Bluffton ghost stories published by Icon founder
Does Bluffton ooze ghosts? You can soon find out.
Just in time for Halloween, Where Bluffton’s Ghosts Sleep, the latest book by author--and Icon founder--Fred Steiner, will be available at a book signing from 10 :00-11:30 a.m. on Saturday, Sept. 23, at the Bluffton Senior Citizens Center, 132 N. Main St.
Subtitled “Unexpected stories from a small Ohio town,” the 196-page book includes what Steiner says is “every unexpected and cryptic Bluffton epic ever imagined.”
“You will meet ghosts from Maple Grove Cemetery, Harmon Field, Bluffton University, Riley Creek, the Swiss Settlement, from Ada and area ghost towns,” said the author.
“You’ll also discover some very interesting characters including Hezekiah Bloomfield Hubbell whose Shifferly Road tombstone was once the spookiest place in Allen, Hancock and Hardin counties.”
The book contains nine chapters retelling Bluffton stories across the time frame. The earliest involve native Americans who were exiled from Allen County in the 1840s. Stories follow that era covering many decades all the way to the present, involving the Bluffton Middle School ghost.
Among stores in the unexpected category include:
- An 1860s woman’s fear of being buried alive – it almost happened
- Five bodies buried in the same grave during a typhoid epidemic
- A UFO spotted 24 years before Roswell
- A Sunday Bluffton church service attended by members of the KKK
- Description of a Bluffton location where hoofed animals regularly went to die
- 300-plus bodies uncovered in a native American burial mound, not far from Bluffton
Steiner says that after reading this book, you may never wade in Riley Creek or the Buckeye, after discovering tales emerging from those bodies of water.
The book will soon be available in several Bluffton businesses including the Senior Center and from the author.
The following PowerPoint presentations, open to the public, featuring stories from the book take place in October:
• Thursday, Oct. 5, noon – Hancock County Historical Museum, Findlay
• Tuesday, Oct. 17, 6 p.m. – Bluffton Public Library
• Wednesday, Oct. 18, 2:30 p.m. – Bluffton Senior Citizens Center
• Thursday, Oct. 19, 7 p.m. – Ada Public Library
Stories Posted This Week
Wednesday, February 26, 2025
- Senior Center ready for annual garage sale, Feb. 27-Mar. 3
- Fredrick “Fred” W. Evans served in the U.S. Army
- Ashes to Go on March 5
- Ticket reminder for BHS boys basketball semi-final on Feb. 26
- ODNR urges caution during spring wildfire season
- Registration opens for Ropp Triplett Business Plan Competition and classes
- Phillips named as new head of LACRPC and WORPO
- Blanchard Valley Hospital makes World’s Best Hospitals list
Tuesday, February 25, 2025
- Bluffton mayor asks residents to turn in KKK flyers, denounces hate message
- Public Hearing on proposed vacation of a portion of Vine St.
- Annette "Sue" Sprunger helped establish Bluffton Community Daycare
- Community Foundation awards $770K in grants
- Letter: S.H.A.N.N.O.N. Service Club of Bluffton is disbanding
Monday, February 24, 2025
Sunday, February 23, 2025
Saturday, February 22, 2025
- Pirate Bowlus competes in state backstroke consolation finals
- James Arden Emmert was a kidney dialysis technician
- Pirate bowlers 13th at districts
- Pirate boys basketball win sectional vs. Wayne Trace
- Pirate Bowlus advances to OHSAA swim final, Downey swims in prelims
- Flu-related death of teen reported in Allen County
- Bluffton University public events for March 2025
- Weekend Doctor: Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD)
- January 2025 EMS by the numbers