
The short-lived Lawrence County village of Red Oak was established in 1877 and dissolved in 1922.

Largely destroyed during the Civil War and later bypassed by the railroad, the town was eventually dissolved.

Jollification īuilt around a whiskey distillery and grist mill, Jollification (or Jolly) was established in 1848 and is now listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Today, roughly 20 people live in the area, which has been incorporated into nearby Newburg.

Much of Stony Dell was demolished, but a handful of abandoned buildings and overgrown lots remain. When the highway was rerouted and the original two-lane roadway became a dead-end, visitors to the town declined. Arlington Įstablished around 1867, Arlington was a popular tourist destination thanks to the Stony Dell Resort, which drew guests from nearby Route 66. Personnel stationed at Fort Leonard Wood have circulated rumors of hauntings in the Bloodland area since the 1940s. All that’s left is a church bell, which was relocated to nearby Waynesville. When Fort Leonard Wood was constructed during World War II, the residents of Bloodland were displaced, and the once-thriving village was wiped o the map to make room for the military post. Located in Pulaski County, Bloodland was established by a Mr. The only remnant of the previous community is the Georgia City Cemetery (pictured in the top photo) in Oronogo. A 1930 petition by the founder’s daughter vacated the town and returned it to farmland. Within another 20 years, the town was all but abandoned. A decade later, there were only 50 people living there. Within a year, the population had grown to 200 and a post office was erected. Guinn established the Jasper County town and named it after his home state. Georgia City’s story began in 1868 when founder John C. Some maintain a sparse population with a firm hold on their heritage. Others have only remnants of foundations, cemeteries, and other artifacts as proof of their former heydays. Depopulated or simply forgotten, many have fallen into disrepair.

A detour through these rural locales reveals stories of a changing world and devastating acts of nature. Although the phrase “ghost town” might call to mind the tumbleweed-strewn roads and abandoned wooden storefronts of the Old West, ours tell a different tale. Abandoned buildings, paranormal folklore, and historic relics cast an eerie and intriguing atmosphere over Missouri’s ghost towns.
