Five real-life ghost towns to creep you out
- Text by Alex Robert Ross
If history is cyclical and the past can predict the future, we should probably all be a little creeped out by the brave new world we’re stridently marching towards. On every continent – often hundreds of miles away from the metropolises that we consider eternal – monuments to declining industries and the rapid death of ideas still stand, decaying for the sake of practically nobody. Ghost towns pockmark the world map.
It’s the trope of every great zombie movie, a Twilight Zone-style concept to unsettle even the least social person: empty streets, abandoned homes, clear evidence of lives lived before whatever quick buck people were chasing moved location or fell away.
And as a new book by Wade Shepard shows, ghost towns are far from a thing of the past; in fact, in China, they are a defining feature of the present and future.
Diving into that creepiness, then, we’ve gathered together some of the world’s finest abandoned settlements. Think of them as hellish amusement parks:
Deception Island, Antarctica
Antarctica doesn’t conjure up images of civilization at the best of times. It seems uninhabitable to all but the hardiest of souls and, even then, the likelihood of anyone choosing the harsh, never-ending winter that the continent necessitates is slim. But, as with many other ghost towns, on the ominously titled Deception Island it was industry that dragged poor souls to edge of the earth, and a dirty industry at that. It was here that one of the largest whaling stations in the world operated and bones of the slaughtered animals – along with the vats in which their fat was boiled – still litter parts of the island today. It’s now a tourist destination in its own right, a fact that possesses a darkness all of its own.
Trona, California
California is littered with ghost towns, relics from the Old West, hangovers from the Gold Rush, entirely abandoned and uninhabited. They’re all creepy, but after a while it’s just one depressing dwelling after another. Trona, on the other hand, is an exceptionally disturbing place. Still inhabited by over 1,000 people, many of whom are employed by the Searles Valley Mineral Company, its endless industrial peaks reach out over the desert ground like a dystopian landscape. Its high school plays its games on a dirt field and its golf course’s ‘greens’ are just a softer kind of dirt. It’s a ghost town that’s still inhabited, and its all the more disturbing for it.
Rhyolite, Nevada
Rhyolite appears, at first glance, to be just another one of those ghost towns that litter the Death Valley desert, but stop off for 20 minutes in a car, even in broad daylight, and it’s clear very quickly that there’s something more sinister to it. The town hosts the Goldwell Open Air Museum, a stark realization of the concept of a ‘ghost’ town, and an attempt to preserve the legacy of Albert Szukalski who died in 2000. The sheeted, ghostly statues lined up in the town are beautiful and stirring in their way, but no less disturbing for it, particularly given their incongruous backdrop.
Hashima Island, Japan
During Japan’s rapid industrialization in the late 19th Century, Hashima Island became a hub of the nation’s industry. Nine miles off the coast of Nagasaki, those that worked on the island were essentially forced to reside there, living in the hulking apartment blocks on one side of the island. By the late ’50s, the island’s population had approached 6,000. Given the island’s size, that entailed a population density of roughly 216,000 people per square mile. For the sake of comparison, London’s current population density is 11,760 per square mile. When the mine closed in 1974, the island emptied and its population is now down to zero. Many of its monuments still stand, though, kept from the waves only by a short sea wall.
Anting German Town, China
Some of the strangest additions to Wade Shepard’s Ghost Cities of China are the perfectly formed foreign themed towns that exist within some of China’s biggest cities. Built within the city limits of Shanghai, the Anting German Town is a reflection of the joint Chinese-German Volkswagen plant nearby and the Chinese Formula One track just a few miles down the road. The local government employed German architects to design the town, their expertise clearly visible in the town’s disturbing authenticity. It’s still massively under-populated, adding to the incongruity of the space, but, as Shepard assures us, it won’t be soon.
Enjoyed this article? Like Huck on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.
Latest on Huck
The legendary trans artist & illustrator behind Drag magazine
A new book brings together pioneer Vicky West’s luminous illustrations of fantasy, femininity and fashion.
Written by: Miss Rosen
Why did police taser a Bristol grandfather in the face?
Trailblazing documentary I Am Judah chronicles community champion Ras Judah Adunbi’s horrific treatment at the hands of the police and his fight for justice.
Written by: Maisy Hunter
In photos: Ghana’s complex e-waste industry
A new exhibition explores the country’s huge, unregulated industry, which can be hazardous to workers’ health and the local enviroment, yet provides economic opportunity to many.
Written by: Isaac Muk
Meet Corbin Shaw, Huck 81’s Artist in Residence
The Sheffield born artist talks about the people and places that shaped his practice for the latest issue of Huck.
Written by: Josh Jones
The Blessed Madonna: “Dance music flourishes in times of difficulty”
The DJ talks about her debut album ‘Godspeed’, connection and resistance on the dance floor, the US election and more alongside exclusive pictures from her album release party.
Written by: Ben Smoke
Revisiting the birth of skate culture in 1970s Los Angeles
New photobook ‘Last Days of Summer: California Skateboarding Archive 1975–1978’ looks back at an iconic chapter of youth culture.
Written by: Miss Rosen