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The Niagara Scow View of the Toronto Power House with the scow in the background, 1922. The Niagara Scow (also called the Old Scow or Iron Scow) is the unofficial name of the wreck of a small scow that brought two men perilously close to plunging over the Horseshoe Falls, the largest of the Niagara Falls, in 1918. The wreck can still be seen ...
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"Stenton" at Visit Philadelphia "Stenton Museum" at Visit Pennsylvania "Stenton" at Independence Hall Association; Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS) documentation: HABS No. PA-1714, "Stenton", 4 photos, 10 measured drawings, 1 photo caption page; HABS No. PA-1714-A, "Stenton, Kitchen Wing", 3 measured drawings
Thousands of people have gone over Niagara Falls, either intentionally (as stunts or suicide attempts) or accidentally. The first recorded person to survive going over the falls was school teacher Annie Edson Taylor, who in 1901 successfully completed the stunt inside an oak barrel. In the following 123 years, thousands of people have been ...
Wesley Heerssen, who served as Captain aboard the U.S. Brig Niagara from 2003 -20014, describes wood that is sloping slightly in the wrong direction, lower left, which in turn leads to rot over ...
Despite having been stopped by Niagara Parks police two days earlier, [2] on August 18, 1985, at 8:30 AM, Trotter's 11-man crew launched his barrel into the Niagara River rapids, a quarter-mile from the brink of the Canadian Horseshoe Falls. Trotter went over the Falls and survived with minor scrapes.
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Prosecutors made public Monday the arrest of four men as part of an investigation into child sexual exploitation in Centre County, a probe months in the making.