freedom from control or influence of another or others
Loading all of their possessions in Conestoga wagons with billowing canvas tops, settlers seeking independence moved westward to homestead farms, staked a mining claim, or set up storekeeping in a new town.
Although ghost towns can be found throughout the world, in the United States they are most often thought of as the mining camps, cowboy towns, and other settlements of the sprawling western frontier.
an international boundary or the area immediately inside it
Although ghost towns can be found throughout the world, in the United States they are most often thought of as the mining camps, cowboy towns, and other settlements of the sprawling western frontier.
a person who comes to a country in order to settle there
They were a mix of Americans and immigrants—Germans, French, and other Europeans, and gold seekers from China and Chile, along with British convicts from Australia.
In 1860, a letter to the editor of the Rocky Mountain News from the new settlement of Breckinridge, Colorado, read: “A few very respectable looking women have ventured over to see us. Send us a few more.”
Perched on mountain cliffs, tucked into a wooded valley, or baking in the desert sun, these ghost towns are so remote that they are almost impossible to find.
Created on Fri Jul 17 10:57:47 EDT 2020
(updated Mon Jul 20 15:54:04 EDT 2020)
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