Wyoming Has A Lost Town Most People Don’t Know About
By Kim Magaraci|Published March 18, 2019
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Kim Magaraci
Author
Kim Magaraci graduated Rutgers University with a degree in Geography and has spent the last seven years as a freelance travel writer. Contact: kmagaraci@onlyinyourstate.com
Wyoming is home to dozens of ghost towns, established when mining or railroad booms brought thousands of people out west. Many of these towns flourished for years until the mines dried up and people moved on, or in the case of the little-known town of Piedmont, the railroad left town. Read the tragic story of this once bustling town below.
Ten miles south of Evanston, off of Exit 24 from I-80 you'll find an old, abandoned town sitting at the end of a dirt road. Welcome to Piedmont.
Piedmont, originally called Byrne, was settled in 1867 as a resource town for the Union Pacific Railroad. Charcoal kilns were built here, and Charles Guild established one of Wyoming's first ranches.
Piedmont thrived! In 1868, railroad crews arrived to lay down track, and Piedmont became a wood and water refueling station. A mercantile was opened, and four saloons kept workers well hydrated.
In 1877, Moses Byrne built four charcoal kilns to help the established logging industry in town. These kilns still stand today, and you can read about them here.
Unfortunately, Piedmont's prosperity was short-lived. When the Union-Pacific dug the Aspen Tunnel in 1910, the railroad was able to skip the steep and winding route down from Piedmont, and the new track avoided the town altogether.