Washington’s only ‘living ghost town’ is full of history and a few lingering residents
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Living in Liberty, Wash., hasn’t always been easy for the small town’s few residents. But it’s been worth the fight.
“I kind of look at this place as paradise, you see?” said Wes Engstrom.
At 91 – he will turn 92 in December – Wes is the town’s oldest, living resident.
The tiny mining town is hidden just off Stevens Pass. Today, each building looks like it’s come right out of the 1890s: log exteriors, wooden windows and fences. The main (and only) road stretches through town, which is about a third of a mile long.
In recent years, Engstrom’s little mining town has grown by 33%.
“I used to say that ‘Oh, we have a population of nine people and five dogs.’ But the population has gone up now after my son moved in and a few others, so it’s probably 12 people now. We’re booming!” Engstrom said.
And, he said, during this spooky season, there are a few more longtime wanderers not officially counted in the population.
“We have a few ghosts down there in the old house. Well, Mamie Caldwell lived in this house and built this house down below. And, yeah, she sometimes shows up in the closet down there. And there’s a few up in the mountain there,” he said.
Engstrom first came here in 1971. “I was looking for gold, of course,” he said.
He’s seen the town through fights with mining companies and the federal government.
“They said we were squatting on federal land because they could not find a piece of paper that set this aside as a mining townsite,” Engstrom said.
Congress eventually designated the town a historic district.
Even though he’s now documented much of the town’s history, Engstrom said he wasn’t always a fan of history.
“I wasn’t interested at all, until I got stuck with all these papers and things that needed to be reorganized. And I started looking up a few things … and I just got hooked,” he said, laughing.
People have been hooked for centuries – where the region’s unique minerals and gems have drawn people to what’s now the Swauk Mining District. It has deposits of a rare form of gold, known as crystalline wire gold, which looks like a mass of tangled wires.
“Liberty nuggets were formed when masses of wire crystalline gold were eroded from rocks and tumbled into solid-looking nuggets by the Columbia River fifteen million years ago,” Engstrom said.
Rock hounds also come here to search for Ellensburg Blue Agates, the third rarest gemstone in the world.
In his yard, Engstrom turned on a piece of old mining equipment called an arrastra. Water spouted out the side. The large, circular structure whirred to life.
“You’d throw the gold ore in there, and that rock would crush your gold ore, and the gold would fall to the bottom,” he said.
It’s the only working, historic mining equipment in town. “Other than that big shovel that’s sitting down there,” he said.
Engstrom finished building the arrastra in 1974. It’s a replica of one from the 1930s Virden mining camp.
Soon, across the road, the town will hang its own Liberty’s Bell – the apostrophe will help differentiate it from a certain other bell in Philadelphia.
“The Liberty townsite stands for liberty, which is another way of saying freedom,” Engstrom said.
He said he wants to remind people that this town, its relics and its history, are out here in little old Liberty.
“It is a living ghost town,” he said. “You have to come in and sort of experience the spirit of the place. Because that’s what it’s all about.”
CORRECTION, 10/30/23: We blew it! An earlier version of this story misstated the pass you use to find Liberty, Wash. It’s off Blewett Pass on U.S. Highway 97. Apologies for the error.