Located in Pulaski County, Bloodland was established by a Mr. The only remnant of the previous community is the Georgia City Cemetery (pictured in the top photo) in Oronogo.
A 1930 petition by the founder’s daughter vacated the town and returned it to farmland. Within another 20 years, the town was all but abandoned. A decade later, there were only 50 people living there. Within a year, the population had grown to 200 and a post office was erected. Guinn established the Jasper County town and named it after his home state. Georgia City’s story began in 1868 when founder John C. Some maintain a sparse population with a firm hold on their heritage. Others have only remnants of foundations, cemeteries, and other artifacts as proof of their former heydays. Depopulated or simply forgotten, many have fallen into disrepair.
A detour through these rural locales reveals stories of a changing world and devastating acts of nature. Although the phrase “ghost town” might call to mind the tumbleweed-strewn roads and abandoned wooden storefronts of the Old West, ours tell a different tale. Abandoned buildings, paranormal folklore, and historic relics cast an eerie and intriguing atmosphere over Missouri’s ghost towns.