• Subscribe Now
  • Today In History
  • Wars & Events
    • The Russia–Ukraine War
    • American Revolution
    • The Civil War
    • World War I
    • World War II
    • Cold War
    • Korean War
    • Vietnam War
    • Global War on Terror
    • Movements
      • Women’s Rights
      • Civil Rights
      • Abolition of Slavery
  • Famous People
    • U.S. Presidents
    • World Leaders
    • Military Leaders
    • Outlaws & Lawmen
    • Activists
    • Artists & Writers
    • Celebrities
    • Scientists
    • Philosophers
  • Eras
    • Modern Era
      • 2000s
      • 1900s
      • 1800s
    • Early Modern
      • 1700s
      • 1600s
      • 1500s
    • The Middle Ages
    • Classical Era
    • Prehistory
  • Topics
    • Black History
    • Slavery
    • Women’s History
    • Prisoners of War
    • Firsthand Accounts
    • Technology & Weaponry
    • Aviation & Spaceflight
    • Naval & Maritime
    • Politics
    • Military History
    • Art & Literature
    • News
    • Entertainment & Culture
    • Historical Figures
    • Photography
    • Wild West
    • Social History
    • Native American History
  • Magazines
    • American History
    • America’s Civil War
    • Aviation History
    • Civil War Times
    • Military History
    • Military History Quarterly
    • Vietnam
    • Wild West
    • World War II
  • Newsletters
  • Podcasts
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
Skip to content
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
HistoryNet

HistoryNet

The most comprehensive and authoritative history site on the Internet.

  • Subscribe Now
  • Today In History
  • Wars & Events
    • The Russia–Ukraine War
    • American Revolution
    • The Civil War
    • World War I
    • World War II
    • Cold War
    • Korean War
    • Vietnam War
    • Global War on Terror
    • Movements
      • Women’s Rights
      • Civil Rights
      • Abolition of Slavery
  • Famous People
    • U.S. Presidents
    • World Leaders
    • Military Leaders
    • Outlaws & Lawmen
    • Activists
    • Artists & Writers
    • Celebrities
    • Scientists
    • Philosophers
  • Eras
    • Modern Era
      • 2000s
      • 1900s
      • 1800s
    • Early Modern
      • 1700s
      • 1600s
      • 1500s
    • The Middle Ages
    • Classical Era
    • Prehistory
  • Topics
    • Black History
    • Slavery
    • Women’s History
    • Prisoners of War
    • Firsthand Accounts
    • Technology & Weaponry
    • Aviation & Spaceflight
    • Naval & Maritime
    • Politics
    • Military History
    • Art & Literature
    • News
    • Entertainment & Culture
    • Historical Figures
    • Photography
    • Wild West
    • Social History
    • Native American History
  • Magazines
    • American History
    • America’s Civil War
    • Aviation History
    • Civil War Times
    • Military History
    • Military History Quarterly
    • Vietnam
    • Wild West
    • World War II
  • Newsletters
  • Podcasts
Posted inUncategorized

Ghost Town: Sego, Utah

by Jim Pettengill10/9/2017
Share This Article

Gold and silver drew men west, but coal powered the nation. While most of today’s well-known Western ghost towns prospered during the search for precious metals, Sego was a coal town, supplying fuel for railroads, homes and industry.

Extensive panels of Barrier, Fremont and Ute pictographs and petroglyphs in this area of eastern Utah bear witness to the presence of these distinct Indian cultures over several millennia.

Local rancher Henry Ballard owned most of the town of Thompson Springs, a stop on the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad and site of an 1888 train robbery by the Blue Mountain Gang. In 1908 Ballard discovered a rich seam of high-quality coal in a nearby canyon, hired locals to mine the seam and began to sell it in his store.

In 1911 Ballard sold out to B.F. Bauer, who then founded the American Fuel Co. The company built a general store, a boardinghouse and a coal tipple, along with the first coal washer west of the Mississippi. It also renamed the town Neslin after the mine’s general manager. As miners were allowed to build homes wherever they wished, dwellings lay scattered throughout the canyon. The population peaked at about 500.

By 1913 railroad crews had built a spur to the mine from Thompson Springs; it crossed the canyon stream 13 times in five miles. The mine was shipping 600 tons per day, mostly to Colorado and Green River, Utah. However, the local water table began to drop, causing problems with the mining methods, and flash floods regularly washed out bridges on the railroad spur.

