Adobe ruins at a ghost town in Pinal County
Adobe ruins for an Arizona ghost town
Adobe ruins from a ghost town in Pinal County
Ariz. - Ghost town of Harshaw - Old Poolhall through Sycamores.
Ariz. - Ghost town of Mowry, two houses and street.
Dos Cabezas, Ariz. At the foot of the double-headed mtns. which give it its name is the little town of adobe houses - once a busy mining center, now almost a ghost town. Numerous old mines dotting the mtns are also abandoned. [Caption by Josef Muench]
Fairbank Schoolhouse
Ghost Town of Mowry, Ariz. Sturdy adobe houses still stand at the site of one of the state's earliest mines from which silver and lead were taken during the 1850s and 60s. Before then it had been mined by the Jesuits and Mexicans. [Caption by Josef Muench
Ghost Town of Mowry, Arizona. One of the state's earliest mines was here in the Patagonia country and about a million dollars worth of silver and lead ore were taken out. Only some adobe houses mark the site but, it was known first to the Jesuits. [Captio
Ghost Town of Stanton, Ariz. At the foot of Antelope Peak, buildings stand idle in an old gold camp. At the right is the Antelope Stage Station and the large adobe structure was a general store. The setting is a few miles from Congress Juction. [Caption b
Ghost town in Pinal County
Ghost town of McMillenville
Harshaw, Ariz. Set on the east side of the Patagonia Mtns. in Santa Cruz County, an old pool hall is seen through the Sycamore trees. It was settled in 1875 and silver was mined here. It is now a ghost town. [Caption by Josef Muench]
Ruins of a ghost town in Pinal County
Adamsville
Big Bug
Bouse
Cerbat
Cleator
Coldwater
Duquesne
Gleeson
Guthrie
Harshaw
Inspiration
Maricopa Wells
McCabe
McMillenville
Metcalf
Mowry
Octave
Powell
Ruby
Schuchuli
Silver King
Stoddard
Swansea
Arizona Ghost Towns 1988
Ghost Towns in Arizona
Ghost towns in Arizona
Ghost Towns of Arizona
Arizona's Lost Mines and Ghost Towns
Hualapai Times, 1976-11
Arizona Mining