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Elberton is a ghost town on the north fork of the Palouse River northeast of Colfax and northwest of Palouse in Whitman County, Washington, United States.

Elberton
Unincorporated community
Elberton
Location in Washington, and the state's location within the USA
Coordinates: 46°58′53″N 117°13′13″W
CountryUnited States
StateWashington
CountyWhitman
Incorporated24 April 1896
Disincorporated14 January 1966
Population
  Estimate 
(as of unknown date)
15
Time zoneUTC-8 (PST)
  Summer (DST)UTC-7 (PDT)

Geography


Elberton is located in southeastern Washington at 46°58′53″N 117°13′13″W. The nearest cities are Spokane and Pullman in Washington, Moscow in Idaho, and the Lewiston/Clarkston metropolitan area that spans the two states. It is in the middle of the Columbia River Plateau, in a region called the Palouse.


History


Elberton was first settled by C.D. Wilbur. The townsite was platted in 1886, and named by S.M. Wait for his deceased son Elbert.[1]

Elberton was incorporated as a fourth class town on 24 April 1896. It grew to have a population of 500 and at one time had a sawmill, a flour mill, a railroad (the Oregon-Washington Railroad and Navigation Company) that passed through and the world's largest prune dryer.[2]

A major fire started in the town in the 1930s and due to the Great Depression, many of the businesses and homes destroyed by the fire were too costly to rebuild. The fire, along with the Depression hurt the town greatly and it started to decline in population, with people packing up what they could carry and abandoning their homes that they could no longer afford to keep and maintain.

The now-abandoned United Brethren Church building in Elberton, Washington
The now-abandoned United Brethren Church building in Elberton, Washington

In November 1966, residents of Elberton voted 15–5 in favor of dis-incorporation.[3] Elberton became part of unincorporated Whitman County, Washington again within four years, when the county acquired the property of the town. As of 2005, Eleberton is the last instance of a municipality in Washington voting to disincorporate.[4]

Currently, about 15 people live in the 200-acre (0.81 km2) area that once was Elberton.[4] Many of the original homes and buildings have gone or are partially collapsed. Remaining landmarks include United Brethren Church (built in 1913) and the Elberton Cemetery.[5]


See also



References


  1. Majors, Harry M. (1975). Exploring Washington. Van Winkle Publishing Co. p. 143. ISBN 978-0-918664-00-6.
  2. Benoit, Matt (2 October 2013). "Haunting a Ghost Town". Inlander. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  3. "Prune Town Dries Up". St. Petersburg Independent. 19 November 1966. p. 14-A.
  4. Cooley, Megan (5 March 2005). "City's demise could mean state control". The Spokesman Review. Retrieved 11 September 2022.
  5. Lambeth, Robert M. "Ghost Town of Elberton". Spokane Historical. Retrieved 11 September 2022.





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