Travel Tips
Travel tips from this month's Journeys column
- By Smithsonian magazine
- Smithsonian.com, May 01, 2001, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
Getting There:
From Denver, Colorado, the trip is 155 miles and will take about three hours. Take Interstate 70 west 21 miles to Interstate 470 south and go 3 miles. Turn right on Highway 8 and drive south 2 miles to Highway 285. Turn right and drive southwest for about 115 miles. Take a right onto Highway 50, heading west, and continue on it for 11 miles into St. Elmo. St. Elmo General Store, P.O. Box 158, Nathrop, Colorado 81236; Telephone: 719-395-2117; e-mail: generalstore@st-elmo.com.
NEW MEXICO:
About two dozen adobe and wood frame buildings line Wall Street in the privately owned town of Chloride, located in the central-western part of the state.
Chloride
Chloride's general store, the Pioneer (c. 1881-1923), was recently converted to a museum. The Pioneer and the other buildings are owned by Don and Dona Edmund; Telephone: 505-743-2736. Admission is free, but donations are encouraged.
Getting There:
Chloride, on Forest Road 226, is two miles southwest of Winston, located off State Highway 52. The owners ask that you drive only on the roadways.
UTAH:
The streets of southern Utah's Johnson were once part of a movie set that has gradually faded into ghost town status. Also in the south of Utah are the desolate ruins of the Mormon town of Widtsoe Junction.
Johnson
Located outside Kanab, Utah, Johnson is privately owned but is sometimes open for tours; call 435-644-5323. Admission is $3 per person to view the set, which appeared in such movies and series as How the West Was Won, Wagon Train and Gunsmoke.
Getting There:
From Kanab, go east ten miles on Highway 89 until you reach Johnson Canyon. Turn left and drive about five miles. The movie sets are visible from the road.
Widtsoe Junction
The old schoolhouse and the ruins of a few other buildings are all that remain of this former Mormon town. One third of the town is privately owned, another third is owned by the State of Utah and the final third is owned by the federal government.
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