On my travels up US 395 on the eastern side of the Sierra Nevada, I visited Bodie, or rather what's left of Bodie. Today only about 5% of the buildings remain from the town's 1877-1881 heyday, most having fallen victim to time, fire and the elements. Designated a California State Park in 1962, it is now preserved in a state of "arrested decay." W. S. Bodey from New York discovered gold here in 1859. Mining progressed slowly until 1875 when a mine collapse revealed a rich body of gold ore. Word spread fast and Bodie's boomtown days began. Its peak population ranged from 7,000-8,000. Along with miners and merchants, Bodie attracted a rougher element who gave the town a reputation for bad men and wild times. Bodie's mines produced gold valued at 100 million dollars.
The Methodist Church was built in 1882 and is Bodie's only church still remaining.
Surrey Barn
I.O.O.F. Hall
Hotel
School. One year there were 75 students - the next year 665.
The brick building on the left is the Dechambeau Hotel and next to it is the I.O.O.F. Hall. On the left about a quarter of the way up the hill you can see some white grave markers. That's the cemetery.
Sandi