Secret Abandoned Ghost Town Eagle Mountain | 400 Empty Homes In California

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 3 июл 2023
  • Unlike other California ghost towns, Eagle Mountain never truly died. A mystery buyer just purchased entire California ghost town for $22.5 million and a new chapter has been added to its history.
    Eagle Mountain is a ghost town in the California desert in Riverside County. It was founded in 1948 by industrialist Henry Kaiser. Henry Kaiser founded Kaiser Permanente health care for his workers and their families and the town had fully integrated medical care system.
    The town is located at the entrance of the closed Eagle Mountain iron mine, once owned by the Southern Pacific Railroad, then Kaiser Steel. It is located on the southeastern corner of Joshua Tree National Park. Eagle Mountain is accessible by Kaiser Road from Interstate 10 (I-10), twelve miles north of Desert Center.
    In 1950s, as the mine expanded, the town of Eagle Mountain grew to a peak population of 4000 residents. It had wide, landscaped streets lined with over four hundred homes, some with as many as four bedrooms. Two hundred trailer spaces and several boarding houses provided living space for Kaiser's workforce. Other amenities included an auditorium, a park, a shopping center, a community swimming pool, lighted tennis courts, and a baseball field.
    There were several businesses including a bowling alley, two gas stations, eight churches, and three schools. In the late 1930s, Kaiser built the West Coast's first fully integrated steel mill. In 1942, Kaiser built such a mill in Fontana, California, which is located 112 miles west of the Eagle Mountain Mine.
    #eaglemountain #ghosttown #california #californiarealestate #haunted #hauntedhouse
  • РазвлеченияРазвлечения

Комментарии • 1,8 тыс.

  • @exploreusabytexasstarmagaz7213
    @exploreusabytexasstarmagaz7213 10 месяцев назад +692

    Hello: I can answer your questions: This was MY Home!!! We lived there 1960 for 4 years. It was the most beautiful place ever on the desert. We had LUSH green lawns, big tall trees, flowering bushes, paved streets, street lights, well built with AC homes that was owned and maintained by Kaiser. The schools were the best in the USA and our teachers were top in their fields. We had lots of activities, famous movie stars visiting, even Red Skelton's brother worked at the mine with my dad. And we had a good safe place to grow up in, good income, safe working conditions, and 'family' environments.
    IF they could bring it back to its glory days of beauty and Desert Center too! I would move back there in a heart beat! I miss Eagle Mountain. There is water underground, electric power still operational, a huge lake nearby too. Desert Center was the stopping point coming and going from AZ to CA for all traffic. It breaks my heart to see what time has taken away from its one time beauty.
    Most of the original families that lived there are gone now, my parent's generation, and a lot of my age group (60's+) are gone too. Our kids and grandkids have no connection to the town.
    As the drone panned over the community I got to see my house, my best friends' homes, the rec center, the elementary school, the high school, and the shopping area. I CRIED... again, my memories are so strongly attached to those buildings. I know others that see this will have their own memories and that is so wonderful. I pray that who bought this property will not destroy it, but instead bring it back to life... Blessings to all.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад +61

      It’s a pleasure to read comments like yours, glad it brought you good memories of past times, let’s hope the new company preserves the town instead of destroying it.

    • @gregoryagogo
      @gregoryagogo 10 месяцев назад +19

      where are the historic photos?

    • @exploreusabytexasstarmagaz7213
      @exploreusabytexasstarmagaz7213 10 месяцев назад +25

      @@gregoryagogo Hello: Thanks for asking about the historic photos, my sister has most of ours and I have a few in my storage. A lot of the people my age has passed away and their kids didn't care or keep the pictures. There are a few online that I have seen. I wish I could show you just how beautiful the community was back then. Thank you for your inquiry. Blessings

    • @exploreusabytexasstarmagaz7213
      @exploreusabytexasstarmagaz7213 10 месяцев назад +8

      @@OddlyExplorer Thank you so very much for replying. I hope that it is restored for a postive utilization. I would move back if they did. Thanks again. Blessings

    • @tammybrown4901
      @tammybrown4901 10 месяцев назад +4

      Sounds like a wonderful pl

  • @rudydedogg6505
    @rudydedogg6505 10 месяцев назад +662

    This looks like a great opportunity to house at least some of the thousands of homeless people living on California's streets. Bring them here with tools and supplies to refurbish their new-to-them houses, schedule food deliveries and no alcohol, drugs or drug paraphernalia. A remote rehab if you will.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад +57

      Great idea but I think homeless will not like it there with heat and rattlesnakes

    • @mrxman581
      @mrxman581 10 месяцев назад +34

      Those kind of places have been tried in the past and they never last because it just becomes a form of a gilded prison after a while since you're not there voluntarily. There are remnants of that type of facility from decades ago in Downey, California called the LA County Poor Farm.
      Here is a descriptive quote, "For those unfamiliar with the term “poor farm” they were large complexes funded and run by counties or towns to house the poor and destitute, which were often the elderly and disabled. These places were also working farms, complete with fields, orchards, and livestock, which were tended to by the more able-bodied residents, the farm aspect supplied the residents with food, and the excess was sold for profit. Poor farms began to disappear with the arrival of the Social Security in 1935 and were a thing of the past by the mid-20th century."

    • @drmichaelshea
      @drmichaelshea 10 месяцев назад +14

      Oh, boy! That sounds great!! Let me write a check - a big one.

    • @vickiepeek2279
      @vickiepeek2279 10 месяцев назад +5

      i like it

    • @HeadNtheClouds
      @HeadNtheClouds 10 месяцев назад +28

      And they can all hold hands & sing Kumbaya.

  • @doobielawson702
    @doobielawson702 10 месяцев назад +129

    My parents met in this town! They had moved to Oregon by the time I came along. My sister graduated from EMHS in '82. I've always been intrigued by this place. I visited the town in 2014. Rode my motorcycle out there. But I could only look at it from the front gate. Mom and dad are both gone now, but my sisters have some fond memories of the place.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад +4

      So nice to have these memories! 👍

    • @karentrimmer
      @karentrimmer 10 месяцев назад +5

      I had a friend who lived there. I lost touch with her after 1982. They had 5 children, the oldest had just graduated from EMHS, 81 or 82. Her name was Carolyn, she'd be about 70 y/o now. I don't remember her husband's or children's names nor their last name. I'd know them if I heard them. The memory is the first to go!

  • @eaglesnake7005
    @eaglesnake7005 10 месяцев назад +71

    I lived EM from 1956 to 1964 (I was born in Indio). Every day at noon the warning whistle would go off alerting when they blasted the mine. We left and moved to Alaska when I was 12 years old. Still in Alaska. We used to go back when visiting relatives in Blythe, CA. Used to be allowed to walk through the town, but not the last time I was there. Have a lot of photos (color slides of course).

