pplpod
Avsnitt

Centralia: The Name That Spread Across Maps, Ghost Towns, and Pop Culture

Dela

In this episode of pplpod, we take a strange and fascinating deep dive into one of the most unexpectedly widespread place names in the world: Centralia. What begins as a simple exploration of a few towns quickly turns into a sprawling story about geography, infrastructure, ambition, collapse, identity, and cultural memory.

From medium-security prisons in Illinois to open-pit coal mines in Washington, from ghost towns in Pennsylvania to military airfields in Canada, the name “Centralia” appears again and again across maps, industries, institutions, and even music. This episode traces how a single word became attached to rail hubs, canals, airports, colleges, agricultural centers, and fading communities across North America and beyond.

Along the way, we explore the psychology behind naming places “Centralia,” why so many boomtowns adopted versions of the word, and what happens when a place named as “the center” slowly loses its importance over time. The episode also examines how the name evolved beyond geography and entered pop culture through metal albums, atmospheric post-rock music, newspapers, and broader symbolic ideas tied to isolation, scale, and forgotten infrastructure.

Key topics covered:

  • Centralia, Illinois and regional infrastructure networks
  • Centralia Correctional Center
  • Lake Centralia and municipal reservoirs
  • Centralia, Washington and the coal mine
  • Open-pit mining and industrial geography
  • Amtrak stations and transportation hubs
  • Centralia, Pennsylvania and ghost towns
  • Fargo originally being named Centralia
  • Wisconsin Rapids and absorbed city identities
  • Small unincorporated Centralias across the United States
  • Canadian aviation and agricultural institutions
  • RCAF Station Centralia
  • The Centralian Advocate newspaper in Australia
  • Central Australia as “Centralia”
  • Naming psychology and “center” identity
  • Boomtowns, decline, and civic rebranding
  • Centralia in music and pop culture
  • Car Bomb’s 2007 album “Centralia”
  • God Is an Astronaut and “Centralia”
  • Geographic identity in the digital age
  • The idea of future “digital ghost towns”

Ultimately, this episode is about far more than a place name. It is about humanity’s constant urge to define centers, build hubs, project importance onto landscapes, and leave traces of identity behind on maps that are always changing.

Source credit: Research for this episode included transcript materials and supporting historical sources accessed 6/9/2026. Content is summarized and adapted for commentary and educational use.

Podden och tillhörande omslagsbild på den här sidan tillhör pplpod. Innehållet i podden är skapat av pplpod och inte av, eller tillsammans med, Poddtoppen.