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The trail features two tunnels: the Moonville Tunnel, a masonry tunnel in Vinton County that is reputed to be haunted, [2] and the King Switch Tunnel, a timber tunnel in Athens County. The governing organization of the trail, Moonville Rail-Trail, Inc., hopes to eventually extend the trail eastward to New Marshfield then to Athens to join with ...
West entrance of the Moonville tunnel Location of Moonville, Ohio. Moonville is a ghost town in southeastern Brown Township, Vinton County, Ohio, United States.Little remains of this former mining community except a few foundations, a cemetery, and an abandoned railroad tunnel which is the subject of numerous ghost stories.
King’s Station was a coal mining town that began in the late 1850s when the railroad came through the area. It was located East of Moonville and Ingham and west of Mineral.
Sep. 26—Ironton's favorite Halloween attraction, the Haunted Tunnel, reopens for screams on Saturday, Oct. 5. The scary attraction has been scaring people for the better part of 25 years and ...
Nov. 7—Aaron Cahal, left, is seen with his sister-in-law, Michelle Black, while working at the Haunted Tunnel in Ironton. The Ironton Lions Club operates the attraction, located in the Old Route ...
Ingham (also known as Ingham Station or Ingham's Station) is a ghost town in southeastern Brown Township, Vinton County, Ohio, and western Waterloo Township, Athens County, Ohio, United States. [2] The town is located east of the more well known ghost town of Moonville in Vinton County and west of Mineral and King’s Station in Athens County
Location of Vinton County in Ohio. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Vinton County, Ohio. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties on the National Register of Historic Places in Vinton County, Ohio, United States. The locations of National Register properties for which the latitude and ...
Vinton Furnace started around 1854, employing around 100 men. It had a post office that ran from 1854 to 1901. [3] From 1854 to 1857, the post office was known as Vinton Furnace. From 1857 to 1901 the name of the post office was changed to Vinton Station. [4]