Mammoth is home to Mammoth Park, a 408-acre park that features a stocked freshwater lake, recreational areas, several playgrounds, and pavilions.[6] The park is home to the Giant Slide Complex, a pair of 100-foot long slides perched on a climbable rock wall. The complex has been embroiled in lawsuits every year, but remains open as of 2024. [7] In the spring, the annual Mammoth Fest festival featuring vendor booths and children's rides is held at the park.[8]
Also located in Mammoth is the Mount Pleasant Township Municipal Building.[9]
Despite its small population, Mammoth is home to several businesses, including Citizens Telephone Company of Kecksburg which first opened in 1906 to bring telephone services to the rural miners and farmers who lived in the area.[10]
Mammoth is situated in close proximity to the site of the 1965 Kecksburg UFO incident in which many local residents claimed to have witnessed an object streak across the sky and crash-land in the woods of neighboring Kecksburg, PA. The government response to the incident has led many to speculate what the object was, leading to many theories such as a UFO or Russian satellite.[11]
Mining
Known as the infamous Mammoth Mine Disaster, on January 27, 1891, an explosion tore through Mammoth No. 1 Mine owned at the time by H.C. Frick Coke Company.[12] Newspapers reported that firedamp was ignited by a miner's oil lamp, causing the explosion.[13] All 110 miners who entered that day were killed instantly.[13]
The sealed-off entrance to the mine can still be seen today.[15] It is situated behind the Mount Pleasant Township Municipal Building, which once served as the former boiler house and lamp house for the mine. It is the only building from the mining operation still in existence.[16] Many of the patch homes once owned by the miners and their families are still occupied today throughout Mammoth and along Poker Road.[16]