    • @SteveTheFordGuy985
      @SteveTheFordGuy985 10 месяцев назад +7

      What a treat it would be if somehow you could share your pictures of the town when it was a live town with folks living there. Would love to see that.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад +2

      That's great memories 👍

  • @charlieshammer6129
    @charlieshammer6129 9 месяцев назад +96

    I lived in Eagle Mountain as a kid from 1971 until summer of 1979. It was a great place to live, a true sense of community. The people were great, have maintained friendships with some for close to 50 years. Many are dying now. Remembering makes me feel bad for kids today.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  9 месяцев назад +3

      Yes, it was a small and promising town. Unfortunately the international trade changed everything.

    • @caleccopest
      @caleccopest 9 месяцев назад

      me too..

    • @chrisayala3620
      @chrisayala3620 3 месяца назад +1

      Kaiser mine is coming back sir❤❤❤❤

    • @maverick1653
      @maverick1653 2 месяца назад

      My grandfather, Caffrey Wickston, grew up there. He passed away last year. Did you know him?

    • @charlieshammer6129
      @charlieshammer6129 2 месяца назад

      Sorry Maverick I did not know your grandfather, I wish I did... I'm sure he had good memories from Eagle Mountain.@@maverick1653

  • @yeticusrex1661
    @yeticusrex1661 10 месяцев назад +56

    I lived at Eagle Mountain as a kid from 1967-1971; my Mom was a buyer/purchasing agent for the Mine, and we lived in the house at the corner of Palm and Elm (8:14). Played lawn darts with my brother on that green meridian between Palm and Sage. I still have my class pictures from Kindergarten through 2nd grade before my Mom re-married and we moved to Fontana since my stepdad was the chief optometrist for Kaiser Hospital back in 1971.
    The Ghost Town is NOT a secret.

  • @user-ks7gf8uf7m
    @user-ks7gf8uf7m 9 месяцев назад +26

    My husband and I were just married in the early seventies. He was hired by Detroit Diesel as a partsman for the huge earth movers used at the mines. The money was good and we had saved enough money for a down payment on one of the homes there. We couldn’t figure out why our loan wasn’t funded until he and many of the other workers there were laid off. Thank God the banks were aware of the situation and we headed back to LA County to better job offerings. That was over fifty years ago and my husband has since passed. This video brought back some great memories of when we were young and our lives still opening up to what was to become. Thank you!

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  9 месяцев назад +2

      So glad you liked it and brought you great memories of the past 👍

    • @mtsky-tc6uw
      @mtsky-tc6uw 2 месяца назад

      i hauled bennonite from just across the Nv state line down thru Baker 6 days a week until they closed--my truck, and the money was excellent--we would return via needles back to vegas were we lived--do it all over again--hated to see it closed--my semi truck had a detroit diesel in it.Kaiser sold the steal mill to a jap firm who took it down and shipped it to japan...

  • @magprob
    @magprob 10 месяцев назад +137

    My Grandfather was a train mechanic there. I stayed with them a lot and went to school there. It was a wonderful place with many interesting people living and working there. You can never go back home.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад +2

      That's awesome experience 👍

    • @marilynnjacobsen1077
      @marilynnjacobsen1077 10 месяцев назад

      So sad that these companies don't put their own country first and protect our jobs and skills. The government gave tax breaks to companies that moved factories out of this country. The big corporations don't care about protecting their own countries jobs for fellow citizens. Its all about the money as long as they get rich they do not care about anyone else. They all sold out America.

    • @carollong7941
      @carollong7941 10 месяцев назад

      LOVE YOUR PERSONAL STORIES 😍‼️

    • @Chicago48
      @Chicago48 10 месяцев назад +1

      The company that bought it is "ECO" so that means IMO that they will try to build a beautiful lush eco friendly city.

    • @phoenixson4382
      @phoenixson4382 10 месяцев назад

      @@Chicago48 that's what I was thinking when I saw the empty mines where it would be perfect for solar panels

  • @ERCGuy
    @ERCGuy 10 месяцев назад +85

    I worked at the Eagle Mountain Community Correctional Facility for 7 years as a Parole Agent II. The Department of Corrections oversaw operations of Management Training Corporation (MTC) based in Utah. There were seven CDC personnel stationed there and most lived in the housing facility. One Facility Lieutenant, three CDC Sergeants, and three Parole Agent II's. The facility operations were in the old business area, and the Administration Building was the old Bank of America. The old bank vault was our armory. Inmates lived in the buildings that had been used to house single miners. There were two riots there, the first on Feb 27, 1997 and the most serious injury from that one was a sprained ankle of one of the MTC Correctional Officers. One reason why the first riot didn't get out of control was because at that time, the facility had CDC staff on duty 24/7 and we were able to access the facility armory. We got assistance from two CDC Correctional Officers who were there for transportation purposes and from an off-duty Corrections Officer who worked at Ironwood State Prison and lived in the Eagle Mountain housing and was married to an MTC officer. We were able to get assistance from the California Highway Patrol, US Border Patrol, Bureau of Land Management Rangers, and deputies from the Riverside County Sheriff's Department before back-up assistance arrived from Chuckawalla Valley state prison. I left a couple of years before the second riot which got out of hand, in my opinion, because CDC had stopped 24/7 coverage by Department Law Enforcement personnel and there was no access to the facility armory where they kept shotguns and large pepper spray containers. Also, additional fencing that had been recommended after the first riot was never installed. As a side note, one summer day, Kaiser Resources, who maintained a presence on the facility and their weather station recorded a temperature of 132 degrees - only 2 less that the world record high recorded in Death Valley.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад +8

      Wow, that's a very interesting comment! Thanks 👍

    • @zariballard
      @zariballard 10 месяцев назад

      Okay so this community was just another excuse for some big investor, in this case, Kaiser, to build another privatized prison to bring in some free money with every inmate. Privatized prisons are a rich man's trick in this country. Now I get what this "community" was all about.

    • @SandraAnnEvans
      @SandraAnnEvans 9 месяцев назад +2

      THANKS SO MUCH FOR SHARING YOUR FIRST HAND EXPERIENCE THERE . . . WOW.

    • @ERCGuy
      @ERCGuy 9 месяцев назад

      @@johnvanlandingham8832 No reliable weather station there any more.

    • @shaycoles5003
      @shaycoles5003 9 месяцев назад

      I was a MTC Officer there from '94 to '97...I left right before the first riot. But seen my fair share of fights there. I ran the recreation department after Ms. Gady (?) left.

  • @jeffstorm
    @jeffstorm 10 месяцев назад +36

    My uncle Jack worked at Kaiser Steel and lived in Eagle Mountain until he retired in 1978.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад

      That's awesome 👍

    • @cookielapaz8927
      @cookielapaz8927 9 месяцев назад

      My father worked for Kaiser Engineers as a foreman during the 1960s.

  • @beccalove8791
    @beccalove8791 10 месяцев назад +58

    Can you imagine having to move from this place knowing that no one would buy your house and having to start over in another town broke…

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад +1

      I know, that’s a disaster experience. Did Kaiser buy it out?

