Man who spent life savings on abandoned California ghost town once worth $500m reveals they've finally hit water after 160 years

Published on Apr 30, 2026 at 2:32 AM (UTC+4)
by Author Daisy Edwards
Last updated on Apr 30, 2026 at 2:32 AM (UTC+4) · Edited by Emma Matthews
Man who spent life savings on abandoned California ghost town once worth $500m reveals they've finally hit water after 160 years
Man who spent life savings on abandoned California ghost town once worth $500m reveals they've finally hit water after 160 years

After pouring his life savings into restoring a long-forgotten abandoned California ghost town once worth $500 million, one man finally thought he’d cracked the one water problem that had haunted it for over a century.

After 160 years of dry taps and failed schemes, the town of Cerro Gordo had finally struck water.

There were cheers, disbelief, and excitement that maybe this town could come back to life once more.

For a moment, it felt like history had been rewritten, but then everything went sideways.

An abandoned California ghost town finally hit water after 160 years

Cerro Gordo isn’t just any ghost town; it was once the biggest silver mine in California, churning out eye-watering amounts of silver, and with it, money back in its heyday, using old-school tech.

The only catch is that it never had a proper water supply, which is kind of a big deal when you’re trying to run an entire town.

Back in the 1800s, water had to be hauled up an eight-mile mountain road by mules, and every attempt to fix that problem since then has ended in disaster.

Fast forward to today, and the current owner, Brent, who runs a YouTube channel called Ghost Town Living, has spent six years breathing life back into Cerro Gordo, restoring cabins, reopening parts of the mine, and even setting up a hotel.

But none of it works without water, so he brought in a drilling crew with a plan to go hundreds of feet underground, and a whole lot of hope.

After days of slow drilling through rock, they finally hit it.

They found actual water, around five gallons per minute, which might not sound like a lot, but in Cerro Gordo, it might as well be liquid gold.

Cerro Gordo’s breakthrough was short-lived

Naturally, they didn’t stop there, and the team pushed deeper, hoping to find even more water and make the well properly sustainable for the long haul.

And that’s when things went from dream to total nightmare because the drill got stuck with over 600 feet of pipe trapped underground.

They threw everything at it, massive pulling force, industrial jacks, even a specialist hammer setup, but nothing worked.

They had to make a decision about whether to abandon the hole they had made because the precious liquid stopped flowing and start again, or push on and potentially damage their equipment.

While this was a disappointing development, it showed that if they managed to find water once, there’s every chance they’ll do it again.

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