Greenhorn, located in the Blue Mountains of Grant County in eastern Oregon, is one of the highest-elevation ghost towns in Oregon, sitting at approximately 6,306 feet. The gold mining settlement was established in the 1860s and reached its peak during the Blue Mountain gold rush before declining as the ore played out. The town is now reduced to a handful of deteriorating structures surrounded by dense alpine forest. Visitors to the ghost town have reported supernatural activity consistent with a residual haunting. The sounds of pickaxes striking rock, the creak of ore carts, and muffled conversations have been heard near the old mine openings. Some visitors have described seeing figures in mining clothing walking among the ruins at twilight, disappearing when observers try to get a closer look. The town's extreme isolation — accessible only by rough forest roads — and its high-elevation alpine setting create an atmosphere that feels removed from the modern world. The thin mountain air and the silence of the surrounding forest amplify every sound, making the reported phenomena particularly vivid. Greenhorn's combination of historical tragedy, physical isolation, and atmospheric setting make it a compelling but rarely visited haunted location in the Pacific Northwest.