    • @beccalove8791
      @beccalove8791 10 месяцев назад

      @@OddlyExplorer I don’t know

    • @matthewbogue9283
      @matthewbogue9283 10 месяцев назад +6

      Was it a company owned town? Like, Kaiser owned all the houses?

    • @davidrichardson2869
      @davidrichardson2869 10 месяцев назад +4

      Yes

    • @huu7hbbjko
      @huu7hbbjko 10 месяцев назад

      Yes, I can imagine.
      Been there, done that.

  • @patricksanders858
    @patricksanders858 9 месяцев назад +7

    My Godfather was the Cathloic Priest there for many years and my brother Richard grew up there. I remember visiting them and stopping at the Desert Center lake. Good Times.

  • @dethray1000
    @dethray1000 10 месяцев назад +14

    i hauled bentonite to there until the day it closed--the mill used it to make steel--we came out of amagossa,nv and came down the calbaker road,unloaded and went home to vegas and did the same thing day after day--it was a gravy run,great money,my truck--hated to see it close but fontana was a huge smog maker where they rolled the steel

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад

      Wow, that's great memories, thanks 👍

  • @chanceseiler
    @chanceseiler 9 месяцев назад +12

    In 1990 I was a truck driver with California fright line. They had the contact to haul away the scrap steel from the mine building’s. Even then it was a ghost town. I was not aware of the prison facility in the town. Learned something new all these years later.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  9 месяцев назад +2

      Yes they tried to run a prison there with very little success in the desert heat

  • @carlu-dovica
    @carlu-dovica 10 месяцев назад +39

    Quite an active place when I worked there temporarily in the late 1960's until a fire department job opened in my town nearby. No mention of the heavy equipment and 100 ton trucks that sped the ore up from the bottom of a mega-huge quarry, the expanse of which would take your breath away when looking down from the top. Thanks for a reminder of an era very much different from today, and proudly a part of my past.

  • @cyndshumway
    @cyndshumway 9 месяцев назад +8

    This is where I grew up…
    I attended school there until we had to move. My dad, as school administrator, found employment elsewhere after closing, so I attended High School in a strange new place, a crowded city school with the freshman class of over 1000 students…. 😳
    So much history and innovation created there, it wants to be revitalized but with a renewed spirit and purpose, like that of an ugly duckling becoming swan…. And flying like an eagle… let my spirit carry me…🎶🎵🎼🎤
    (Little me dreaming).
    🥰

  • @shamenstarrstarr4560
    @shamenstarrstarr4560 9 месяцев назад +4

    I grew up here. And, yes, not only would I live here again, but it has been my desire to do so for many, many years!!!

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  9 месяцев назад

      Used to be a great place to live 👍

  • @rodinmiami1632
    @rodinmiami1632 10 месяцев назад +4

    Lived here from 1967 to 1980. Fun place to grow up.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад

      Used to be a great little town

  • @mariepaulinebarajas9676
    @mariepaulinebarajas9676 9 месяцев назад +19

    I live at a shelter on skid row in downtown Los Angeles and I would definitely move here in a heartbeat!!! I have my own tools to help rebuild!!!

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  9 месяцев назад +1

      That's awesome! You can call the new owner and ask!

    • @danoc51
      @danoc51 8 месяцев назад +3

      As a Californian who has just built a house for myself, I can't imagine that one would be allowed to rebuild those homes without going thru an enormous amount of paperwork and then brining the homes and infrastructure into compliance with present-day building codes. Also, the current cost of construction materials would make rehabilitation too expensive. You'd need new plumbing, wiring, windows, roofs, siding, drywall, kitchens, bathrooms and so on. Then, you wouldn't be able to work for a wage unless the mine reopened, which would first require a steel mill within a short distance. Those permits would take years and receive objections from countless people. I've been to Desert Center and Eagle Mountain, and there are no other job sources within 40 miles.

    • @Andromeda2976
      @Andromeda2976 8 месяцев назад

      where can we find contact info?? I´m so interested@@OddlyExplorer

  • @karentrimmer
    @karentrimmer 10 месяцев назад +15

    How sad. I helped friends move there in the 70s. It was a beautiful little town then. I moved out of state shortly after that. I had no idea it had become a ghost town. I also worked across the freeway from Kaiser Steel. I knew it had closed and the Ontario Motor Speedway moved onto the property.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад

      The town can still be restored with investment and the right mindset

  • @abatude5879
    @abatude5879 10 месяцев назад +65

    Maybe homeless people can go there and rebuild with their skills and turn it into their own community

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад +5

      If that ever happens, for their "skills" they would need more guards to guard them than residents...

    • @warpath1998
      @warpath1998 10 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@OddlyExplorerit's possible for homeless to rebuild there

    • @rafaeltorre1643
      @rafaeltorre1643 10 месяцев назад

      @@warpath1998 Yeah it is! You are going to pay for it right? They need millions of dollars, water, food, stores, police? Oh and rehab and a nursing home, oh and transportation and septic tanks, mental health institutions. Oh and a security guard at every block. And who is going to plan this for you? Let us know! Will this look like the projects in the NE where families lived and crime skyrocketed and consequently were imploded 50 years later? And they actually had us taxpayers pay for it. Please tell us how this would work? What’s wrong with them living in tents anywhere they want where they have access to anything? You are right lets put them into a home and abandon them out where its lawless and maybe if they are lucky they will look like Portland except they can do anything they want…. Anything…. 💵🔥😡🔪😌🙃😉

    • @karengiorella2690
      @karengiorella2690 10 месяцев назад +8

      There are thousands of empty derelict military housing communities too. Wish they were used for low income housing. And transitional housing. So much waste in America that can be repurposed to better serve Americans.

    • @WildWabbit3122
      @WildWabbit3122 10 месяцев назад

      The majority of the homeless are either drug addicts or have mental issues. They aren't building anything there.

  • @cookielapaz8927
    @cookielapaz8927 9 месяцев назад +4

    My father, my God father, his son, and their friends all worked for Kaiser Engineers at Eagle Mountain during the 1960s. I hope the new buyer opens the iron mine and brings back manufacturing to California.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  9 месяцев назад

      I hope that too, let's bring the jobs back to US

  • @backachershomestead
    @backachershomestead 9 месяцев назад +11

    That's interesting, never heard of this town.
    Really adds to this story when people commenting had lived there.
    Thank you all for sharing your stories.

  • @moorec1053
    @moorec1053 9 месяцев назад +3

    Whenever i see things like this, i look at the homes, stores, schools......... and womder about all the families and their kids.
    What happened to all those people.?
    Most of us can probably return to where we grew up.
    It has probably changed, but at least your hometown is still there.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  9 месяцев назад

      They all just moved to other towns where they found employment opportunities.

    • @pigoff123
      @pigoff123 9 месяцев назад

      I grew up on bases overseas. They are long gone too now.

