Stunning Photos of Abandoned Iowa Brickyard

Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard ABANDONED SPACES
Deep in rural Iowa, hidden by a lush green forest, a sprawling brickyard slowly crumbles as nature creeps in to reclaim it. 
Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard

Deep in rural Iowa, hidden by a lush green forest, a sprawling brickyard slowly crumbles as nature creeps in to reclaim it. Ragged tatters of storm clouds receded overhead.

Iowa Brick is one such gem. Closed several decades ago, the old brickyard is still largely intact. Vandals have left it alone, for the most part, allowing nature to creep back in and slowly wear away at the structures and equipment that were left behind.

Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard

The ceiling of the old workshop has begun to collapse, allowing a bed of moss and small plants to take root.

Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard
Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard
Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard

The place looks to have been abandoned very suddenly. Workbenches still line the walls.

Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard
Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard

Forklifts and other equipment are still parked inside several of the old structures.

Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard
Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard

Stacks of brick wait patiently to be shipped out to customers.

Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard
Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard
Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard

Many of the rooms were flooded from the previous night’s storm.

Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard
Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard
Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard

Located near the banks of Crooked Creek, I wouldn’t be surprised if the flooding was a common occurrence in the old brick factory.

Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard
Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard

It would explain why plants have flourished in just about every building.

Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard
Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard
Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard

Inside the main factory, eerie silence hangs in the air, interrupted only by the echoing sounds of dripping and my footfalls.

Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard

It’s strange to imagine that these places were once filled with workers’ voices and the roar of industry.

Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard

Half a dozen chimneys keep a vigil on the grounds of the old brickyard.

Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard

Piles of rubble at their bases mark the locations of smaller structures that collapsed long ago.

Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard

An enormous dome-shaped kiln rusts among the thick vegetation.

Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard

Time and the elements have done incredible things to the brick walls and floor inside.

Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard
Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard
Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard

Lehigh, a small town in Webster County, Iowa, was built upon two major industries: coal mines and brickyards. Brickyards made clay from shale excavated at the local coal mines. Formed into bricks and drain tile, the clay was baked in kilns heated by coal from the same mines.

Coal mining declined in Webster County during the first half of the 20th century. The population of Lehigh has fallen steadily since then, from 1,004 in 1940 to about 400 nowadays.

Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard
Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard

Lehigh Brick and Tile company was established in the late 1800s as a producer of bricks and ceramic sewer and drain pipes.

Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard

In 1896, the company won the contract to produce the paving brick for the city of Dubuque, Iowa. Then in 1897, a serious fire crippled the facility. Several other local brickyards rushed in to fill the void in production. By 1903, Lehigh Brick and Tile had fully recovered from the fire and was back in business.

Most of the structures that currently occupy the site were built in the 1950s and ’60s, with the final additions made in the late ’70s.

Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard
Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard

At some point, the Lehigh Brick and Tile Company became Iowa Brick. It operated under that name until the facility closed in the 1980s.

Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard
Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard

The stunning photos of an abandoned Iowa brickyard were taken by Jim Sullivan. Jim Sullivan is a traveler, who shares his stories with followers If you’d like to see more abandoned places, then check out our articles on the History of Searchlight: Ghost Town of Nevada and the Sunken Mar Sem Fim yacht in Antarctica

Abandoned Iowa Brick Yard
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