Wednesday, January 26, 2011

297/365: ghost story



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A few nice Ghosts images I found:

297/365: ghost story



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Ghosts


Image by malik ml williams

when i was a wee bairn one summer, my parents sent me off to an overnight stay at the daycamp i attended. (don't ask.) the kids started to tell ghost stories. i don't remember which story it was that got to me, but i do remember the part where the camp counselors had to call my parents so i could ask them to come get me.

looking back on it now, i think that was one of the turning points in my life. my parents could have told me to stay my ass at the sleepover. instead, it just became the first of many lessons in my life that taught me i didn't have to stick with uncomfortable situations.

funny, but i didn't think of that until after i created this image. almost as if seeing it brought back an old ghost...


p.s. the distortion of my face was intentional this time. i used the long exposure to move while highlighting areas of my face with a masked-off flashlight.



~'~''~'''~''~'~
a week of painting with light

P1250794 - Ghost?

Ghosts


Image by _kristin_

I was going to delete this one, but then I noticed the blurb on the stairs that's person shaped. It reminded me of a ghost (although enlarged it looks like a drop or something on the lens - which is kind of weird because it didn't show in any of the other photos I took). The Landmark Center is supposedly haunted, and it's fun to think I caught one of the ghosts! :) Taken on the second floor looking up.

Looking down one of the dead-end streets in Darwin ghost town towards Death Valley - darwin17x

Ghosts


Image by mlhradio

Darwin Ghost Town. Looking down one of the cross-streets. I don't think it actually goes anywhere.

Darwin Ghost Town, near Death Valley, CA. At its peak in 1877, the remote mining camp of Darwin boasted a population of more than three thousand, but these days it is just a dusty remnant of a town on the edge of Death Valley. In the 1860's and 1870's, several prospectors, including Dr. Darwin French, scattered out all over eastern California in search of the next big gold strike. In 1874, a rich grade of silver ore was found in the nearby Coso Mountains, and Darwin was born.

Within a year, Darwin boasted over a thousand residents and several businesses, including a hotel, drug store, restaurants and saloons, a baseball team and a newspaper. Despite the extreme isolation and harsh environment, the boomtown boomed - by mid-1877, the population peaked at over 3000, but a national depression and a miner's strike quickly destroyed the town. Prospectors and workers moved to other nearby, richer mining towns, and within a year only a few hundred residents remained. By the time the 1880 census rolled around, only 85 people were left to be counted in Darwin.

In 1880, a fire swept through town, destroying most of the businesses. A new, low-grade mine opened nearby in 1908, and Darwin experienced a minor boom, only to be destroyed again in another widespread fire in 1917, then a third time in 1918. Mining continued nearby, and Darwin never completely died, but was just a shell of its former self. In 1926, the Eichbaum Toll Road provided easier access to Death Valley through Darwin and Darwin Falls, and Darwin experienced some tourism business. But it was short-lived, as State Highway 190 bypassed the town to the north in 1937.

After World War II, the Anaconda Copper Mining Company opened a massive complex about a mile to the west of town on the slopes of Mount Ophir - and for several years they operated the state's largest lead mine. But these mines closed down in the seventies, leaving Darwin once again to fade away. Darwin has never completely died off like several of the nearby mining camps did - small-time mining by hardened desert rats continue to this day, but only a small handful of people call Darwin home, and there are no active businesses remaining.

Darwin is found at the end of the Olancha-Darwin Road, which wraps around the southern flank of Mount Ophir, while State Highway 190 takes a more northerly course. Heading east towards before the highway drops down into Death Valley and Panamint Springs, hang right along the crumbling blacktop of the Olancha-Darwin Road for about five miles, until the road dead-ends at the only stop sign in center of town. I only did a quick visit and snapped a handful of photos at the center of town, but there are plenty of opportunities to explore the surrounding landscape for mining ruins and ghost town relics - but be careful because some of the back-roads can get extremely rough, and some of the local residents may not take too kindly to trespassers on private property. Also worth noting: nearby Darwin Falls, a year-round spring-fed waterfall in the heart of Death Valley, a tiny speck of green in the bleak, parched desert (pictures of Darwin Falls are also included in this photoset).

For more info about Darwin:
Excellent, informative Rootsweb entry by Gary Speck.
www.ghosttowns.com/states/ca/darwin.html.
Ghost Town Explorers.

Picture taken October 20, 2007. Photo #17 of 66 of my Darwin Ghost Town and Darwin Falls photoset.

This photograph is free for use on the internet under the 'Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial' license. You are free to copy, distribute, transmit and/or adapt this photograph without seeking permission first, as long as you provide attribution to the photograph (preferably by linking to this web page, or including the phrase 'Copyright Matthew Lee High'), and as long as the the photo is not used for commercial purposes. For more information about Creative Commons licenses, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/deed.en..

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