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Niagara Falls

Niagara Falls (/nˈæɡərə/) is a group of three waterfalls at the southern end of Niagara Gorge, spanning the border between the province of Ontario in Canada and the state of New York in the United States. The largest of the three is Horseshoe Falls, which straddles the international border of the two countries.[1] It is also known as the Canadian Falls.[2] The smaller American Falls and Bridal Veil Falls lie within the United States. Bridal Veil Falls is separated from Horseshoe Falls by Goat Island and from American Falls by Luna Island, with both islands situated in New York.

Niagara Falls
Niagara Falls seen from the Canadian side of the river, including three individual falls (from left to right): American Falls, Bridal Veil Falls, and Horseshoe Falls.
Niagara Falls
Niagara Falls
LocationNiagara River into the Niagara Gorge on the border of New York in the United States and Ontario in Canada
Coordinates43°04′48″N 79°04′29″W / 43.0799°N 79.0747°W / 43.0799; -79.0747 (Niagara Falls)
TypeCataract
Total height167 ft (51 m)
Number of drops3
WatercourseNiagara River
Average
flow rate
85,000 cu ft/s (2,400 m3/s)

Formed by the Niagara River, which drains Lake Erie into Lake Ontario, the combined falls have the highest flow rate of any waterfall in North America that has a vertical drop of more than 50 m (160 ft). During peak daytime tourist hours, more than 168,000 m3 (5.9 million cu ft) of water goes over the crest of the falls every minute.[3] Horseshoe Falls is the most powerful waterfall in North America, as measured by flow rate.[4] Niagara Falls is famed for its beauty and is a valuable source of hydroelectric power. Balancing recreational, commercial, and industrial uses has been a challenge for the stewards of the falls since the 19th century.

Niagara Falls is 27 km (17 mi) northwest of Buffalo, New York, and 69 km (43 mi) southeast of Toronto, between the twin cities of Niagara Falls, Ontario, and Niagara Falls, New York. Niagara Falls was formed when glaciers receded at the end of the Wisconsin glaciation (the last ice age), and water from the newly formed Great Lakes carved a path over and through the Niagara Escarpment en route to the Atlantic Ocean.

Characteristics edit

 
Canadian Horseshoe Falls at right

Horseshoe Falls is about 57 m (187 ft) high,[5] while the height of the American Falls varies between 21 and 30 m (69 and 98 ft) because of the presence of giant boulders at its base. The larger Horseshoe Falls is about 790 m (2,590 ft) wide, while the American Falls is 320 m (1,050 ft) wide. The distance between the American extremity of Niagara Falls and the Canadian extremity is 1,039 m (3,409 ft).

The peak flow over Horseshoe Falls was recorded at 6,370 m3 (225,000 cu ft) per second.[6] The average annual flow rate is 2,400 m3 (85,000 cu ft) per second.[7] Since the flow is a direct function of the Lake Erie water elevation, it typically peaks in late spring or early summer. During the summer months, at least 2,800 m3 (99,000 cu ft) per second of water traverse the falls, some 90% of which goes over Horseshoe Falls, while the balance is diverted to hydroelectric facilities and then on to American Falls and Bridal Veil Falls. This is accomplished by employing a weir – the International Control Dam – with movable gates upstream from Horseshoe Falls.

 
American Falls (large waterfall center-left) and Bridal Veil Falls (right)

The water flow is halved at night and during the low tourist season winter months and only attains a minimum flow of 1,400 cubic metres (49,000 cu ft) per second. Water diversion is regulated by the 1950 Niagara Treaty and is administered by the International Niagara Board of Control.[8] The verdant green color of the water flowing over Niagara Falls is a byproduct of the estimated 60 tonnes/minute of dissolved salts and rock flour (very finely ground rock) generated by the erosive force of the Niagara River.[9]

The Niagara River is an Important Bird Area due to its impact on Bonaparte's gulls, ring-billed gulls, and herring gulls. Several thousand birds migrate and winter in the surrounding area.[10]

Geology edit

The features that became Niagara Falls were created by the Wisconsin glaciation about 10,000 years ago.[11] The retreat of the ice sheet left behind a large amount of meltwater (see Lake Algonquin, Lake Chicago, Glacial Lake Iroquois, and Champlain Sea) that filled up the basins that the glaciers had carved, thus creating the Great Lakes as we know them today.[12][13] Scientists posit there is an old valley, St David's Buried Gorge, buried by glacial drift, at the approximate location of the present Welland Canal.

