Step Inside The Creepy, Abandoned Town Of Little Egypt In Cleveland
Little Egypt, Ohio, a once-thriving community now mostly absorbed by Walton Hills, is the creepiest abandoned town in Cleveland with remnants still visible in Bedford Reservation.
If you're a lifelong Clevelander, you probably don't realize that a place as populated as Northeast Ohio would have ghost towns. However, that's only because the remnants of many communities have been absorbed by parks and annexed into surrounding towns and cities. Are you ready to take a tour back in time? You don't have to look far, but the remnants of this once-bustling community and the lives lost there have become the creepiest abandoned town in Cleveland.
Welcome to Little Egypt... or rather, the remains of what was once Little Egypt, Ohio.
This community thrived from 1813 to 1951, but its remnants are mostly part of Walton Hills today. This community succeeded thanks to the canal, farming, and mills.
This neighborhood earned its name from a bizarre pyramid-like mound that purportedly once existed in the area.
The mound was on what would become the Gleeson homestead circa 1818. The family would go on to become the richest landowners in a community that was named after their parcel of property.
The Gleeson's cozy little property would soon host the World's End Tavern, then it became the community's first burial ground.
World's End Tavern, which opened during the 1820s, was located in front of the mysterious mound. It was there that the community's first cemetery was established. The family's infant daughter, Rebecca Gleeson, tragically died in 1833. She was laid to rest on the iconic pyramid mound.
Though the community experienced initial success, it seems it was doomed to fail from the start.
When the Connecticut Land Company conducted their second land survey of the area in 1797, Captain Joseph Tinker and several of his men drowned in the creek that would come to bear his name.
Growth in the little community was impressive, but it truly took off when the New York Central Railroad construction began in 1904.
More people migrated to this quaint little community during the period of construction and the trains continued to roll through the area through the 1960s.
The town was said to be quite beautiful in its heyday... but the surrounding communities grew much faster, and Little Egypt soon ceased to exist.
Ruins of this Cleveland ghost town are still hidden in the area, with many remaining in Bedford Reservation.
The gorgeous landscape of what was once the Gleeson homestead is preserved today as the Canal Corners Farm, which maintains some of the lost city's history.
A few gravestones still stand on the strange pyramid-like hill, though much of the Gleeson Homestead Cemetery has been lost to time.
A large portion of the former community has been reclaimed by the forest, and many of the graves at the cemetery are now unmarked.
While you still may encounter remnants of the community that once was in the Metroparks and in local lore, Little Egypt is but a mere memory now.
However, its story has shaped part of Greater Cleveland's landscape, and locals have yet to forget its influence.
Greater Cleveland hides many secrets, but one wouldn't expect an entire community to be lost to the sands of time. And yet, it happened to Little Egypt, Ohio, and most people don't realize that remnants of its existence still hide in the area.
As the creepiest abandoned town in Cleveland, Little Egypt has quite the story. Do you remember this Cleveland ghost town? Share your stories in the comments below! We'd love to hear them! Then check out these abandoned places in Cleveland.
Ready to explore on a hiking trail that leads to more abandoned places in Cleveland, Ohio? Check out AllTrails.
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