Faded Dreams
More Ghost Towns of Kansas
Daniel C. Fitzgerald
304 pages, 92 photographs, 10 maps, 6 x 9
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-0668-9, $14.95
Palermo was a thriving port on
the Missouri in the 1850s. Steamboats lined up to load and unload
merchandise. Hotels flourished and pleasure cruises came from
St. Louis. When the steamboat business collapsed, the railroad
came. But the railroad had no depot, and passengers had to flag
down trains from the platform. After a few years, the trains
stopped coming altogether. By 1904 the post office was gone.
Like hundreds of towns across Kansas, Palermo peaked then
petered, leaving behind only a faded image of its former self.
Now it's a ghost town--a shadowy remnant of what it once was,
says Daniel Fitzgerald. Some ghost towns are completely gone,
he says, while others remain as abandoned ruins or foundations.
Some even have small populations and community spirit, but none
are the bustling sites they once were. All are towns that time
has passed by.
Providing an intriguing glimpse into the past, Fitzgerald
takes us on a journey around the state--to Goguac and Itasca,
routed around by the railroads; to Eustis, loser of the county
seat; to Fostoria, booming then busting as a mining town; to
Old Clear Water, abandoned when the sun set on the Cheyenne cattle
trail; and to Paradise, ravaged by fire during the depression
and unable to fully recover. He leads us through Kalida, with
too little water, Strawn--now on the bottom of John Redmond Reservoir--with
too much, and Quindaro before it was consumed by Kansas City.
Examining why towns declined or were abandoned, Fitzgerald
chronicles the births, descents, and heyday adventures of 106
of the more alluring ghost towns in the state. And, for the ghost-town
enthusiast ready for a hunt, he supplies current descriptions
of these once prosperous sites where the phantoms of unfulfilled
dreams linger elusively among the remains.
"Fitzgerald has done it again. Faded Dreams stirs
up memories of hopeful beginnings undone by the relentless march
of time and change. Fascinating stories of a bygone Kansas. A
neat book."--James J. Fisher, Kansas City Star
columnist
"Fitzgerald breathes life into forgotten settlements,
finding in each community a unique personality. He manages to
rattle some skeletons in community closets and even to awaken
some lingering ghosts."--Annals of Iowa
DANIEL C. FITGERALD has spent twenty years researching
Kansas ghost towns and has published four books on the topic,
including Ghost Towns of Kansas: A Traveler's
Guide. He is the local records archivist at the Kansas
State Historical Society.
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