 
Niagara Escarpment (in red). Niagara Falls is center-right between Lake Ontario and Lake Erie.

When the ice melted, the upper Great Lakes emptied into the Niagara River, which followed the rearranged topography across the Niagara Escarpment. In time, the river cut a gorge through the north-facing cliff, or cuesta.[14] Because of the interactions of three major rock formations, the rocky bed did not erode evenly. The caprock formation is composed of hard, erosion-resistant limestone and dolomite of the Lockport Formation (Middle Silurian). That hard layer of stone eroded more slowly than the underlying materials.[14] Immediately below the caprock lies the weaker, softer, sloping Rochester Formation (Lower Silurian). This formation is composed mainly of shale, though it has some thin limestone layers. It also contains ancient fossils. In time, the river eroded the soft layer that supported the hard layers, undercutting the hard caprock, which gave way in great chunks. This process repeated countless times, eventually carving out the falls. Submerged in the river in the lower valley, hidden from view, is the Queenston Formation (Upper Ordovician), which is composed of shales and fine sandstones. All three formations were laid down in an ancient sea, their differences of character deriving from changing conditions within that sea.

About 10,900 years ago, the Niagara Falls was between present-day Queenston, Ontario, and Lewiston, New York, but erosion of the crest caused the falls to retreat approximately 6.8 miles (10.9 km) southward.[15] The shape of Horseshoe Falls has changed through the process of erosion, evolving from a small arch to a horseshoe bend to the present day V-shape.[16] Just upstream from the falls' current location, Goat Island splits the course of the Niagara River, resulting in the separation of Horseshoe Falls to the west from the American and Bridal Veil Falls to the east. Engineering has slowed erosion and recession.[17]

Future of the falls edit

The current rate of erosion is approximately 30 centimeters (0.98 feet) per year, down from a historical average of 0.91 m (3.0 ft) per year. At this rate, in about 50,000 years Niagara Falls will have eroded the remaining 32 km (20 mi) to Lake Erie, and the falls will cease to exist.[9]

Preservation efforts edit

In the 1870s, sightseers had limited access to Niagara Falls and often had to pay for a glimpse, and industrialization threatened to carve up Goat Island to further expand commercial development.[18] Other industrial encroachments and lack of public access led to a conservation movement in the U.S. known as Free Niagara, led by such notables as Hudson River School artist Frederic Edwin Church, landscape designer Frederick Law Olmsted, and architect Henry Hobson Richardson. Church approached Lord Dufferin, governor-general of Canada, with a proposal for international discussions on the establishment of a public park.[19]

 
Damage from wind and ice on Goat Island, 1903

Goat Island was one of the inspirations for the American side of the effort. William Dorsheimer, moved by the scene from the island, brought Olmsted to Buffalo in 1868 to design a city park system, which helped promote Olmsted's career. In 1879, the New York state legislature commissioned Olmsted and James T. Gardner to survey the falls and to create the single most important document in the Niagara preservation movement, a "Special Report on the preservation of Niagara Falls".[20] The report advocated for state purchase, restoration and preservation through public ownership of the scenic lands surrounding Niagara Falls. Restoring the former beauty of the falls was described in the report as a "sacred obligation to mankind".[21] In 1883, New York Governor Grover Cleveland drafted legislation authorizing acquisition of lands for a state reservation at Niagara, and the Niagara Falls Association, a private citizens group founded in 1882, mounted a great letter-writing campaign and petition drive in support of the park. Professor Charles Eliot Norton and Olmsted were among the leaders of the public campaign, while New York Governor Alonzo Cornell opposed.[22]