  • @madreep
    @madreep 9 месяцев назад +3

    It really bothers me to see so many abandoned homes and completely abandoned towns when there are so many people who could use them. I'm not even talking about squatters or addicts who don't appreciate anything and trash everything they touch, I'm talking about real people in need. The working poor. The elderly. People on fixed incomes like myself lol. I was 34 when I became permanently disabled due to a brain tumor. I support myself and my son on 1,511 per month. Life is a struggle every day. I hope to one day become well enough to return to work. The tumor and resulting brain surgery left me with some challenges and it has been a slow recovery. I would love to be able to live in an abandoned home or trailer and fix it up in exchange for rent so that I could have the opportunity to save so that I can one day have something of my own and I know that there are plenty others out there like myself. People with skills, who are clean and respectful. People who work or want to work but have barriers because they don't have a home or stable housing. I'm college educated and worked at my job for 13 years before I had to stop working to receive treatment for my brain tumor. It was a rare tumor and there's only a handful of specialists in the United States that are knowledgeable about that type of tumor and can treat it. Fortunately I lived 30 minues away from a hospital who had the kind of specialist that i needed but he moved 1700 miles away some years ago and two years ago i moved to where he is because it was too expensive to travel back and forth. It was a stupid decision since I ended up in Phoenix, Arizona where it's crazy expensive to live. I do receive housing assistance from section 8 but it's hard to find a place that will accept it. So i had to take what I could get, which was a 650 square foot 2 bedroom (yes i said 650sq ft) in a less than desirable location, managed by a slum lord. Maybe I'm uppity but I want better. I want to live in a safe neighborhood. I want a garage so that i can buy my son a new bike and he'll have a safe place to store it. We've lost two bikes this summer that were securely chained to the fence outside of our front door and locked because the theives cut the locks. They even stole my adult tricycle which was a gift that I can't afford to replace, it was a 2,000 dollar bike that isn't available in the United States. I can only ride a trike now because I can't balance a 2 wheel bike after my brain surgery. These people out here steal from the people who need it the most. So I don't think it's uppity to feel that I should have better. I may be living well below the poverty line but I'm smart and educated. I have pride in my home. I have an amazing son who is kind, polite, and respectful. I don't drink or do drugs. Never have. Sorry if anyone has made it this far. I'm just ranting I guess. I just don't understand how someone can just throw an entire home away. I will never own a home although I wish to. More than anything. And I know I'm not alone. It is just crazy to me that a person has so much that they can just walk away and it doesn't matter.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  9 месяцев назад +1

      So sorry to hear that... Yes it's awful what happened in Eagle mountain while millions of people can't buy homes... Hope you get better. God bless and good luck!

  • @susanaust869
    @susanaust869 10 месяцев назад +5

    My husband works there in 1973 and 1974 it was good place to live, seeing this makes me my husband is long pass and so to his this. Life just keeps on going on.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад

      Yes, used to be a good town with secure employment

  • @cyndeecollings9461
    @cyndeecollings9461 9 месяцев назад +5

    My dad worked out at Kieser still for many years just when we where going to move out there the mine shutdown. My best friend went to Eagle Mountain HighSchool. Back then it was very beautiful and everything was green. It broke my heart the last time we drove by the road just off I-40. My step sister and her husband lived in Desert Center and he also worked at the mine. It would be great to see that place get a new life, a chance for families to ,live in those homes again.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  9 месяцев назад +1

      I think only some of them can be repaired, better build new homes, many started collapsing.

    • @SamOlds2999
      @SamOlds2999 7 месяцев назад

      5th like

  • @Pamela-jh7sh
    @Pamela-jh7sh 10 месяцев назад +13

    See their always claiming they don't have a place for homeless. This is a example of what they can do for them.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад

      I don't think homeless will like the idea of living there

    • @jjdjj5392
      @jjdjj5392 10 месяцев назад +1

      I think they would love to have a house of their own (the homeless). It can be brought back to life. One man that used to live there said it had lush green lawns and was beautiful at one time. It can be brought back. I hope they presearve the old buildings and the town.

    • @northernpianotuner3319
      @northernpianotuner3319 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@jjdjj5392 ---- I can see your point, but most of the homeless are that way because they are so drugged, they cannot function. They'd have to go thru a mandatory, boot-camp style rehab, to get clean and stay clean. The US in general and California in particular have gotten so soft, that won't be done.

  • @jacquesafley5828
    @jacquesafley5828 9 месяцев назад +9

    Great history lesson of a forgotten town !! 👍😊

  • @cookielapaz8927
    @cookielapaz8927 9 месяцев назад +4

    Im surprised so many people have memories of Eagle Mountain so few know about it.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  9 месяцев назад

      Several thousand people lived there with kids.

  • @sgd5k292
    @sgd5k292 9 месяцев назад +6

    Drive by there from Lake Havasu City quite often to visit relatives in So. Cal (as recently as last week) since the early '80's. Used to stop at the service station in Desert Center until it closed. I have always wondered what was out there. If somebody has bought it, I would bet it would be for huge solar farms which are now infesting the area. Thanks for the video!

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  9 месяцев назад +1

      Glad you liked it! And yes, there are many solar farms in the area and many more are coming.

    • @kathylarson8876
      @kathylarson8876 7 месяцев назад

      That was interesting, until you mentioned that I didn't even realize that desert center was where i used to stop going from Phoenix to California,

  • @tamiweber9409
    @tamiweber9409 10 месяцев назад +3

    Kaiser saw the opportunity to make this a thriving community again. Brilliant Buy 🎉❤🎉❤🎉

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад +2

      Kaiser made a fortune from the mine

    • @tamiweber9409
      @tamiweber9409 9 месяцев назад +1

      @OddlyExplorer Great I love it when people hit a Goldmine as Kaiser did. Maybe a Goldmine is in your future? ❤️ My future? ❤️

  • @LindaToon-cs5mh
    @LindaToon-cs5mh 9 месяцев назад +5

    It should be restored, I lived there back when the prison was there with my older brother and my parents who lived two doors down. My father was a guard and my brother was in maintenance. It could be a great community and yes I would live there again

  • @robertfabra3016
    @robertfabra3016 9 месяцев назад +23

    I was 7 years ago, along with an entire film crew. We lived in the houses for a month. We filmed a sci-fi horror movie there. I personally loved it there. Looked like it does in the video. I can tell it was beautiful at one point. There was definitely some paranormal activity going on. I know there are two families there that are caretakers if the property, as it is fenced into keep looters and scavengers away.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  9 месяцев назад +2

      I'm sure that was an AWESOME experience! 👍

    • @robertfabra3016
      @robertfabra3016 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@OddlyExplorer unfortunately the funding ended and the movie was never finished. But the friendships made were great.

  • @Returned2Forever
    @Returned2Forever 10 месяцев назад +28

    It has an interesting history and deserves to be restored and recreated into something incredible. Anything but a wind-turbine farm.

