ADVERTISEMENT

Turns out there are people who’d choose to live in a ghost town—and even own one.

Meet Brent Underwood, a 31-year-old entrepreneur who, along with his friend Jon Bier, bought a ghost town called Cerro Gordo back in 2018 for a whopping 1.4 million dollars.

He spent his entire life’s savings on it, as well as money from his business partner Jon, friends, clients, and other investors, in hopes of turning it into an authentic tourist attraction.

Fast forward to the start of 2020, the coronavirus hits and Brent decides to self-isolate in Cerro Gordo. The initial plan was to stay for 3–4 weeks because he thought that’s how long quarantine would last, but he ended up staying there for 6 months now—first because of the snowstorm and the pandemic, and then because he fell in love with the place.

Meet Brent Underwood, the guy who spent the last 6+ months living in Cerro Gordo, a ghost town

Image credits: Ghost Town Living

So, Cerro Gordo, the 300-acre ghost town, used to be the largest silver producer in California with about 4,000 people across 400 houses. Over its entire history, the inhabitants managed to mine around 17 million dollars worth of silver—500 million bucks today after adjusting for inflation.

But the mines ran dry, and so did the town. Brent is now the only resident in a 22-building town—actually, him, 7 cats, and 4 goats.

Brent and his friend Jon Bier bought the 300-acre ghost town in 2018 for $1.4M in hopes of rebuilding it and making it into an authentic tourist attraction

ADVERTISEMENT

Image credits: Ghost Town Living

When the coronavirus hit, he packed up his bags and self-isolated there, renovating and rebuilding

Image credits: Ghost Town Living

At first, he thought he’ll be there for several weeks, but ended up spending 6 months there

Image credits: Ghost Town Living

Recently, Brent came to Reddit with an AMA (Ask Me Anything) session urging people to ask questions as well as a YouTube video about his 6-month experience living in a ghost town.

“The more time you spend in Cerro Gordo, the more it enchants you,” explained Brent. “It’s weird to say that out loud that a property can do that, but, like, maybe see it in the video, it looks beautiful, but here, there’s something about this place, it casts a spell on you, this is the only place you wanna be.”

So far, Brent’s worked on some of the 22 buildings still standing, cleaning them up and renovating

ADVERTISEMENT

Image credits: Bishop Real Estate

Image credits: Bishop Real Estate

There’s a general store he’s looking to transform into a museum to house all of the stuff found onsite

Image credits: Ghost Town Living

ADVERTISEMENT

Image credits: Ghost Town Living

Over those 6 months, Brent undertook a number of projects: he’s reworked the bunk house into a place for people to stay in, cleaned up and restored the former garage-turned-chapel, transformed a shed into a simple and cozy writer’s retreat, and turned the general store into a museum to exhibit all the cool things he found onsite.

His most important project thus far is restoring the town’s water supply system. The town has a 900-foot-deep mine shaft with a hoist from the 1800s. He teamed up with some of the more distant locals and went down 700 feet to find the spring used for the water supply. They replaced the pump, restored over 500 feet of piping, and now the town has running water for the first time in almost 15 years.

ADVERTISEMENT

The ghost town is home to a number of mines, some of which Brent has already explored

Image credits: brentwunderwood

He managed to find leftover denim clothes, a rusted gun, and even dynamite!

Image credits: brentwunderwood

Image credits: brentwunderwood

Take a look at one of Brent’s descents into the mines

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Brent Underwood (@brentwunderwood) on

“Our goal is to maintain the historical nature of the property and respect the piece of history,” Brent in an interview with NBC. “We want to continue this piece of American history.”

Now, Brent did receive some help from friends, but for the most part, he has been doing everything alone in a town whose location is not easy to access: “Out here, you learn to depend on yourself. If you forget something, too bad. Figure it out. If you don’t have the right screw, figure out some other way.”

Besides the scraps and junk he found stored in many of the buildings, there were also some treasures for the museum. These include an old rusted pistol, denim mining clothes (jeans and jacket), various tools and hats, pots, pans, utensils, even leftover dynamite in the mines.

ADVERTISEMENT

Among the many projects he did around the ghost town, the biggest one is restoring the water supply

Image credits: Ghost Town Living

Some more distant locals offered help with replacing the underground water pump using the 1800s hoist (seen below) to go down a 900-foot mine shaft

Image credits: Ghost Town Living

They replaced the pump found at the 700-foot depth and water was running for the first time in 15 years

Image credits: Ghost Town Living

His 6-month stay in Cerro Gordo hasn’t been easy. The crown jewel of the town, the American Hotel, which has stood there since 1871, has burned down due to some tinkering with 100-year-old wiring. Then there was an earthquake that shook things a little bit and an extreme hail storm that damaged the road and the power supply.

To top it all off, there’s believed to be ghosts there. One day, Brent went down to the bulk house and noticed that the light was on in the kitchen—the curtain moved and a face peeked out. At first, he thought that was the contractors, but soon found out that they had left weeks ago. After locking the door, he noticed how the light turned back on again despite the house being locked. Needless to say, he has been reluctant to enter it since then.

ADVERTISEMENT

There’s only one house that has a functioning stove, as well as a bathtub and a toilet

Image credits: Ghost Town Living

Image credits: Ghost Town Living

Since the 6-month update, all of this went viral with the YouTube video garnering over 645,000 views, and his AMA drawing in over 40,000 upvotes and 4,600 comments.

Brent will continue living there, working for another month until winter comes and continuing work in the spring. His plan is to have it all open for next summer.

The 1871 American Hotel, the crown jewel of the town, was unfortunately burnt down due to old wiring, a Patreon fundraiser is now up to restore the loss

Image credits: Ghost Town Living

The town even has a chapel—a former mining equipment garage before the mines dried up

Image credits: Ghost Town Living

Image credits: Ghost Town Living

You can check out the full update video in the article below. Besides his YouTube channel, he also has an Instagram where he also posts updates and lucky finds, and he has also launched a Patreon to fund the rebuilding of the American Hotel, so consider checking it all out.

While it’s called a ‘ghost town’ because it was abandoned, Brent thinks there actually is a ghost residing here

Image credits: Bishop Real Estate

He saw a face and curtains move in the window of the bulk house weeks after the contractors stayed there

Image credits: Ghost Town Living

Image credits: Bishop Real Estate

Check out Brent’s recap of his 6-month experience in the ghost town below

Image credits: Ghost Town Living

What are your thoughts on this? Would you want to live in a ghost town for 6 months? Let us know in the comment section below!

Here are some Qs and As from the Reddit AMA