American Fuel fired Neslin as manager in 1916 and renamed the town Sego, after the Utah state flower, the sego lily. In 1925 the company itself was renamed the Chesterfield Coal Co.

Throughout the 1920s the company paid miners mostly in scrip, usable only at the company store. In 1933 the workers unionized for regular pay. Meanwhile, the discovery of dinosaur footprints brought paleontologists to Sego in the 1930s and ’40s.

The mine closed in 1947, but the 27 remaining miners purchased it at a sheriff’s auction and continued operations as the Utah Grand Coal Co. By 1950 fire had destroyed the tipple and other mine buildings, the railroad had abandoned the spur from Thompson Springs, and conversion of the railroad from steam to diesel power had destroyed the regional coal market. In 1955 a Texas-based oil and gas company bought the company, and some mine buildings were moved to other locations.

Today Sego is reachable via a level dirt road from modern-day Thompson. Treasure hunters burned several of the mining-era buildings in 1973. Remaining structures include the general store, railroad bridges, dozens of dugouts and the cemetery. The distinctive two-story boardinghouse recently collapsed. On the drive up to town keep watch for an excellent interpreted rock art site.

 

Originally published in the October 2011 issue of Wild West. To subscribe, click here. 

Share This Article
by Jim Pettengill

more by Jim Pettengill

    Dive deeper

    • Ghost towns
    • Mining
    • tourism
    • Travel

    Citation information

    Jim Pettengill (10/12/2025) Ghost Town: Sego, Utah. HistoryNet Retrieved from https://www.historynet.com/ghost-town-sego-utah/.
    "Ghost Town: Sego, Utah."Jim Pettengill - 10/12/2025, https://www.historynet.com/ghost-town-sego-utah/
    Jim Pettengill 10/9/2017 Ghost Town: Sego, Utah., viewed 10/12/2025,<https://www.historynet.com/ghost-town-sego-utah/>
    Jim Pettengill - Ghost Town: Sego, Utah. [Internet]. [Accessed 10/12/2025]. Available from: https://www.historynet.com/ghost-town-sego-utah/
    Jim Pettengill. "Ghost Town: Sego, Utah." Jim Pettengill - Accessed 10/12/2025. https://www.historynet.com/ghost-town-sego-utah/
    "Ghost Town: Sego, Utah." Jim Pettengill [Online]. Available: https://www.historynet.com/ghost-town-sego-utah/. [Accessed: 10/12/2025]

    Related stories

    Stories

    Portfolio: Images of War as Landscape

    Whether they produced battlefield images of the dead or daguerreotype portraits of common soldiers, […]

    Stories

    Jerrie Mock: Record-Breaking American Female Pilot

    In 1964 an Ohio woman took up the challenge that had led to Amelia Earhart’s disappearance.

    Pony Express National Historic Trail in Wyoming
    Portfolio

    This Patient Rider Spent Months Retracing the Pony Express on Horseback

    In 2019 Will Grant embarked on a 142-day, 2,000-mile horseback journey from the Pony Express stables in St. Joseph, Mo., to trail’s end in Sacramento, Calif.

    Buffalo Bill Cody
    Stories

    10 Pivotal Events in the Life of Buffalo Bill

    William Frederick Cody (1846-1917) led a signal life, from his youthful exploits with the Pony Express and in service as a U.S. Army scout to his globetrotting days as a showman and international icon Buffalo Bill.

    HistoryNet
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    • YouTube

    “History is a guide to navigation in perilous times. History is who we are and why we are the way we are.”

    David McCullough, author of “1776”

    HistoryNet.com is brought to you by HistoryNet LLC, the world’s largest publisher of history magazines. HistoryNet.com contains daily features, photo galleries and over 25,000 articles originally published in our nine magazines.

    Our Magazines

    • American History
    • America’s Civil War
    • Aviation History
    • Civil War Times
    • Military History
    • Military History Quarterly
    • Vietnam
    • Wild West
    • World War II

    About Us

    • What Is HistoryNet.com?
    • Advertise With Us
    • Careers
    • Meet Our Staff!

    Stay Curious

    Subscribe to receive our weekly newsletter with top stories from master historians.

    sign me up!

    © 2025 HistoryNet.
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Service