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According to one report, when a professional photographer took a picture of the empty room, the ghostly figure of a man appeared on the developed print. Continuing to celebrate, guests and staff have often heard the pair whispering and laughing from the room when it is empty. The first and foremost ghosts are Clark Gable and Carole Lombard, who evidently had so many fine memories of the old hotel that they simply refuse to leave. The Oatman Hotel is one of the biggest attractions of the small village as the word of its mischievous ghosts has spread far and wide. Today only about 100 people live in Oatman year-round. When Route 66 was replaced with the interstate, Oatman again suffered a devastating blow and dwindled to a few gift shops and restaurants. Over the years, the old hotel carried several names but was changed to the Oatman Hotel in the 1960s. Though devastated, Clark continued with his life and career and later married again. Sadly, Carole Lombard was killed in a plane crash in January 1942. Clark was known to spend many a night playing poker with some miners. Remembering this memorable night, the couple often returned to the hotel for the peace and solitude it afforded them. But with the advent of Route 66, the old town and the hotel hung on, catering to the many travelers along the new highway.Ĭlark Gable and Carole Lombard after their marriage.Īccording to the Hotel (*see special note at the end of article), on March 29, 1939, Clark Gable and Carole Lombard spent their wedding night thereafter having been married in Kingman, Arizona. The largest mining company, United Eastern Mines, shut down its operations in 1924, and the town almost died. However, both the population and the mining boom were short-lived. However, the town was rebuilt, and the old hotel was repaired in 1920, continuing to host its many guests. Oatman suffered three major fires that almost destroyed the town in just a few short years. The rich gold discovery brought hundreds of new settlers, and within one year’s time, Oatman had grown to more than 3,500 residents.

Before that time, the town had been little more than a mining camp. The eight-room hotel did a brisk business to area miners, especially after two miners struck a rich vein that would end up being a 10 million dollar gold find in 1915. Oatman was first established as a tent city in the early 1900s, and the historic hotel, called the Drulin Hotel, was built in 1902. In the historic town of Oatman, Arizona, sits the haunted Oatman Hotel. Oatman, Arizona Hotel Sign by Kathy Alexander.