  • @yelwing
    @yelwing 9 месяцев назад +4

    I have flown over this place a dozen times. It’s surrounded by the WWII training area. You can still clearly see the rocks soldiers placed around their tents and walkways. If you look really hard, you can see tank tracks cutting across the desert

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  9 месяцев назад

      That’s so awesome 👍💪

    • @mtsky-tc6uw
      @mtsky-tc6uw 2 месяца назад

      yup--that is where Patton trained his troops--until the early 80ties you could clearly see the tank tracks

  • @felixtorojr2219
    @felixtorojr2219 9 месяцев назад +8

    I think that the entire area could be revived agriculturely. Also the possibility of an active community as well. You will need people to look after everything once it gets going.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  9 месяцев назад

      It's hard but possible

    • @queenesther5358
      @queenesther5358 4 месяца назад

      Give migrants and refugees this place so that it comes back to life

  • @kathyfalej3762
    @kathyfalej3762 10 месяцев назад +55

    Seems like a perfect solution for the homeless problem

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад +6

      I think you are right 👍

    • @griffinswrath
      @griffinswrath 10 месяцев назад +6

      It gets TERRIBLY hot there, more so than other area's. If I was homeless, I would prefer to be homeless, lol. Was 110 when I went there in 2002.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад +2

      @@griffinswrath yes indeed, up to 115F in the sun in July and August. These houses get hot and can be up to 120F inside

    • @williamedwards8183
      @williamedwards8183 10 месяцев назад

      And illegals

    • @kathyfalej3762
      @kathyfalej3762 10 месяцев назад +15

      So people are worried that’s it’s too hot…who cares. I want them off the streets. This or something like this is the only
      Solution. Spend the money to make it livable. Give them jobs, medical care. All the basics. We already spend millions on the homeless problem, how about using that money to really make a difference. GET THEM OFF THE STREET

  • @miggsblanq
    @miggsblanq 9 месяцев назад +2

    This is awesome… I live in Twentynine palms and had no idea this was here! It’s only an hour and a half drive!

  • @M.Campbell
    @M.Campbell 10 месяцев назад +9

    Some of the houses are definitely in good enough shape to be restored. Others are beyond hope. It would be a great place for a tech based town. Silicon Valley is beyond expensive.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад +1

      Good point! 👍

    • @MrShobar
      @MrShobar 9 месяцев назад

      How do you know? They are all probably filled with asbestos and lead-based paint.

  • @councilmemberwaymondfermon
    @councilmemberwaymondfermon 8 месяцев назад +4

    Eagle Mountain was a small, thriving, and family-oriented community, my family had strong ties to the place. My Grandfather, Ben Fermon, worked at the mine, while my grandmother was employed at the school. My mother, aunts, and uncles all attended school in Eagle Mountain. However, after the 1983 school year, Eagle Mountain High School closed, and my youngest uncle had to attend Indio High School. In 1976, my mother moved to Indio. I have two older brothers, and I was born in 1979. Due to illness, my grandfather also relocated to Indio, while my grandmother remained in Desert Center. Sadly, my grandmother Gladys Fermon passed away in 1985, followed by my grandfather Ben Fermon the next year. My mother, Diana Fermon, followed in my grandmother's footsteps and worked with children. After retiring as a kindergarten teacher, she passed away in 2020, leaving behind seven siblings and three sons. I am the youngest of the three. Im a Correctional Officer for the California Department of Corrections and served as the Mayor of Indio in 2022. I am currently a Councilmember. Despite the changes, there is still a deep sense of pride in our roots. I have vague memories of spending time in Desert Center as a young boy, and it saddens me to see the area disrespected with vandalism. With the purchase of Desert Center and Eagle Mountain, I believe that revitalization is on the horizon. I visit the area about twice a year, and I owe my existence to Eagle Mountain, as my grandfather and family moved from Utah to California to work at the mine. Without Eagle Mountain, I might not be here today.

  • @Swimmyrox
    @Swimmyrox 10 месяцев назад +17

    The first movie I worked on was filmed at the Kaiser steel mill in Fontana. It was called Steel Frontier. I think that was in 1993. That was pretty trippy because there was still a bunch of the infrastructure left from the mill and it was enormous. I think it’s all gone now. I wonder what they did with all the toxic soil that was there. Probably little to nothing. One day a fierce wind came up and blew some dust in my co worker’s eyes. She had to go to the hospital to get treatment for the chemical burns in her eyes. Fun times!🎉

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад

      Wow, is it so toxic ?

    • @rafaeltorre1643
      @rafaeltorre1643 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@OddlyExplorer Anything industrial uses heavy chemicals not fit for human habitation. Decades of this stuff gets dumped in the easiest way possible.

    • @mtsky-tc6uw
      @mtsky-tc6uw 2 месяца назад

      all mine tailings have to be removed after a closure--huge projects--that what the superfund was all about--big clean ups all over the west--been some big ones in utah and the mines are still operating--they bury the contaminated soil---owens lake south of lone pine they put a huge clay cap on top of the alkaline soil--they spent close to a billion bucks they say

  • @maryfranta5673
    @maryfranta5673 4 месяца назад +2

    This is facinating information: I only know about Kaiser Steel because I was a nurse working at Kaiser Permanente in Fontana and in the hospital orientation, they tell the story about the origins of Kaiser Health Care. I never knew! It would be great if the buyer would build or restore some of the older homes and rebulit a community out there in Eagle Mountain. Maybe low income housing would be the best use of this place. The industry would have to come to provide jobs. It could just be a low cost desert oasis. I would pay to spend some nights there in the absolute silent world. Beautiful desolation, as they call it. Thank you for those old stories. X O

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  4 месяца назад +1

      I agree, they could use this town for the benefit of many people. Hopefully it happens one day.

  • @lorrainemendoza8375
    @lorrainemendoza8375 9 месяцев назад +5

    I was passing by the town in 2021. It's a beautiful place to live and so close to Big Bear Mountain. I would love to see the place redevelop.

  • @matthewbogue9283
    @matthewbogue9283 10 месяцев назад +9

    Interesting little documentary. Thanks for the upload! (Music a bit dramatic for the subject matter in my opinion, but still good…)

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад

      Glad you liked it 👍

    • @matthewbogue9283
      @matthewbogue9283 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@OddlyExplorerI did. It looks like a lot of your documentaries are about places of interest to me. My mom’s side of the family is from the Calexico area. They had a dairy there at the turn of the (last) century. Then they had ranches in that area after they closed the dairy. My grandfather helped dig the American canal. I also lived in Brawley for a bit. My step-dad worked at an oil plant that was owned by union oil and located next to the Salton Sea. Also, we used to go down to San Felipe to visit my uncle, a white guy who lived out past the town on the coast by about 30 miles. We would then sometimes drive through the hills in my Grandpa’s motor home over to Ensenada before coming back over the border. All the older generation in my family spoke Spanish as fluently as English. So anyway, I find that whole area interesting because of my history there.

  • @kevinjones4008
    @kevinjones4008 10 месяцев назад +7

    Sad the railroad isn't there anymore would have been good for a scenic railroad and hopefully the town won't be empty anymore and someone nice to help keep it maintained

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад

      Railroad is still there but it’s abandoned

    • @kevinjones4008
      @kevinjones4008 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@OddlyExplorer most of it took up from I 10 now I saw it last week in a semi truck on our way to California that's so sad now

    • @MrShobar
      @MrShobar 9 месяцев назад

      Paid for by whom?

