Posted on 07/29/2011 10:10:25 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
If you dont mind an old saloon and two empty jails then this historic ghost town in South Dakota is for you.
For sale: The majority of the land within the Township of Scenic, South Dakota, totaling about 46 acres. Over the years, since 1906, it has been a thriving town mostly of visitors for the convenience of fuel, groceries, hunting, fossil hunting and the world famous Longhorn Saloon.
And the price? $799,000.
Population: 9.
The nearest town might be 50-miles away, but reporters, television crews, and millionaires are making plans to visit this small town located on the edge of the remote Badlands.
Rodeo legend from the early 1950s Twila Merrill put the town on the market about two months ago for the current price due to an illness.
The original asking price for the property was $3 million, but the price dropped after being on the market for two years.
Merrill told her real estate broker that she hopes someone will come to the rescue and save the town from desolation.
Scenic was surprisingly a thriving railroad town in the early 20th century.
Local newspapers report that the small town once had a functioning bank, grocery stores, a church, a high school and even a hotel in its early days.
Families moved away during the Great Depression and the small town never quite recovered.
Merrill and her daughter, LeeAnn Keester, still believe their little ghost town has potential.
The businesses and land has always been family-run, but now, its time for someone else to come in and bring it back to life, Keester told the Rapid City Journal.
Its just me and my mom now, and now, with her health being what it is, its just too much for us.
According to real estate broker David T. Olsen Scenic is beautiful just like its namesake.
Included in the asking price of just under $1 million is a U.S. Post Office land lease, the Longhorn Fuel and Food Convenience Store, the 1906 Longhorn Saloon, a museum, two houses, and two jails.
"It has so much history and was once a great little rally town, Olsen said.
Its really a bargain price, and it has a lot to offer, he said. Keep in mind the price of Scenic is nearly comparable to one of Valle Piola, Italy, a whole Abruzzan village that's also on the market. How do the Badlands stack up next to the Italian hillside? Decisions, decisions!
About 700 cars a day pass near the small town, which are mostly on their way to the Badlands National Park or the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, 6 miles away.
Olsen, who is a Coldwell Banker agent, said he hopes the new owner will preserve the buildings as relics of the Old West.
Keester told the local newspaper that her mother loved Scenic and purchased the properties one by one as they were put up for sale.
The family kept many animals including one two-year-old bull named Freckles, who can still be spotted roaming around town.
Does “Bombing Range Road” mean what it says?
I can’t wait to see the listing price for Detriot.
***Local newspapers report that the small town once had a functioning bank, grocery stores, a church, a high school and even a hotel in its early days. ****
Sounds like several towns I used to live in in New Mexico. Functioning in the early 1900s dead by 1960.
Farley
Mount Dora
Tatum
Hope
RE: Farley
Mount Dora
Tatum
Hope
____________________________________________________________________________
Was there a nearby town called Change? :)
At that price, this will be snapped up today.
What happened to Organ?
“I cant wait to see the listing price for Detriot.”
I think pieces of it are selling for $1.
Farley
Mount Dora
Tatum
Hope
.
What about ‘Change’?
****Was there a nearby town called Change? :)****
We lived in HOPE, and called it Dispair!
***What happened to Organ?****
Never lived in Organ but from what I’ve read,it went the way of Ingalls Ok.
I was told by a customer of mine in Detroit that they are giving people $25K loans to buy and fix up houses in Detroit. The catch is you need to LIVE in the house for five years. At the end of five years the loan is forgiven.
It is like urban homesteading(we are going to give you a 1/4 acre and a mule).
“It is like urban homesteading(we are going to give you a 1/4 acre and a mule”
***What happened to Organ?****
Never lived in Organ but from what I’ve read,it went the way of Ingalls Ok.
“It is like urban homesteading(we are going to give you a 1/4 acre and a mule).”
A Remington 870 would be more appropriate to the setting than a mule.
Do I get the mineral rights to the underlying content? Or is there some widespread deal from the 1800s that I have to submit to if I buy?
Also looks like an owner will be subject to state or federal restrictions as it appears to be within the Badlands National Park.
Can it be renamed Galt’s Gulch??
I think, were I in the Hotel business, I would build a Drury there.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organ,_New_Mexico
Everything south of HW70 is abandoned - everything north is a trailer park.
Still, it is midway between LC, NM, WSMR, and NASA WSMR. At the TDY rate, and in that location, it would sell out every day.
What I can’t figure out is why all the buildings south of HW 70 are abondoned. Been driving me buggy for years.
***I think, were I in the Hotel business, I would build a Drury there.****
Two other formerly real towns where my dad lived were Branson Colorado and Flosom NM, along with Farley.
Farley had a railroad stop, feed store, general store, school, blacksmith shop, bar, roller skating rink, and a race track. It is a ghost town today.
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