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Zindel, Washington facts for kids

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Zindel was once a small town in Asotin County, Washington. It's known as a "ghost town" because people no longer live there. Zindel had a very short life, existing for only about ten years before everyone moved away.

Zindel: A Vanished Town

Zindel was a small community that appeared on maps for a brief time. It was located in the southeastern part of Washington state. Like many small towns, it likely grew around a specific activity or resource.

The Zindel Post Office

One of the most important parts of Zindel's history was its post office. A post office is a place where people send and receive mail. The Zindel post office opened in 1902. It served the people living in and around the small community. However, it closed just ten years later, in 1912. The closing of a post office often signals that a town is shrinking or that people are moving away.

Who Was M. W. Zindal?

The community of Zindel was named after an early settler. His name was M. W. Zindal. Settlers are people who move to a new area to live and build a community. Naming a town after an important early resident was a common practice in the past.

Why Towns Become Ghost Towns

Many towns, like Zindel, become ghost towns for different reasons. Sometimes, the main reason people settled there disappears. For example, if a town grew around a mine, and the mine ran out of ore, people would move away to find work. Other reasons include changes in transportation, like new roads or railroads bypassing a town. Sometimes, people simply move to bigger cities for more opportunities. Zindel's short existence suggests that the conditions that supported it did not last very long.

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