  • @ddunning6207
    @ddunning6207 10 месяцев назад +9

    The company that bought it was formed in March of 23, the property was bought in May. The guy only makes 200k a year? Highly suspect as to what it will be used for. He has a recycling company... Long drive to do recycling.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад

      Probably he financed the deal and will make it a dump or a recycling facility

  • @griffinswrath
    @griffinswrath 10 месяцев назад +9

    I went there in 2002 and there were guards for the prison living in some of the houses. Was surreal to say the least. Oddest ghost town I'd ever been to! Never saw a soul, except for a woman on a porch smoking a cigarette (prolly a guards wife or daughter?). The quietness out there is deafening! Great place to visit if the public still can. I do know the final graduates of the school still meet there, or they did before it was purchased. I don't know if it's blocked off now, and/or they let them still do that.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад +3

      Only school is open there for a few students. The town is fenced and there's security and no trespassing signs

    • @claysmith782
      @claysmith782 10 месяцев назад +5

      I think it would be great if they brought it back into production, and we can start doing things in this country instead of importing globally for our Steel and iron let's get production going back in the United States again, instead of depending on global markets.

    • @davidkesterson
      @davidkesterson 10 месяцев назад

      @@OddlyExplorer indicates they do intend to use it for SOMETHING possibly in the very near future

    • @danoc51
      @danoc51 8 месяцев назад

      I was there about five months ago and it is blocked off and has security personnel. That was before the recent sale, though.

  • @laraoneal7284
    @laraoneal7284 10 месяцев назад +9

    Would have liked a tour of inside the homes.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад

      I wish I could do that but it's a private property with security guards. But there are other videos inside abandoned homes near Eagle Mountain on this channel.

  • @briana.1878
    @briana.1878 10 месяцев назад +15

    Pretty cool place ro explore. Interested to see what the new ownership will so with it.
    Eagle Mountain School K-8 is still open, has around 20 students.

  • @user-iu8lf6tj9w
    @user-iu8lf6tj9w 10 месяцев назад +8

    I've always wanted to see the town that Kaiser built, more interested in the former mine and the Eagle Mountain Railroad. But, the railroad has mostly been ripped apart to keep the curious railfans from exploring the area!

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад

      I think I saw railroad there, will film it next time 👍

    • @SoloPilot6
      @SoloPilot6 10 месяцев назад +1

      Actually, the railroad was damaged in flooding, and never repaired because the mine had closed. I've heard that someone is exploring the feasibility of doing those repairs.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад +1

      @@SoloPilot6 wow, very interesting, I might go and film that railroad too 👍

  • @rmaltbie1
    @rmaltbie1 10 месяцев назад +8

    I’ve raced at Chuckwalla in Desert Center and they’re actually doing new construction in the area, and there’s already a small community at Eagle Mountain pumping plant. Anything is possible, but it’s called the middle of nowhere for a reason. Although the desert is beautiful to visit, I wouldn’t want to live there year-round. RV park may work or rentals if themed properly IMO. Maybe The Flintstones?🤠

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад +2

      That's a great idea, they can create a soft of RV park there, plant some palm trees, etc.

    • @mtsky-tc6uw
      @mtsky-tc6uw 2 месяца назад +1

      eagle mountain was where the steel mill,ironore deposit was--they shipped all the little steel balls to Fontana and they made what ever steel they were making--

  • @undasea
    @undasea 10 месяцев назад +17

    I've heard Ecology Mountain Holdings is a subsidiary of the Umbrella Corporation. And that people have heard strange noises underground there, as if a secret research facility was hidden far below.

  • @JohnDoe-ls1vd
    @JohnDoe-ls1vd 10 месяцев назад +15

    Build a wall around it, fill it with tents and prisoners like they did in Arizona. Bet it would cut crime by 75%

  • @nightcoder5k
    @nightcoder5k 9 месяцев назад +1

    Interesting video. Thank you for sharing.

  • @georgegong6813
    @georgegong6813 10 месяцев назад +8

    Thank you for this very interesting video. They are many remote ghost towns in California. Eagle Mountain reminds me of Trona. Only there they're still residents living there. Not many anymore either though still there!

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад +1

      Glad you enjoyed it. More California ghost town videos are coming soon.

    • @mtsky-tc6uw
      @mtsky-tc6uw 2 месяца назад

      yeah the Trona mine,mill is going strong but most people live in Ridgecrest now,,much nicer town,Ridgecrest--Trona sucks!

  • @alchristensen8121
    @alchristensen8121 10 месяцев назад +6

    I live full time in a camper van and travel all over the west, spending the winters in the desert. I've been past Eagle Mountain a few times but assumed it was at least a semi-active operation. Having seen this video it looks like a good place to boondock when visiting Joshua Tree NP. But that wouldn't work since it's private land. Oh well.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад +3

      You can boondock a few miles south of it in Desert Center, plenty of space and I have seen many campers there.

    • @ben8405
      @ben8405 10 месяцев назад

      The future is a futuristic city!!!
      FOR GOOD FOLKS.
      NO DRUGS, NO BAD HABITS, NO. GREED!
      NO CROOKET POLITICS.
      Freedom of folks that break
      Good laws.
      We need a good place to be an example for the future!

  • @lwilmoth1573
    @lwilmoth1573 9 месяцев назад +3

    My dad worked at Kaiser then went up to Eagle Mt ..it was really green at that time best time living with my family there as a kid

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  9 месяцев назад

      Those were the glory days at Eagle Mountain...

  • @faustinreeder1075
    @faustinreeder1075 9 месяцев назад +1

    I used to work for Kaiser Steel in Fontana. Worked there for a year in 1981-1982
    Great pay for sure and met quite a few colorful characters. I used to cash my paycheck at a liquor store on Cherry Avenue.
    Great video

  • @crabby2186
    @crabby2186 4 месяца назад +1

    Lived there when it was a prison. Loved it as a kid i could explore old houses or buildings. If it ever opens to the public id love to show my family it.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  4 месяца назад

      Hopefully they reopen it someday.

