It is
proposed that this article be deleted because of the following concern:
No information found about this place other than the cited sources, one of which is a bullet-point mention. A history of the region shows that the Farghers were indeed a prominent settler family: [1], but no mention of a "community" or "town" of Fargher could be located. No appearance at all on any USGS topo map except a "Fargher Airfield" on the 2011 map: [2]. In all likelihood this was just a farm owned by the Fargher family. Without more information it's a failure of WP:GEOLAND and probably something conjured up by Sherman County so they could claim on their website they're home to several "ghost towns". (proposed by WeirdNAnnoyed)
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The article may be deleted if this message remains in place for seven days, i.e., after 14:06, 30 May 2024 (UTC).
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Find sources: "Fargher, Oregon" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTORPROD
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Expired [[WP:PROD|prod]], concern was: No information found about this place other than the cited sources, one of which is a bullet-point mention. A history of the region shows that the Farghers were indeed a prominent settler family:
[3], but no mention of a "community" or "town" of Fargher could be located. No appearance at all on any USGS topo map except a "Fargher Airfield" on the 2011 map:
[4]. In all likelihood this was just a farm owned by the Fargher family. Without more information it's a failure of
WP:GEOLAND and probably something conjured up by Sherman County so they could claim on their website they're home to several "ghost towns".