News

Strangeville: The Ghost Town of Puncheon Camp Creek

Strangeville: The Ghost Town of Puncheon Camp Creek

A rustic archway with a longhorn skull leads to the gated entrance of Puncheon Camp Creek Ranch. The site is not open to the public, but its buildings are visible from Rhodes Road. Photo: Contributed/Shannon Ballard


EDITOR’S NOTE: Strangeville explores the curious and unexplained stories that have long defined Asheville and Western North Carolina. The region is full of unanswered questions, from old folklore and local legends to eerie encounters, unsolved moments in history, and the true-crime mysteries that still leave people wondering. Each week, we look back with an open mind and a sense of curiosity, trying to understand why some stories take hold and why some can never be explained.


EDNEYVILLE, N.C. (828newsNOW.com) — In the open farmland of rural Henderson County, two oversized fiberglass steers stand watch along Old Clear Creek Road. Beyond them, past rolling pastureland and toward the base of Bald Top Mountain, a ghost town rises from the Clear Creek Valley.

Puncheon Camp Creek Ranch is a privately built Western-style village created by Boyd Leon “Bub” Hyder on land his family has farmed for generations. Though it was never a functioning town, it is known as a ghost town due to its deserted streets and the way it seems to appear out of nowhere as you drive along Old Clear Creek.

Two large fiberglass cows greet visitors along Old Clear Creek Road in Henderson County. The roadside figures are the first sign that something unusual waits around the corner. Photo by Shannon Ballard.

The village sits near Puncheon Camp Creek, a small stream that winds through the property. A white chapel with a five-point star on its steeple overlooks the site. Nearby stand a red schoolhouse, a post office, a jail, a courthouse, and a general store outfitted with vintage Pure Oil gas pumps. A hotel and saloon face the gravel drive. The structures create the illusion of a long-abandoned frontier town near the working ranch.

Closer inspection reveals that nothing here was left to decay by accident. The buildings are maintained. The signs, including no trespassing signs, are deliberate and add to the scene. The courthouse features a domed roof and classical details, possibly inspired by designs from architect Richard Sharp Smith, who shaped much of Western North Carolina’s historic architecture in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The word “puncheon” carries several meanings, but in this region, it generally refers to split logs that were smoothed on one side and used as flooring in early Appalachian cabins.

A handmade wooden sign marks the entrance to Puncheon Camp Creek Ranch, a private Western-themed village near Edneyville built by Boyd “Bub” Hyder in the early 1990s. Photo by Shannon Ballard.

Hyder began assembling the village after purchasing part of the Puncheon Camp Creek farm in a 1988 bankruptcy sale. He later expanded the property to nearly 600 acres, operating it as the Puncheon Camp Creek Land and Cattle Company. After restoring existing farm buildings, he repurposed them and constructed additional structures to form the village.

Hyder comes from a long line of Henderson County families who worked as farmers, carpenters, school board members and law enforcement officers in Edneyville. That legacy carries into the present. Hyder holds monthly services at the small church he built on the property, named Marie’s Chapel in honor of his mother, and he continues to host fundraisers for the Boy Scouts.

The general store, post office, and livery stable at Puncheon Camp Creek Ranch include vintage signs, gas pumps, and Old West details. The ghost town sits on private farmland in rural Henderson County. Photo by Shannon Ballard.

Puncheon Camp Creek Ranch is not open to the public. A gate and posted signs make that clear. Visitors who find the site generally do so intentionally and by invitation, following back roads into the countryside. What they encounter is a place that looks abandoned but never was, a town that feels forgotten even though it was carefully imagined.

Puncheon Camp Creek Ranch stands as one of Western North Carolina’s most unusual landmarks. A ghost town rooted in family history and a personal vision that turned farmland into folklore.


Recent Headlines

11 hours ago in Business, Entertainment, Food & Drink, Local

Asheville online beer festival aims to support local breweries during slower season

Discounted online beer deals aim to boost Asheville-area breweries and beer-focused businesses during the winter slowdown.

17 hours ago in Entertainment, Trending

Bad Bunny brings Gaga, Martin and Puerto Rican pride to Super Bowl as Green Day, Puth play pregame

Stars were front-and-center at Super Bowl 60, with Chris Pratt and Jon Bon Jovi introducing the teams, a series of soaring pre-game performances and Bad Bunny's much-anticipated halftime show featuring a tour of Puerto Rican culture and a real-life marriage.

1 day ago in Arts & Culture, Entertainment, Lifestyle, Local, Perspectives

3 new movies to see, stream or skip in February 2026 – 828reviewsNOW

This February, we review a zany new sci-fi adventure from the director of "Pirates of the Caribbean," an Oscar-nominated documentary about senior opera singers and the concluding installment of a horror movie trilogy. Which should you see, stream or skip? Find out in our review.

4 days ago in Arts & Culture, Entertainment, Lifestyle, Local, Perspectives

The well-meaning ‘Whistle’ is a bit of a whiff – 828reviewsNOW

We wouldn't say that "Whistle" blows, but it definitely doesn't sing. Corin Hardy's horror flick is a love song to its genre, but too much of a clunky retread of other "death curse" flicks to feel fresh. Read more in our review.

4 days ago in Entertainment

Not just pups this time: ‘Puppy Bowl’ embraces older dogs

This year, the Puppy Bowl isn't just about puppies. Older dogs are getting some attention, too. There will be a halftime showdown between Team Oldies and Team Goldies, offering a showcase for senior dogs as a reminder that they also need adoption and love.