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Hotel ghost town
Retro styled, sepia toned, old-fashioned photograph of a Native American Indian cowboy standing with his horse on a rocky cliff and looking into the Southwest USA desert wilderness of Monument Valley Tribal Park, Arizona. Navaho tribe man with saddle animal admiring Wild West extreme terrain beauty of the Indian Reservation landscape.
Old homestead at Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument, CO
Wide view Fort Union preservation with cannon in New Mexico exposed to the wind, within a sweeping valley of short grass prairie, amid the swales of the Santa Fe trail, is the remnants of the largest 19th century military fort in the region of New Mexico, in southwest USA.
Genoa, NV. 1920s chicken house at the Mormon Station Historic Park
Leafless tree and old barn in autumn along country road in Redlands California
Ghost town of Bodie State Historic Park
The beautiful landscape of Wyoming; the prairie with an old worn fence in foreground.
Gran Canaria - April 2023: Step into Sioux City theme park and instantly transform into a cowboy or Indian. Explore the town, witness a thrilling bank robbery and watch the sheriff take on outlaws.
Bodie is a ghost town in the Bodie Hills east of the Sierra Nevada, it became a boom town in 1876 (146 years ago) after the discovery of a profitable line of gold; by 1879 it had a population of 7,000–10,000.
Old West Town village in Cody Wyoming.
Bodie a historic ghost town in California east of the Sierra Nevada Mountains. Mono County.
In this iconic image of the American West, a cowboy stands facing the rugged wooden barn on Mormon Row as he views the majesty of Wyoming's Teton Mountains.
Old log barn beside Colorado backcountry dirt road in western USA.
Rows of abandoned homes and buildings in Bannack Ghost Town, Montana
Dilapidated Old Western Log Cabin
USA, State of Utah, Washington County, town of Grafton. The Alonzo H. Russel's home (about 1862) and the church/schoolhouse. Grafton is a ghost town near the Zion National Park. The site was first settled in December 1859 as part of a cotton-growing project ordered by Brigham Young (president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints from 1847 to 1877). After a  flood of the Virgin River, that had destroyed the first town (called Wheeler), a new town, called New Grafton, was built upstream. In 1866 some settlers were killed by Navajo raiders. Besides that, more than thirty people (including many children) died of diseases such as diphtheria, scarlet fever, or accident. So a lot of Grafton's residents moved to Rockville. In 1890 only four families remained. In 1921, the local branch of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints was discontinued. Grafton was permanently abandoned in 1944. In 1997, a restoration project started to preserve the Grafton site. The old church, some houses, and the fence of Berry's grave in the cemetery were restored. In the cemetery it's believed about 80 graves exist. In the center of the cemetery there is the restored fence of Robert Madison Berry (24 years old), his wife Mary Isabella Hales Berry (20) and his brother Joseph Smith Berry (22), killed by Indians. Grafton has been featured as a location in several films.
The beautiful clouds in the mountains of New Mexico ad depth to the old wooden mountain cabin. A photographer is capturing the scenic.
Old wooden clapboard Cottonwood Lutheran Church on the Great Plains near Havre, Montana, USA
Picture of some of the abandoned buildings left behind in Bodie, California. Bodie is a ghost town that has now become a historical state park.
The historic wooden schoolhouse in Bodie ghost town.
Historic John Moulton Barn at Mormon Row in Grand Teton National Park on a sunny summer day, with snowcapped Teton Mountain Range in the background.
The replica of the interior of Fort Clatsop where Lewis and Clark lodged in 1805 in Oregon
USA, State of Utah, Washington County, town of Grafton. The Alonzo H. Russel home (about 1862). Grafton is a ghost town near the Zion National Park. The site was first settled in December 1859 as part of a cotton-growing project ordered by Brigham Young (president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints from 1847 to 1877). After a  flood of the Virgin River, that had destroyed the first town (called Wheeler), a new town, called New Grafton, was built upstream. In 1866 some settlers were killed by Navajo raiders. Besides that, more than thirty people (including many children) died of diseases such as diphtheria, scarlet fever, or accident. So a lot of Grafton's residents moved to Rockville. In 1890 only four families remained. In 1921, the local branch of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints was discontinued. Grafton was permanently abandoned in 1944. In 1997, a restoration project started to preserve the Grafton site. The old church, some houses, and the fence of Berry's grave in the cemetery were restored. In the cemetery it's believed about 80 graves exist. In the center of the cemetery there is the restored fence of Robert Madison Berry (24 years old), his wife Mary Isabella Hales Berry (20) and his brother Joseph Smith Berry (22), killed by Indians. Grafton has been featured as a location in several films.
Old broken down abandoned wood log cabin in rural Colorado in western USA of North America.
Abandoned Cottonwood Lutheran Church and a barbed wire fence near the town of Havre, Montana, USA
Silverton, Colorado, USA - July 12, 2021: The historic Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railway Passenger Station is a destination for tourists in Silverton.
Telluride, CO - October 2, 2019: Welcome sign outside of Telluride, Colorado in the San Juan Maountains
Adobe buildings in the Grand Canyon National Park
Free Images: "bestof:Lot Smith.jpg Lot Smith a Mormon pioneer and American frontiersman Orson Pratt Brown - American Civil War History http //www orsonprattbrown com/..."
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