A Casual Conversation Sparks a Mystery
Recently, a friend and I were talking about places to live. He’d moved from the Taunton, Massachusetts area and was temporarily staying with people he knew in South Carolina. Things weren’t quite working out the way he expected, so naturally the conversation drifted to “best states” to live in.
We didn’t agree on many. He was eyeing Pennsylvania and West Virginia, while I leaned… elsewhere. When I mentioned Centralia, Pennsylvania, he looked at me blankly. He’d never heard of it. That surprised me—and got me wondering how many others have missed this strange chapter of American history.
Because Centralia isn’t just a dot on the map. It’s a cautionary tale, an environmental disaster, and today, a curious tourist attraction.
Good Intentions, Catastrophic Results
The story begins in 1962, when Centralia’s city council met to discuss cleaning up a strip‑mine dump. At the time, using abandoned mines as landfills wasn’t unusual. Lighting them on fire, however, was a known risk—especially in coal country.
Still, the council hired five volunteer firefighters to clean up the landfill and burn off the trash. On May 27, 1962, they set the fire, doused the visible flames that evening, and assumed the job was done.
It wasn’t.
Flames kept reappearing. The fire crew returned again and again, but something underground had already gone terribly wrong. While bulldozing debris, workers had unknowingly exposed a hole filled with combustible material—an open doorway into the maze of old coal seams beneath the town. Once the fire slipped into that labyrinth, it became unstoppable.
A Town Lost to the Flames
More than sixty years later, the Centralia mine fire still burns. Experts believe it could continue for centuries. The ground above it has cracked, collapsed, and vented smoke. Most residents relocated long ago, leaving behind empty streets, a handful of determined holdouts, and a ghost town that draws curious visitors from around the world.
Not the Only Eternal Flame
Coal seam fires are notoriously difficult to extinguish. Some burn for thousands of years. Australia’s Burning Mountain has been smoldering for an estimated six million years.
Even Pennsylvania—rich in coal—has multiple active mine fires beyond Centralia, including long‑burning sites in the Powder River Basin.
Myth or Truth? Absolutely True.
Centralia isn’t an urban legend or a campfire tale. It’s a real place with a real fire still burning beneath it. And if my friend hadn’t heard of it, I’m guessing plenty of others haven’t either.
Maybe that’s why stories like this matter—they remind us how easily good intentions can ignite something far bigger than anyone ever imagined.


