • Type A: A completely barren site with no remnants remaining to suggest a town, community, or village of any type ever existed here.
    • Type B: A site of rubble and roofless buildings remaining with no obvious population or a location marked with only a sign noting that something once existed.
    • Type C: A Cemetery (may or may not have a sign, and may or may not share the same name of the community), church, creamery, bridge, mill, fort or other civic indicator remains to mark where a town, or village existed. These can be representative of a township so long as it is no further than one mile from the site.
    • Type D: A semi-abandoned community. Site may have a few residences but all commercial and industrial buildings are abandoned.
    • Type E: A historic Community. Site may have some residences and fewer than ten commercial and industrial buildings that are in use.
    • Type F: A restored, fabricated, or semi-dilapidated community maintained as an attraction or within a park.
    • Type G: Integrated Community: The site was either annexed into a neighboring community or is presently a location where new homes or buildings occupy the site of a former town.

    In addition to these types, Baker further defines a ghost town as to whether or not it was ever incorporated as an actual town.

    • Group 1: A formerly platted and incorporated city or town
    • Group 2: A formerly platted unincorporated city or town
    • Group 3: A formerly non-platted community of industrial or commercial significance (usually related to coal mining or quarries, but there are several towns in the Carolinas centered around other industries such as textiles and logging.)
    • Group 4: An informal community, non-platted which surrounded around a central location or locations, examples of these include a school, church, creamery, or railroad station
    • Group 5: An informal community created on or centered around private land. May or may not have been subdivided into lots.
    • Group 6: A pioneer village having been established within ten years of statehood with no formal recognition otherwise

    Resources:

    • Midwest Ghost Towns with Dan Cline
    • Willington on the Way

    Photos:

    Sara Jungst in the bookstore with friends

    Old Store display in history center

    Cowan Family Band

    Cowan Instruments

    History Center diorama

    Old Willington Post Office

    Willington Academy Location and Cemetery

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    24 mins
  • Petersburg, Lisbon, and Vienna
    Apr 30 2024

    The towns of Petersburg, Lisbon, and Vienna were located on the Savannah River at its confluence with the Broad River. Petersburg and Vienna were on the Georgia side, and Vienna was across the Savannah in South Carolina.

    Resources:

    • Blog Post
    • Plan of Petersburg
    • Old Petersburg report
    • Moses Waddel
    • Augusta Canal
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    23 mins
  • Tunnel Hill
    Apr 16 2024

    Tunnel Hill was the shanty boomtown for workers working on the Stumphouse Tunnel, part of the Blue Ridge Railroad. It was abandoned around the time of the Civil War when the railroad ran out of money to complete the project.

    Blog post

    Additional voices by Elevenlabs.io.

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    31 mins