  • @rk-ec7kx
    @rk-ec7kx 10 месяцев назад +4

    A cool old place I'd love to walk around and check it out

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад +1

      Great idea but there are security guards and no trespassing

  • @simons5193
    @simons5193 10 месяцев назад +11

    Interesting video. I guess it is not open to the public. I would love to explore this place.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад +3

      No, it’s a private town now with 24 hr security

  • @jerrykeenan1848
    @jerrykeenan1848 9 месяцев назад +1

    Very interesting. Thanks

  • @Blueyez67
    @Blueyez67 9 месяцев назад +1

    We moved to Eagle Mountain in 1956,the year i was born, through 1971. Eagle mountain was the best place ever to grow up. You never had to worry about anyting. We were all like one big family. We took care of and looked out for each other And most of us still are to this day. We drank out of hoses, slid down the gullies on cardboard boxes, after it rained we would go looking for polliwogs, or tadpoles for those of you who don't know what those are LOL. nice green lawns,nice houses,great schools,teachers, and the most Absolutely greatest people that ever walked this earth.What's really sad is my kids and my grandkids will never experience where I grew up or even see it. Its hard not to cry just thinking about Eagle Mountain. If there was ever a chance to live there again with all the security and safety we had, I would move back there in a heartbeat.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  9 месяцев назад

      What an awesome memories! 👍 Indeed it was a great place to live 👍

  • @Cmon-Man
    @Cmon-Man 9 месяцев назад +4

    And another excellent video that has many memories for me. Been there several times in the ‘70s. It was a beautiful place because of the underground water supply. I had a friend that worked at that correctional facility. My opinion, that would be a good option for that area, to bring people back, you have to have some commerce. There is nothing else out there to build from. Minimum security correction facility would bring a lot of opportunities for jobs. Thanks again for your content. Brings some new info to places I have been so many years ago, now laid up with a broken foot, having 🤩 fun.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  9 месяцев назад +3

      I'm so glad you liked the video! In my opinion they can build a great rest area 8 miles south in Desert Center on I-10. That place is still very popular for truck drivers and tourists looking to get some rest. Instead they take a nap in the dust. And yes, in Eagle Mountain they can build another facility or solar energy farm.

    • @Cmon-Man
      @Cmon-Man 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@OddlyExploreryes, absolutely bringing life back to Desert Center would be awesome and start the flow of people into the area. I haven’t thought on this place for years , now with new ownership, curious as to what they will do. Solar farm wouldn’t surprise me but that wouldn’t bring much employment, some type facility would bring more opportunity for jobs. Be interesting to follow up on.

  • @conniekehres
    @conniekehres 9 месяцев назад +8

    Would be interesting to see or know if there are other minerals in the area that might be of interest for mining. There are reports from the Salton Sea area of massive lithium deposits for instance.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  9 месяцев назад +4

      The rumor is that there’s a lot of lithium in that area.

    • @mfburns7909
      @mfburns7909 2 дня назад

      It's an extremely yellow desert,meaning it's high in lithium

  • @latigomorgan
    @latigomorgan Месяц назад

    I was working on a job in the mine there in 1992 drilling water monitor wells. At the time, Riverside County was looking at turning the mine into a landfill. The town was abandoned then and our contact told us to pick out one of the furnished houses to stay in. We drove down to Desert Center for groceries and beer.
    I remember I had trouble sleeping at night because of the noise from the prison.

  • @jomama5186
    @jomama5186 10 месяцев назад

    I love your videos even though they are beautiful and compelling.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад

      Wow, thank you! Glad you like them! 👍

  • @BennilocoLoves
    @BennilocoLoves 10 месяцев назад +5

    I would explore there, but I would only live there if it were alive.. 😁 Nice video! Cheers from the high desert 🏜

  • @TrulyGuest
    @TrulyGuest 9 месяцев назад +3

    Frankly we have all kinds of land like this in California. I used to go on these weekend drivers from Highland and every back road. I found abandoned government sites where they had gone off years ago left buildings with desks, chairs, papers, etc from 15-20 years ago.
    Even more sites. Who knows for what, but they cleared out.
    There’s a lot of vacant property that could be used for retraining homeless that want that. For jobs that could have housing attached. Open your mind.

  • @Mike-tube72
    @Mike-tube72 6 месяцев назад +1

    Just awsome,id love to do what your doing ,god bless you.great videos love it🎉

  • @elizabethgallardo954
    @elizabethgallardo954 9 месяцев назад +4

    so sad to see how it become. I cant believe beautiful town like this will become a ghost town. I hope they revive this town again.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  9 месяцев назад

      Only if they reopen the mine or build a factory

    • @MrShobar
      @MrShobar 9 месяцев назад

      It's like any ghost town in the American West. The company owned the town and provided the jobs. No jobs, no workers no more town.

  • @donaldwarriner1640
    @donaldwarriner1640 10 месяцев назад +6

    If you look at the developments all around the region I believe it will be revived and refurbished with new homes. Sadly track housing is swallowing up all the beautiful desert spots and the natural serenity into cold and environmental outdates boxes.

  • @kathleenmccown3066
    @kathleenmccown3066 10 месяцев назад +3

    I'd love to live there !!! Yes it should be restored

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад

      There may be a lot of asbestos in these houses…

  • @randyk7699
    @randyk7699 10 месяцев назад +1

    Very interesting! Thanks

  • @JaredMerlin
    @JaredMerlin 6 месяцев назад +1

    This place is fascinating!

  • @teresaboucher9371
    @teresaboucher9371 10 месяцев назад +4

    Yes I already live in riverside. I was born in Fontana kaiser hospital..... yes I think it should be rebuilt creat jobs for homeless that want to better themselves and get the chance to have a own home that they built....it could be a good idea for restoration of the town..,....ext... I would love to live and help work on town.. I'm pretty good at construction remodeling landscaping..my dad worked with the water public utilities for Riverside county.,, water maintenance supervisor...retired now...but that is how we were able to have heath insurance with Keiser hospital...❤😮kind of cool on how I kind of connect with the ghost town a little...

  • @claudehighsmith7311
    @claudehighsmith7311 10 месяцев назад +5

    If food and water were available it would make a good retirement facility with recreation facilities entertainment and medical staff also have a good security system armed guards.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад +1

      Too much heat there for seniors, only factory workers can tolerate it and only for a while, in my opinion...

  • @datmixednut1254
    @datmixednut1254 6 месяцев назад +1

    That was a smart buy ! already running water and power this city will be up and running within the next 5 years and looking beautiful with million-dollar homes ,,,I will continue to check the progress since I'm 30 minutes away

  • @enlat2003
    @enlat2003 Месяц назад

    Great video. Music a bit dramatic for the subject being covered though. Keep up the good work.

  • @charlielaudico3523
    @charlielaudico3523 10 месяцев назад +5

    It was corporate town for the miners! It is trashed last time I was there! Ok put the homeless in the middle of the desert where we can't see them!

  • @davidkesterson
    @davidkesterson 10 месяцев назад +5

    well it does sit at 1400 feet it could be beachfront property someday

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад

      If you pour enough water into the open mine and make it a lake 😊

    • @davidkesterson
      @davidkesterson 10 месяцев назад

      @@OddlyExplorer well yeah maybe a fishing resort or something? you might have something there

  • @dakotaiv
    @dakotaiv 29 дней назад

    My parents lived here from 1964 to 1983. I graduated from high school in Eagle Mountain in 1975, Two of my brothers also graduated after me and one of my younger sisters was in the last graduating class in 1983.

  • @danvision5086
    @danvision5086 9 месяцев назад +1

    *As a Ghost Town, Eagle Mountain is just perfect , very good for the tourists!!! I love it !!* 💙💙💙

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  9 месяцев назад

      It really is! But it's a private property and no trespassing area.

