”I read once that love is friendship on fire. That's how I feel about you.”

My Life; My Recent Travels

Photo AlbumCentralia, Pennsylvania Jan 27, '08 7:35 PM
for everyone
First of all, zoom into these photos to see the smoke better. Also, I added descriptions to each of them, so please look at each one individually.

"Centralia - Columbia County, Pennsylvania - The fire was started in a garbage dump over an open coal seam in May of 1962. The fire was reported and seemed to be quenched at the time, but actually continued underground. There are many additional versions of the original cause but the garbage pit and the date are probably right. First bid to extinguish the fire was $175.

In July of 1962, the Department of Environmental Resources started to monitor the fire. Boreholes were drilled to check to extent and the temperature of the fire. Some thought they also provided an natural draft which helped combustion. Gas monitors were also installed in most homes in the area above the hottest fire (the impact area).

On May 22, 1969 the first three families were moved from Centralia. A trench was dug north of the Odd Fellows Cemetery where fly ash and clay seals were used in am attempt to put out the fire. According to Tony Gaughan (quoted in "Slow Burn"), if the trench had been dug in three shifts per day instead of one and if they had worked through the Labor Day holiday, the fire would have been contained. He said the project was $50,000 short of completion.

In 1980, the U.S. Bureau of Mines "Red Book" said, "The Centralia mine fire has not been extinguished and has not been controlled." In the year twenty-seven more families were moved at a price that was comparatively less than later buy-outs."

...read more at the link on my page!

Steve and I saw this town on the History Channel and decided to stop by and check it out in January, 2008. Lots of hots spots and steam coming from large holes in the ground....hot to the touch. Nothing left but some streets reclaimed by nature, a church, municipal building and about four houses.


Centralia, Columbia County, PA
  

Outside St. Ignatius Cemetary
  

Near St. Ignatius Cemetary
  

Abandoned road
  

Cinder Block
  

Used to be houses here
  

Gas vent
  

Same area by the cemetary
  

Old street
  

More smoke
  

Fire in their backyard
  

Russian Orthodox Church
  

Some houses
  

Smoke
  

More smoke
  

Smoke
  

Streets
  

Close up
  

Row houses
  

Municipal building
  

Church
 1 Comment 

Steeple
  

Old Route 61S.
  

Route 61
  

Route 61S
  

route 61S
  

Graffiti
  

Facing 61North
  

Route 61North
  

Silent Hll
  

Park Bench
  

Ode to Centralia
  


lynnhr wrote on Jan 28
I've always heard about that church and how beautiful it was! Thank you for taking a picture of it!!! I'm sure enjoying reading this blog!!! Love you!
acrystalbutterfly wrote on Jan 28
zoom into these photos to see the smoke better. Also, I added descriptions to each of them, so please look at each one individually.

It was worth the trip and I hope to go back soon. This time I want to bring my Ford Escape because Steve didn't want to take his Lincoln LS on some of the snow covered areas! (I'm MUCH more brave...or stupid!)
victoriousspirit wrote on Feb 22
Get this Sandra...I have been there several times....

No joke...my Grandmother grew up in Mount Carmel Pennsylvania...my great-grandfather was a coal miner and died from black lung.

My great-grandmother lived until I was 25 years old...we visited her often in Mount Carmel, I still have cousins who live there.

The last time I was there was the summer after I graduated high school. I have a collection of crystals I collected from Centralia.

Too cool and such a coincedence!
Comment deleted at the request of the thread owner.
celine1969 wrote on May 25
We, me, my husband and his daughter, just came back from Centralia.It is a frightening place that gave me chills. The church was a breath of fresh air in that desolating place. I am orthodox myself. It seemed the church was lively and not deserted.
acrystalbutterfly wrote on May 25
They only have services there once per month. It's a Russian Orthodox Church.
celine1969 wrote on May 26
Hi Crystal. This is her hsband. Personally, I loved it. It made me aware of how fleeting life can be on the individual scale and as a macrocosm. Nature reclaims what she owns very quickly. One thing I love about going to the Middle East and Europe is you can stand almost anywhere and something significant has happened upon the very spot ceturies earlier.
So, why didn't the church have any sort of billboard near it. I theorized that it was desecrated, but the freshly painted doors and cut grass suggested otherwise.
celine1969 wrote on May 26
Hi Crystal. This is her hsband. Personally, I loved it. It made me aware of how fleeting life can be on the individual scale and as a macrocosm. Nature reclaims what she owns very quickly. One thing I love about going to the Middle East and Europe is you can stand almost anywhere and something significant has happened upon the very spot ceturies earlier.
So, why didn't the church have any sort of billboard near it. I theorized that it was desecrated, but the freshly painted doors and cut grass suggested otherwise.
acrystalbutterfly wrote on May 29
Well I don't believe the church is used for anything other than a service once per month. I can't really tell you anything else about it other than at one time there was a high amount of Catholics and Orthodox Russians in the area. There was another church right next to the cemetary that's still there but they took it down when the government started buying out the majority of the families.

Some families refused to move and are still there to this day although most have passed on now. Our governement truly gave them "the shaft" when it came to their buyouts and I felt badly for them. I read a book recently about this town, as well as sent a copy to a friend and most of the time, all I could do is shake my head at the level of incompetance on the local, state and federal government's part. Lots of corruption caused many people to fall ill or pretty much lose it all.
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