Graves in a Ghost Town | Odd Fellows Cemetery, Centralia
Season 2 Episode 31
Where the dead are remembered, and the earth still burns. Beneath the quiet rows of Odd Fellows Cemetery in Centralia, Pennsylvania, a fire has been burning since 1962 — and it shows no sign of stopping. In this episode of The Grim, we open the gate on one of America's most unsettling burial grounds: an active cemetery inside a ghost town, maintained by a church miles away, visited by families who no longer have a home to return to.
Centralia was once a thriving coal-mining community in Columbia County, Pennsylvania. Today, fewer than five residents remain — the rest displaced by a government-mandated evacuation driven by an underground mine fire that has burned for over sixty years, reaching temperatures exceeding 1,000 degrees Fahrenheit. The town's eerie fate inspired the 2006 horror film Silent Hill, and its abandoned streets and smoke-venting earth continue to draw visitors from across the country.
Yet through it all, the cemeteries remain. Tended. Loved. Active.
Featured Stories:
The Independent Order of Odd Fellows — Founded in Baltimore in 1819 by Thomas Wildey, the Odd Fellows carried a quietly progressive legacy in a rigidly classed era, becoming the first national fraternal order to formally admit both men and women in 1851. Their lodges spread across Pennsylvania's coal region, and their promise — that no member would ever be abandoned — echoes still in Centralia.
Odd Fellows Cemetery — First burial recorded in 1858 (Sarah Buchanan), with the most recent in 2013. The grounds feel irregular, almost unplanned, as if order was never the intention. Now maintained by the First United Methodist Church in Mount Carmel, PA.
The Centralia Mine Fire — Burning since at least May 27, 1962, its true origin remains disputed: a trash burn gone wrong near Odd Fellows Cemetery, old ash reigniting a coal seam, or perhaps a forgotten 1932 fire that never fully died. Once it reached the underground coal veins, nothing could stop it.
Todd Domboski — On Valentine's Day, 1981, twelve-year-old Todd fell into a steaming, smoke-filled sinkhole caused by mine-fire subsidence. He survived only by grasping an exposed tree root until his cousin pulled him free — the moment that made Centralia's danger impossible to ignore.
The Curse of Centralia — Local legend ties the fire to the Molly Maguires, a 19th-century Irish secret society active in Pennsylvania's coal region. After twenty suspected members were convicted and hanged in the 1870s, a priest allegedly cursed the town: that it would one day burn — except for the church itself. One church still stands in Centralia today.
If you’re drawn to haunted history, Pennsylvania coal region lore, environmental disasters, or the ethics of leaving and staying, this story sticks. Subscribe for more, share this with a friend who loves eerie true history, and leave a review with your take: would you visit Centralia or avoid it?