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Belle Valley, Ohio

Belle Valley, Ohio
Village
Location of Belle Valley, Ohio
Location of Belle Valley, Ohio
Location of Belle Valley in Noble County
Location of Belle Valley in Noble County
Coordinates: 39°47′21″N 81°33′17″W / 39.78917°N 81.55472°W / 39.78917; -81.55472Coordinates: 39°47′21″N 81°33′17″W / 39.78917°N 81.55472°W / 39.78917; -81.55472
Country United States
State Ohio
County Noble
Area
 • Total 0.41 sq mi (1.06 km2)
 • Land 0.41 sq mi (1.06 km2)
 • Water 0 sq mi (0 km2)
Elevation 745 ft (227 m)
Population (2010)
 • Total 223
 • Estimate (2012) 223
 • Density 543.9/sq mi (210.0/km2)
Time zone Eastern (EST) (UTC-5)
 • Summer (DST) EDT (UTC-4)
ZIP code 43717
Area code(s) 740
FIPS code 39-05158
GNIS feature ID 1064405

Belle Valley is a village in Noble County, Ohio, United States. The population was 223 at the 2010 census.

Belle Valley had its start when the Cleveland and Marietta Railroad was extended to that point. The Village of Belle Valley was incorporated in 1905.

During World War II, Belle Valley soldier Harry Torhan, who was born to Russian emigre coal mining parents, received the Silver Star and Purple Heart for evacuating four wounded soldiers while under mortar and small arms fire during the Battle of the Bulge.

Belle Valley is located at 39°47′21″N 81°33′17″W / 39.78917°N 81.55472°W / 39.78917; -81.55472 (39.789241, -81.554833), along the West Fork of Duck Creek in Noble Township. Belle Valley is located within a short driving distance of Cambridge, Marietta, and Zanesville, near Interstate 77.

According to the United States Census Bureau, the village has a total area of 0.41 square miles (1.06 km2), all land.

The Village of Belle Valley is also part of the Ohio Buckeye Trail, a hiking trail that circles the entire state of Ohio. The Belle Valley section is a mostly hilly, completely rural portion of the Buckeye Trail that runs through Guernsey and Noble Counties in southeast Ohio. The section runs from Winterset to the America Electric Power Recreation Lands. The trail here is mostly on rarely traveled dirt roads, with off-road portions located at Salt Fork Wildlife Area, Seneca Lake (the southernmost of the Muskingum Watershed Conservancy District Lakes), Wolf Run State Park and America Electric Power Recreation Lands. The trail passes through the villages of Old Washington, where the trail crosses I-70, and Belle Valley, where it crosses I-77, and Hoskinsville.


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