Monday, April 6, 2015

Connecticut Ghost Town Back On the Market After Buyer Disappears

Following up on October 2014's "You Can Buy This Abandoned CT Town For Less Than A Brooklyn Apartment":

Miss Patty's dance studio
 
From Curbed:

Shockingly, the Buyer of Connecticut's Famous Ghost Town Vanished, and Now It's Back for $2.4M
Last fall, the entire ghost town of Johnsonville, Connecticut went up for action with a starting bid of $800K. The 19th-century mill community with eight appealing yet derelict buildings on 62 acres had been abandoned for more than two decades, ever since an aerospace millionaire's attempt to turn it into a theme park was derailed. At the auction last October, Johnsonville sold for $1.9M, but the winning bidder was unable to close the deal. Now the historic ghost town is back on the market, asking $2.4M. "This historic village presents a unique redevelopment opportunity to combine the historic value of the 19th century village with 21st century living," the listing claims. So get to it, aspiring cult leaders or hedge funders with DIY inclinations!

The vanishing buyer is only Johnsonville's most recent setback; there have been many others over the last 180 years. Dating back to the 1830s, the hamlet was once the hub of Connecticut's twine industry, but the industrial revolution kind of nipped that in the bud. Then it was purchased by the eccentric businessman Raymond Schmitt in 1960, who decided to turn it into a theme park....MORE