Temple, North Dakota

Temple is ghost town located in Williams County, North Dakota. There are some remaining structures which include: a small garage, a couple small outbuildings and a couple caved-in houses. In 2003 one of the last two business buildings was either torn down or burned. The school was moved in 2010 and reportedly used as an addition to a house. The last business building collapsed in 2010, and was disposed of by 2012. One of the few remaining abandoned houses was destroyed in 2015. Also in 2015, the church was burned and razed, the reason is said to be because "it had deteriorated to the point that it became dangerous."[1] There is now an occupied camper on the same spot the school was located.

Church building

Geography

Temple, ND is located at 48°23'20.31"N 103°03'21.66"W.[2] The elevation is 2,352ft.

History

The township known as Temple was first established on July 16, 1906, and was originally named Haarstad, for Ole G. Haarstad, the township postmaster and townsite owner.[3] The town was later renamed to "Temple" by officials of the Great Northern Railway. Temple's post office was created on March 12, 1908, and was closed April 30, 1965. [4]

gollark: https://www.reddit.com/r/SubSimulatorGPT2/comments/dd3ksq/eli5_how_exactly_can_something_be_considered/This is a subreddit of bots which simulate particular subreddits using that GPT-2 model. It's asked "ELI5: How exactly can something be considered "self-aware"?". Pretty cool.
gollark: <@478699769175343114> It's not overblown. I thought it was initially, but the big danger seems to be that hospitals will be horribly overloaded with severe cases.
gollark: At my school they're vaguely worried about maybe having to close it, which means there are now vague plans to send people work online, without much actual detail.
gollark: I did find this though: http://www.andrewlipson.com/lstest.html
gollark: Hmm, apparently I do *not* have it bookmarked, sadly.

References

  1. http://www.ghostsofnorthdakota.com/2010/03/04/more-of-temple-nd/
  2. Google Earth v5.0.11733.9347
  3. Williams, Mary Ann Barnes. "Origins of North Dakota Place Names", Bismarck Tribune (1961)
  4. Eide, Marlene. The Wonder of Williams. North Dakota: Williams County Historical Society (1975)

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