An Investigation and Inquiry into Unsolved Crimes, Mystery's , The Bizarre ,Macabre,Unusual and just strange events and unique properties and buildings which played a part in or that have occurred in Tri State Area
Strange Oriental Statues along a Butler County Road seems no one knows why.
Put up in the 90s no one not even the Butler county Tourist Bureau seems to know the story why behind them .They just popped up one day.
All the research I have done short of stopping and bothering neighbors has turned up zilch.
I can not even find an artist name on them.
But some one cuts the grass and some one knows who put them up and why.
An Oddly Placed Memorial about a forgotten massacare during the American revolution in Altoona area
it looks like one of those markers for a bridge deck or road mileage marker. But you would be wrong in your thinking because this marker tells of the horrific massacre of 17 Bedford Scouts during the American revolution by English Tories and Indians.
As a side not a Rod equals 16.5 feet so this massacre took place approx. 742 feet from this marker.
Flaigs Guns a Legendary lodge which was hidden high up in a hill side in Ross Twp Pa. and supposedly had Nazi Leanings
But lets allow this edited excerpt in the Pittsburgh Press tell the story from when Mr. Flaig Passed
 February 6, 1991 The Pittsburgh Press Mr.Flaig 
moved to Ross about 1940. After Flaig's death in 1978, Mellon Bank 
administered the gun business. "He never set up any provisions for 
somebody to run it," said Forsythe. Former Aspinwall resident John 
Levendos, an exporter of commercial shooting supplies, bought Flaig's 
about two years ago. Levendos always knew about the place, but stayed 
away. "It was intimidating. I didn't want to go up the driveway. It has 
Transylvania overtones. Dense stands of tall evergreens still line 
the narrow road , that climbs, twists and leads to Flaig's, a maze of 
small buildings on 13 steep acres. Customers do business in the lodge, 
an 18th-century log house, moved to the site in 1927. A knob shaped like
 a rabbit "hanging by its back paws opens the lodge's front door. Resale
 rifles and shotguns hang from the ceiling beams. Antlers from European 
stags and roe deer decorate the .walls. Shooting supplies fill the cases
 and shelves. Oblivious to the business at hand, deer and squirrels 
freely roam the property, safe from the test firings performed on every 
gun,-new or repaired. "They're safe. We're not that bloodthirsty," said 
Forsythe. Test shots go into a sand-filled concrete chamber built into 
ground behind the gun shop where Forsythe works. Although he specializes
 in 'gun work, Forsythe also carves animals and birds in his spare 
time. Mr.Nelson was always good; with wood," said former Flaig's 
manager Bill Knabel of Ross. "He'll duplicate anything by hand. He does a
 lot .of statue carving. One of his hawks is sitting right here in my 
kitchen."- Forsythe and his wife, Doris, both shooters, spend most 
weekends at their farm in Lockport, Mifflin County. They have one 
daughter, Nicola Hood of Richland. ".: The couple, married almost' 40 
years, met as youths. "A date was going out groundhog hunting," said 
Mrs. Forsythe, who has three guns made by her husband. She often hears 
about his projects at home. "He's always very proud of the guns he has 
made. He'll come home and say, 'I made a gun for. this person today.' 
"He likes to see the finished product, the beautiful wood," she 
continued. "That's what gives the gun-its beauty Lovers of fine firearms appreciate Nelson Forsythe, a 
quiet craftsman of uncommon artistry. Forsythe chisels and melds the 
choice woods and blackened steel that become one in guns made at Flaig's, a one of a
 kind of shooter's emporium on a hillside in Ross. ' Flaig's reputation 
for "Serving sportsmen Around the Globe" largely rests with Forsythe, "one
 of the  best stock makers in the country," said shop manager George 
Lnoll Jr. "He has made guns for kings, and he has made guns for gasoline 
station attendants," said Jae Levendos, wife of Flaig's owner, John 
Levendos. one of Forsythe's latest projects include matching hunting rifles 
for a Saudi Arabian prince and princess.  The prince's rifle, a Remington powerful enough to 
hunt elephants, will feature a barrel modified to educe recoil. Hand 
carvings  will embellish the stocks of both guns, priced about 
$5,300 for the pair. "It's just another job," said Forsythe, who makes the custom riffles and shotguns each year for hunters and target 
shooters. He specializes in gun stocks, usually made from assorted 
walnuts. He also repairs and alters guns for customers across the United 
States. You always run into something you haven't seen before." More 
than 100 chisels, rasps and chapers hang above the narrow workbench 
where Forsythe works, overlooking traffic on Thompson run Road. He 
talked last week while repairing a loaded shell from one gun's ammed 
action. "I'm a chiseler," said the 61-year-)ld Butler County resident, 
one of five gunsmiths among Flaig's eight employees. Each custom-made gun 
begins as a piece of wood that is cut by machine according to one of 
more than 100 patterns available to suit any shooter's physical build. 
While other gunsmiths blacken, cut and assemble the receiver, barrel and
 trigger, Forsythe fits the wood parts of each gun to its metal components. The exacting work of Gunsmith Nelson 
Forsythe carves out the stock to Donald J. Stetz of The Pittsburgh Press a
 rifle by tracing over a template 1953, remembers Forsythe the student "His work stood out." Other fans include Howard Wells of Peters, a 
gun manufacturer's representative and former professional shooter for 
the Winchester Repeating Arms Co. "He has built several guns for me. He 
has done an incredible job. He's a tremendous craftsman. The guns I 
have, that Nelson has built, have worked as smooth as butter." had to 
hold it up on a fence for me." Forsythe came to Flaig's in 1957 after 
training at the Pennsylvania Gunsmith School in Avalon. "They needed 
somebody and I needed a job." He started as a barrel fitter before he 
found his niche in woodworking. "I was always more interested in wood 
than I was in metals." George Thacker, director of the Pennsylvania 
Gunsmith School since Fellow gunsmith George Bole of Middlesex, a 
competitor, also praised Forsythe's skill: "He is as good as they come."
 But Forsythe remains humble about his work. "Really, that's the only 
thing I've ever done. I can't do much else. A lot of people came and 
went I just kind of hung in there." The late Edwin Flaig, a World War I 
veteran, established his gun business in 1934 on the North Side  which requires accuracy within a few thousandths of an inch, "to make 
it look like the metals are growing out of the wood," said Forsythe, who
 lives , in Jefferson. A railroader's son and a veteran of the Korean 
conflict, Forsythe grew up in a family of Mifflin County hunters. "Guns 
were always an interest to me," be said, recalling his first shot from 
an old Winchester. "
I also found these articles not sure of there origin or who to credit
A one time Amusment Park in Chester WV. and a horrifying fire in a Old Mill Ride which killed 3
One of the many beautiful little trolley parks lost to history it also like many of the parks suffered a horrific tragedy when a fire broke out in the old mill ride .
Fires where always a big concern in these old parks due to all the wooden construction and lack of modern fire protection systems.
http://www3.gendisasters.com/west-virginia/5983/chester-wv-fire-amusement-park-june-1915
This fire like the others resulted in the death of 3 individuals who where just out for a day of fun and relaxation.
Its a shame fire Protection Sprinklers where available at the time but they where seen more for protecting property like warehouses than lives and where expensive.
Today nothing is left of the park you would not even know you just drove over top of it
Just another of the many Tragedy's lost to history in the Ohio Valley and Tri-State



 



















