With support from the University of Richmond

New perspectives on how history is made

Hidden fire chokes last life from US ghost town

That is the bizarre fate of Centralia, where a vast, subterranean coal fire ignited in an accident almost 50 years ago, gradually turning the settlement, about two hours drive from Philadelphia, into a ghost town.

Of the original population of around 1,000, fewer than a dozen people remain, refusing to obey government orders to leave their homes.

Fading signs still mark Plum Street, or Apple, or Grape. There are telephone poles, street lamps, and graveyards - four of them.

But there are almost no homes. Bare grass lines the crumbling sidewalks. Sometimes a few steps ending in thin air betray where a house stood before being torn down.

Read entire article at Telegraph (UK)