Tubb Town | |
Other Name: | Field City |
Settlement Type: | Ghost town |
Pushpin Map: | Wyoming#USA |
Pushpin Label Position: | left |
Pushpin Label: | Tubb Town |
Pushpin Map Alt: | Field City |
Coordinates: | 43.8214°N -104.1408°W |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Name: | United States of America |
Subdivision Type1: | State |
Subdivision Name1: | Wyoming |
Subdivision Type2: | County |
Subdivision Name2: | Weston |
Established Title: | Established |
Established Date: | spring 1889 |
Extinct Title: | Abandoned |
Extinct Date: | September 1889 |
Founder: | DeLoss Dewitt Tubbs |
Named For: | founder |
Timezone1: | MST |
Utc Offset1: | -7 |
Timezone1 Dst: | MDT |
Utc Offset1 Dst: | -6 |
Population As Of: | 2024 |
Population Total: | 0 |
Tubb Town, also known as Field City, is a ghost town in Weston County, Wyoming, United States. It was initially intended as a railroad town but quickly gained a reputation as a rough place to live, as saloons, brothels, and similar establishments became the main draw. Settled and abandoned within months during 1889, it is an early example of a boom and bust town in the Black Hills.
Originally, founder DeLoss Dewitt Tubbs chose the name Field City for the new settlement. However, all residents except Tubbs called it Tubb Town in his honor, and most sources refer to it as such.[1] Other sources refer to it as Tubtown or Tibville.[2]
In the late 1880s, the Chicago, Burlington, and Quincy Railroad (CBQ) made its way through Wyoming Territory, and several settlements popped up in its potential path, vying for a depot that would support a town's economy. In the spring of 1889, Field City was built by DeLoss Dewitt Tubbs, a resident of Custer, South Dakota, further down the expected site of the railroad.[3]
At first, Field City only consisted of Tubbs's general store.[3] Shortly thereafter, F. R. Curran, also a Custer native, arrived. He soon set up a bar, building the walls and roof over it later. Curran convinced Tubbs that the only way to encourage people to stay in town was to provide them a bar, as a general store would provide only a stopping point.[4]
By the time construction on the saloon was complete, the town was beginning to boom. The bar was used by workers from the Burlington & Missouri River Railroad. Later, oil drilling went on in the area.[3] The residents of Whoop-Up, Wyoming, a nearby railhead town, moved to Tubb Town, expecting it to become a large city.[5] Tubb Town soon gained a reputation for being a very rough place to live;[1] reportedly, the initiation was to buy drinks for everyone at the saloons.[6] Saloons, brothels, and dance halls quickly became abundant in the town.[6]
Besides the bars and general store, Tubb Town sported multiple other establishments: two restaurants, a Chinese laundry, a livery stable, and a dairy farm.[4] Frank Nelson founded the Field City Journal, which covered a political rally by Frank W. Mondell for U.S. Representative of Wyoming.[6] The first editions of the Stockade Journal, the forerunner to Newcastle's newspaper, were published in Tubb Town.[7] Calamity Jane is rumored to have visited the town.[1]
Late in the summer, a makeshift school opened for the town's children, operating as a Sundayschool on the weekends. F.B. Curran's brother, J.B. Curran, planned to build a Presbyterian church in Tubb Town, but a dispute between the Curran brothers delayed its establishment,[8] and the town went bust before it could be completed.
At the close of the summer, negotiations between local land owners and the railroad company began to break down. The plot CBQ desired for their depot was on LAK Ranch, owned by Joseph Spencer. CBQ and Spencer failed to agree on a price. On September 1, 1889, the railroad announced that it would not pass through Tubb Town in favor of Newcastle.[3] On September 10, the first lots in Newcastle were sold, and a mass exodus from Tubb Town began.[1] Some residents moved entire buildings from Tubb Town to Newcastle; others simply walked out of their homes.[7] Curran reportedly set up a bar in the back of his wagon and operated for the town's residents while on the move.[4] Within 48 hours, the town was completely deserted.[6]
Overwhelmed by the influx of new residents, Newcastle did not have enough housing. Tubb Town's former residents largely congregated in dugouts along Cambria Creek on the outskirts of town.[7]
In the 1970s, local oil businessman Al Smith tried to turn the old townsite into a tourist attraction. As the post office was never actually disbanded, Smith even considered re-opening it.[9] He bought and disassembled buildings in Newcastle and reinstalled them at the ghost town. However, this venture quickly failed and was also abandoned.[1]
In 1980, a metal sculpture of a man panning for gold and his mule was erected in front of the Provident Federal Savings and Loan bank in Newcastle. A local contest to name the mule was held, and the winner was selected as Tubb Town Trixie.[10]
Tubb Town was located along Salt Creek and the Custer-Belle Fourche Trail, northeast of Newcastle in Weston County, Wyoming, and west of the South Dakota border.[3] Today, the former townsite sits alongside U.S. Route 16. There are no remaining original buildings, and what ruins are there are the results of Smith's attempt to recreate the town. The site is now marked by a memorial commemorating the town's boom and bust.[1]