| STORIES & LEGENDS Tightrope
walkers and other daredevils have risked great danger atop
the chasm. Even today there are those who take certain risks
just to say..."I did that." While Ausable Chasm does not
condone risky endeavors, we find many of these incidents have become
a part of our history nonetheless.
As the High
Bridge was being built in 1793, it was discovered that oxen stood on one side of the
river, ready to haul the huge timbers, but the ox yoke was on the other side. Since only one of the stringers (support beams) had
yet been laid across the 30-foot gorge, Samuel Jackson threw the yoke across his broad
shoulders and tight-roped the chasm to the other side.
In 1820, when
High Bridge was in ruin, Stephen Stearn sallied across the last remaining stringer of the
bridge in his stocking feet, holding a boot in each hand for balance.
In the 1890s
more than one boy was said, on a dare, to ride his bicycle across the railroad trestle.
About where the
wheel house of the AuSable Horsenail Company once stood, near the present Chasm entrance,
was once a projecting rock. Some boys,
attempting to weigh the overhang till it collapsed, were carrying stones out to the edge. When Jim Hall delivered his load, the ledge did
indeed collapse, carrying Jim along with it 110 feet to the waters below. Luckily, Jim suffered only bruised limbs and ego.
Stoddard - 1870
About 1870, a mammoth log served as a bridge to Table Rock from the
opposite bank. The upper side had been hewed
flat but had become slippery with moisture. It
was a fine summer day and the Rev John Dyer, a young Episcopalian minister, was enjoying
an outing with his sweetheart, Jennie Smith. As
John stepped out on the log bridge and reached back to take Jennies hand he lost his
balance and plunged into the boiling waters below. His
horrified sweetheart watched him disappear beneath the water, never to return. Local legend offers the classic storybook ending
that Jennie stayed on at the Chasm until she pined away and died of a broken heart.
When voting time
comes around, an old story about Ausable Chasm is brought to mind. It appeared in the Readers Digest awhile back. A farmer was asked who he was going to vote for and
he scratched his head, saying he really didnt know.
But he had seen a lot of bumper stickers and he kinda liked that guy Ausable
Chasm.
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