    • @danvision5086
      @danvision5086 9 месяцев назад

      @@OddlyExplorer *Yes, but the owner , can get some money, but maybe, he doesn't need !*

  • @805MechanicMatt
    @805MechanicMatt 10 месяцев назад +3

    I find it a bit odd that the Keizer facility just got destroyed by a tornado and this was purchased about a month before 🤨

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад +1

      Wow really? Since when they have tornados in California?

    • @iamgabriel5823
      @iamgabriel5823 9 месяцев назад

      @@OddlyExplorer They have had tornados in CA ever since the gvt started manipulating the weather. NONE of the weather in CA is natural. It is all manipulated by HAARP and other gvt programs.

    • @okoutdoors9497
      @okoutdoors9497 9 месяцев назад +1

      It’s Pfizer not Keizer that got hit. That’s in NC not CA.

  • @reggiejones6716
    @reggiejones6716 9 месяцев назад +3

    Yes it should be restored and no I wouldn’t live there but I do think when you have a place with so much history we should definitely make sure it stay alive as much as possible…

  • @GFS6666
    @GFS6666 9 месяцев назад +2

    My Father worked at the Iron Mine and Mom/Dad/5 kids lived in a mobile home there for about a year or two. I remember the sand storms that used to hit the area. They looked so weird. I got hit by a golf club that another kid was swinging around (hit me in the head. Mom said she never saw so much blood) and was treated at the hospital there. The area had large numbers of Tarantulas. My father was a drunk then and he wrecked a Ford Falcon into the schools chain link fence and took out like 100 ft of fence. Was an interesting place to grow up at.

  • @thomasjennings2593
    @thomasjennings2593 8 месяцев назад +1

    I grew up in Needles, CA in the 60s and 70s. We played high school sports against Eagle Mountain. They had lots of talent and it was always a tough game. Nothing like playing football against a bunch of miners' sons. Like the song says: "The children of a mining town are raised on iron and lead"

  • @suzannehaigh4281
    @suzannehaigh4281 10 месяцев назад +5

    Would that not make an ideal place to put the tiny homes for homeless, gradually building into a living town again ?. Businesses could invest in ventures, big or small solving the plight of many homeless on the street and so clearing the mess generated. I fully understand more is needed for this to become a long term solution but is it not worth a try?

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад

      No employment opportunities nearby. Homeless will not like the heat

    • @suzannehaigh4281
      @suzannehaigh4281 10 месяцев назад

      @@OddlyExplorer If business invested some employment would be there, surely something could be done? Such a shame if not, loads of abandoned towns in the USA.

  • @davidbreen4353
    @davidbreen4353 10 месяцев назад +9

    yeah it could be used as a maximum federal prison. spend some money building a high voltage double fence around the housing, no need to repair anything, put the inmates in just like it is. chopper the food and water in, and let them run the place. you would only need 25 guards, pay them a good salary, build them some concessions so they don't go nuts doing nothing all day. and your done!

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад +4

      That's a great idea 💡. And there's little point in escaping because of the desert and 50 miles to nearest towns.

    • @mitchmiller7204
      @mitchmiller7204 10 месяцев назад

      @@OddlyExplorer I thought it was 12 miles from Desert Center.

  • @kathybeeston6429
    @kathybeeston6429 6 месяцев назад

    A smart developer could make it beautiful once again. Make it like the Old Palm Springs. Great video

  • @lqmom1982
    @lqmom1982 9 месяцев назад +2

    This was my home town from 1966 till 1983 when it closed.

  • @obviouslyurnotagolfer148
    @obviouslyurnotagolfer148 10 месяцев назад +3

    The problem is it's still a desert. There is a good reason it became a ghost town.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад +1

      The reason it became a ghost town is that the mine was closed

  • @crabappleracer
    @crabappleracer 10 месяцев назад +3

    A town that could be brought back to life, California EPA laws would probably keep the mine shut down.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад

      That’s very possible

    • @MrShobar
      @MrShobar 9 месяцев назад

      Economics would probably keep the mine shut down.

  • @boonhinglim6670
    @boonhinglim6670 9 месяцев назад +1

    So many response,good video

  • @user-lx1is2wl7i
    @user-lx1is2wl7i 10 месяцев назад +7

    Kaiser over-spent on a marginal location which likely had a sparse amount of available water. It would have been better had Kaiser brought-in portable housing which could be moved when the mining was done. Collecting reasonable rents would have been a good option for basic housing, but it's all history now.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад +4

      Kaiser made a fortune from this mine, he knew that business would be over sooner or later.

    • @joywebster2678
      @joywebster2678 10 месяцев назад +2

      And a war effort required all ideas to be pushed and his main business was shipbuilding. So he needed iron/steel, he got it. His healthcare, so similar to other countries entire Healthcare systems was his claim to fame. By keeping his workers healthy on site he saved on having to keep finding new unskilled laborers. And most "one company towns" didn't survive as we see on this channel and others many of Henry Fords idyllic towns he built for his various enterprises were nice and had other industries or businesses joined those sites, people,e could have stayed when the sole company pulled out. But that wasn't the way of "company towns".

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад +1

      @@joywebster2678 you are 100% right about it 👍

  • @zaidshirbaz156
    @zaidshirbaz156 10 месяцев назад +3

    I think the best idea repair the houses and bring the homeless people in this town.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад +1

      I think that's a great idea 👍

    • @stridersmythe8860
      @stridersmythe8860 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@OddlyExplorer who would pay for that, Homeless people would not be able to maintain them. how would they feed themselves.

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад +1

      @@stridersmythe8860 it's a better idea to create a retirement community there

    • @stridersmythe8860
      @stridersmythe8860 10 месяцев назад

      @@OddlyExplorer yep

    • @davidortega357
      @davidortega357 10 месяцев назад

      Let the county pay them houses for repair bring in water sewer and electricity for air conditioner open up mining for iron silver, copper build a dump site for trash build a prison , mental health facility get the homeless out of Los Angeles county clean our beaches cities put a grocery store and gas station burger ,taco joint

  • @joywadelle9658
    @joywadelle9658 9 месяцев назад +1

    This is the perfect place for an amusement park. It has enough space for an amusement park and a place to ride ATVs. Be sure to include a swimming pool at the amusement park. Happy trails new owner!

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  9 месяцев назад

      That's a great business idea 👍

    • @mfburns7909
      @mfburns7909 2 дня назад

      It's 50 miles from the closest town

  • @damenbutvidas61
    @damenbutvidas61 8 месяцев назад +1

    I grew up there until 1982. Would move back in a second.

  • @johnnycarpenter1744
    @johnnycarpenter1744 10 месяцев назад +3

    The scary part is not knowing anything about the new owners who they really are and what they have planned . something up
    What's really going on ?

    • @OddlyExplorer
      @OddlyExplorer  10 месяцев назад

      The rumor is that Chinese are behind this company but it's only a rumor

    • @DamGreek
      @DamGreek 9 месяцев назад

      @@OddlyExplorer That rumour doesn't surprise me at all. Many speculate the Chinese are buying everything and being quite secretive about it.