The ghost town frozen in time

Rhyolite in Nervada is a ghost town that is home to a quirky outdoor museum. Picture: Gabriel Millos

BEYOND the bright lights of Las Vegas, and the snowy mountains of Lake Tahoe, Nevada is home to dozens of fascinating ghost towns, telling the story of a rich gold rush history.

One of the most fascinating is Rhyolite in the Bullfrog Hills, about 190km northwest of Las Vegas, near the eastern edge of Death Valley.

Not many people around this town. Picture: iStock

Not many people around this town. Picture: iStock

This boomtown sprung to life after a couple of prospectors discovered high-grade ore in 1905. By 1907, Rhyolite had electric lights, water mains, telephones, newspapers, a hospital, a school, an opera house, and a stock exchange. It was the third largest city in Nevada by 1908.

But the town declined almost as rapidly as it rose — it was abandoned by 1916, when the mines played out. Today Rhyolite is a ghost town of dreams.

Rhyolite Mercantile, an abandoned general store, burned in 2014 after being hit by lightning. Picture: Jeff Hitchcock

Rhyolite Mercantile, an abandoned general store, burned in 2014 after being hit by lightning. Picture: Jeff Hitchcock

Rhyolite is home to a quirky museums, Goldwell Open Air Museum, which features a handful of large-scale sculptures built by artists in the 1980s. Popular works include Albert Szukalski’s “The Last Supper”, a sculpture featuring 13 ghostly figures, which permanently sit on an old boardwalk.

One of the first things you see as you enter the townsite of Rhyolite are the statues built by Albert Szukalski and other artists from Belgium. Picture: Frank Kehren

One of the first things you see as you enter the townsite of Rhyolite are the statues built by Albert Szukalski and other artists from Belgium. Picture: Frank Kehren

The first schoolhouse was a small wooden structure that was completed in 1906 and had a total of 28 students, according to a Rhyolitesite.com.

One year after the school was opened, they were turning students away from the door. The student population had grown to an astounding 250 children.

The second school, which was built in 1909, still stands in Rhyolite today.

Once a booming town — Burro race, Rhyolite, 1908. Picture: Orange County Archives.

Once a booming town — Burro race, Rhyolite, 1908. Picture: Orange County Archives.

The Cook Bank building is one of the most photographed ruins in the state of Nevada.

Mr Cook came from Goldfield, Nevada to Rhyolite in hopes of opening another Cook Bank.

He started with a small building on Golden Street in 1905, and it did not take long for him to decide he needed a much larger place to conduct business, according to Rhyolitesite.com

Mr Cook hired a contractor to build a three-storey building with a basement. It was completed in 1908, rising to a height of 13 metres. The building had marble floors imported from Italy, mahogany woodwork, electric lights, telephone and inside plumbing.

Ruins of the Cook Bank building in Rhyolite. Picture: Omar Barcena

Ruins of the Cook Bank building in Rhyolite. Picture: Omar Barcena

A caboose formerly used as a gas station. Picture: Omar Barcena

A caboose formerly used as a gas station. Picture: Omar Barcena

Inside the caboose where people have left their rubbish. Picture: Omar Barcena

Inside the caboose where people have left their rubbish. Picture: Omar Barcena

A crumbling building in Rhyolite. Picture: Omar Barcena

A crumbling building in Rhyolite. Picture: Omar Barcena

The town is named for rhyolite, an igneous rock composed of light-coloured silicates. Picture: Flavia

The town is named for rhyolite, an igneous rock composed of light-coloured silicates. Picture: Flavia

For more info see TravelNevada.com.

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