Drive about two and a half hours northwest of Philadelphia and you’ll find Centralia, a mostly abandoned town filled with overgrown roads, an eerie sense of stillness and an odd number of graveyards. It’s the least-populated municipality in Pennsylvania — and the only municipality that's had a fire burning beneath it for 50-plus years.
Once home to a thriving mining community of roughly 1,500 residents, the coal town saw its first three families move out in 1969, seven years after a coal fire set ablaze in the mines below. While no one knows for certain the fire’s exact origins, it was believed to have started in a garbage dump over an open coal seam in 1962. Fire officials at the time did their best to put it out, but like an egg stuck to a non-non-stick pan, the blaze clung to the coal and continued underground.
Following a death-by-sinkhole incident and other toxic gas leak concerns, the people moved out it droves. In 1990, there were 63 residents. In 1992, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania claimed all real estate in the borough under eminent domain. Today, Centralia is down to a mere 11 people.
While it is made clear that you explore at your own risk, visitors (and graffiti artists) make their way from all over the state to wander around the sleepy town. We checked out Centralia to give you a peek of what a ghost town — on fire — in the middle of nowhere PA looks like. Check out the photos below.