12 Unique Attractions You Absolutely Must Visit In West Virginia
West Virginia has its fair share of unique, odd, and amazing attractions. West Virginia is absolutely one of the most amazing and interesting places in the world! Check out these 12 fascinating attractions right here in this mountain state!

This teeny-tiny church claims to be the "Smallest Church in 48 States."

A Stuart's in West Virginia really catches your attention with this 15-foot long culvert pipe made to look like a hot dog. The bun is an old canoe!
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In 1888, amateur scientist Graham Hamrick purchased two female corpses from the Trans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum and mummified them with his own patented embalming potion. He was really trying to understand the secrets of the Pharoahs and recreate their methods of preserving the dead. And he did it!
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The Mystery Hole is a roadside attraction in Ansted, near the New River Gorge Bridge. You actually go underneath this weird little trailer and see things that defy the laws of gravity.

Who doesn't love giant teapots? This huge teapot is located in the cool little town of Chester.

It all started right here in West Virginia. I'm sure we've all seen this three crosses that are typically on the side of the road. Those sets of crosses were started and put up by Bernard Coffindaffer, a West Virginia businessman that had a vision following open heart surgery that told him to start building these. The first set of crosses were built near Charleston, WV, and eventually some 1,800 were built across 29 states.

The Robert C. Byrd Green Bank telescope is the world's largest fully steerable radio telescope! Not only that, it is the world's largest moveable land object.

The Marx Toy Museum has over sixty years of Louis Marx and Co. toys on display! This museum is the largest collection of Marx Toys in the world!
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In 2010, the Williamson Coal House actually caught fire (Who would have thought?) but ended up only suffering minimal damage to the outside structure. It reopened in September of 2011.

The Grave Creek Mound, at 62 feet high and 240 feet in diameter, is one of the largest conical-shaped burial mounds in America. The Adena mound builders moved more than 60,000 tons of dirt to create it. This is the largest surviving mound built by the Adena!

While this may not be the smallest post office in the world, it certainly is the smallest in West Virginia! Silver Lake is the same town that has the tiny church!

John Henry was a former slave that was hired by the C & O Railroad to build a mile-long tunnel through the Big Bend Mountain. The company supposedly bought a steam-powered drill to replace John Henry, but he wasn't havin' any of that. He said that he would beat it or die trying. The drill drove into the mountain 9 feet, and then John Henry drove his sledgehammer in 14 feet. While he technically did defeat it, he died immediately and so was replaced by the machine nonetheless.
What is your favorite West Virginia attraction? Comment below!
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