West of Dillon, Montana·other Bannack stands as Montana's best-preserved and most historically intact ghost town, representing a remarkably complete and visually arresting snapshot of a nineteenth-century mining boomtown preserved essentially frozen in time through more than a century of careful stewardship and deliberate minimal modern development or reconstruction. Located in a remote mountain valley in southwestern Montana, the town was founded in 1862 following the discovery of significant gold deposits in the surrounding geological formations, an event that drew miners, merchants, saloon proprietors, supply vendors, and families seeking fortune in the gold fields and seeking economic opportunity in the rapid expansion of mineral extraction operations. At the height of its prosperity and economic vitality, Bannack bustled visibly with intensive economic activity, commercial enterprise, and entrepreneurial optimism, its streets filled with the sights, sounds, and energy of rapid development and vigorous commercial exchange among diverse participants. Over the subsequent decades following peak prosperity, as accessible gold deposits became progressively exhausted and miners migrated continuously to newer discoveries offering greater promise and profitability, Bannack gradually emptied of its population, its permanent resident community declining steadily until the town reached functional abandonment while retaining most of its physical structures intact and recognizable. Today the site comprises approximately sixty substantial buildings spanning the full comprehensive range of frontier community infrastructure—residential dwellings, commercial establishments, religious structures, public facilities, administrative buildings, and specialized structures—each preserved in a state approaching its historical condition with artifacts and furnishings testament to the vanished society that once occupied these spaces in daily life. The town has been designated a National Historic Landmark and state park facility, offering visitors the distinctive opportunity to experience the authentic visual and spatial environments of a mining frontier settlement with minimal modern intrusion, reconstruction, or interpretive alteration. Yet beneath the considerable historical importance of Bannack's material culture and architectural integrity lies an equally significant and well-documented paranormal dimension that has become increasingly recognized and studied through systematic investigation and extensive visitor reporting. Researchers and paranormal investigators working across multiple decades believe that virtually all sixty buildings within the town are inhabited by spirits of the miners, merchants, families, and other residents who died while the town flourished or who passed away during its prolonged decline and eventual abandonment. The Hotel Meade stands unequivocally as the paranormal epicenter within Bannack, with Room 3 generating the most intense and consistently documented spirit activity within the entire town and surrounding environs. Visitors to Hotel Meade report overwhelming emotional sensations—profound grief, despair, resignation, and peaceful acceptance—that wash over observers upon entering specific spaces, particularly the most actively haunted room and adjacent corridors. Cold spots permeate the building with such dramatic intensity that visible breath appears even on mild days and in temperate seasons. Disembodied voices speak clearly in various regional accents and distinctive dialects, engaging in conversations that reference events and concerns from the mining era. Apparitions of miners, female figures, and family groups have been witnessed moving through the hotel's interior spaces, their forms sufficiently solid and lifelike to be momentarily mistaken for living persons before their spectral nature becomes apparent. In other locations throughout the town, visitors report similar and consistent phenomena including apparitions of distinct historical figures, echoes of children crying, sounds of laughter and music from nonexistent saloons, and the overwhelming sensation of being surrounded by an invisible population continuing its daily routines. Paranormal investigators have documented Henry Plummer, a controversial historical figure associated with violence and moral ambiguity, as a significant spectral presence within Bannack, as well as Dorothy Dunn and numerous unidentified miners and family members. Bannack has become a premier destination for paranormal researchers seeking to investigate phenomena within an authentically preserved historical environment.
Cold Spots
Apparitions
Disembodied Voices