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South Charleston, Ohio
Beaver Valley Resort

6725 E. National Road
S. Charleston, Ohio 45368
(937) 324–3263
Eastern Time

 

 

Open year-round
High-Use Seasonal Period: July Through September

Sites: 160 Full / 150 Partial
Check in: 9 AM to 7 PM
Check out: Noon
Maximum Electrical: 30 / 50 amps
Maximum RV Length: 40 ft.

Directions:
At the intersection of I-70 and U.S. Hwy. 40, proceed east on U.S. 40 for 1/2 mile to the resort on the right.




Accommodations   Facilities and Amenities


Park Models, $45-$50
Reservation Requirements: Minimum stay: 2 nights on weekends; 3 nights on holiday weekends. Check in: 9 AM to 5 PM, Check out: Noon


 

The resort has an activity center, heated indoor pool, outdoor pool, sauna, exercise room, shuffleboard, adult rec room, miniature golf, playground, picnic area, stocked pond fishing (no license), horseshoes, and arcade game room. Dump station.

 

Resort Profile

With its many amenities, Beaver Valley Resort is a western Ohio playground in itself, but the attractions in the nearby communities of Dayton and Columbus make this resort an especially enjoyable place to stay for a while.

Beautiful Beaver Creek meanders through the entire park offering excellent recreation and scenery, and a small lake and numerous canals provide beauty and recreation in the form of fishing and canoeing. Buck Creek State Park and C.J. Brown Reservoir are just 15 minutes north of the resort and offer water sports, wilderness trails, and peaceful settings.

Museums abound in the area, many featuring the lives and works of the Wright Brothers. Carillon Historical Park in Dayton has more than 60 acres of museums, restorations, and collections of transportation history. Included is the 1905 Wright Flyer III, the airplane of Dayton’s most famous native sons, Orville and Wilbur Wright. There are also 19th-century homes, a schoolhouse, a train station, a 1930’s print shop, a replica of the Wright Brothers’ bicycle shop and other buildings — 18 in all — as well as Ohio’s largest 50-bell carillon.

The German Village and Brewery District in Columbus are two 19th-century neighborhoods that are all the more astonishing for being nestled so close to downtown. German Village retains much of its German flavor, with delis, bakeries, and restaurants “where sauerkraut is spoken.” In the Brewery District, adjacent to German Village, the old brewery buildings have been given new life as restaurants, shops,
and microbreweries.

An hour and a half south of the resort, in Cincinnati, is Paramount’s Kings Island, a sprawling theme park with rides, a water park, Broadway style entertainment, and headline acts.