His creative inspiration soon led him to turn his acreage into a tribute to his home town and before long Red Oak II was born. In 1987, Davis was living on a farm near Carthage that was little more than an empty cornfield. The original Red Oak, like many other rural agricultural towns across the country, started to fade sometime after World War II, when people began to move to the cities in earnest.Īfter Davis had left the area for a number of years, he returned in the 1970s to find his home town had become a ghost town. Red Oak II was actually the brainchild of artist Lowell Davis who grew up in the “real” Red Oak, Missouri, about 18 miles northwest of the “new” Red Oak II. But, it has authentic old buildings, and an old cemetery, and it looks like a ghost town. Town Hall in Red Oak, Missouri by Kathy Alexander.Ī couple of miles northeast of Carthage, Missouri and just off Route 66 is Red Oak II – a ghost town, but not really.
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