Preservationists' efforts were rewarded on April 30, 1885, when Governor David B. Hill signed legislation creating the Niagara Reservation, New York's first state park. New York State began to purchase land from developers, under the charter of the Niagara Reservation State Park. In the same year, the province of Ontario established the Queen Victoria Niagara Falls Park for the same purpose. On the Canadian side, the Niagara Parks Commission governs land usage along the entire course of the Niagara River, from Lake Erie to Lake Ontario.[23]

In 1887, Olmsted and Calvert Vaux issued a supplemental report detailing plans to restore the falls. Their intent was "to restore and conserve the natural surroundings of the Falls of Niagara, rather than to attempt to add anything thereto", and the report anticipated fundamental questions, such as how to provide access without destroying the beauty of the falls, and how to restore natural landscapes damaged by man. They planned a park with scenic roadways, paths and a few shelters designed to protect the landscape while allowing large numbers of visitors to enjoy the falls.[24] Commemorative statues, shops, restaurants, and a 1959 glass and metal observation tower were added later. Preservationists continue to strive to strike a balance between Olmsted's idyllic vision and the realities of administering a popular scenic attraction.[25]

Preservation efforts continued well into the 20th century. J. Horace McFarland, the Sierra Club, and the Appalachian Mountain Club persuaded the United States Congress in 1906 to enact legislation to preserve the falls by regulating the waters of the Niagara River.[26] The act sought, in cooperation with the Canadian government, to restrict diversion of water, and a treaty resulted in 1909 that limited the total amount of water diverted from the falls by both nations to approximately 56,000 cubic feet per second (1,600 m3/s). That limitation remained in effect until 1950.[27]

 
American and Bridal Falls diverted during erosion control efforts in 1969

Erosion control efforts have always been of importance. Underwater weirs redirect the most damaging currents, and the top of the falls has been strengthened. In June 1969, the Niagara River was completely diverted from American Falls for several months through construction of a temporary rock and earth dam.[28] During this time, two bodies were removed from under the falls, including a man who had been seen jumping over the falls, and the body of a woman, which was discovered once the falls dried.[29][30] While Horseshoe Falls absorbed the extra flow, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers studied the riverbed and mechanically bolted and strengthened any faults they found; faults that would, if left untreated, have hastened the retreat of American Falls. A plan to remove the huge mound of talus deposited in 1954 was abandoned owing to cost,[31] and in November 1969, the temporary dam was dynamited, restoring flow to American Falls.[32] Even after these undertakings, Luna Island, the small piece of land between the American Falls and Bridal Veil Falls, remained off limits to the public for years owing to fears that it was unstable and could collapse into the gorge.

Commercial interests have continued to encroach on the land surrounding the state park, including the construction of several tall buildings (most of them hotels) on the Canadian side. The result is a significant alteration and urbanisation of the landscape. One study found that the tall buildings changed the breeze patterns and increased the number of mist days from 29 per year to 68 per year,[33][34] but another study disputed this idea.[35]

In 2013, New York State began an effort to renovate Three Sisters Islands located south of Goat Island. Funds were used from the re-licensing of the New York Power Authority hydroelectric plant downriver in Lewiston, New York, to rebuild walking paths on the Three Sisters Islands and to plant native vegetation on the islands. The state also renovated the area around Prospect Point at the brink of American Falls in the state park.

Toponymy edit

Theories differ as to the origin of the name of the falls. The Native American word Ongiara means thundering water;[36] The New York Times used this in 1925.[37] According to Iroquoian scholar Bruce Trigger, Niagara is derived from the name given to a branch of the local native Neutral Confederacy, who are described as the Niagagarega people on several late-17th-century French maps of the area.[38] According to George R. Stewart, it comes from the name of an Iroquois town called Onguiaahra, meaning "point of land cut in two".[39] In 1847, an Iroquois interpreter stated that the name came from Jaonniaka-re, meaning "noisy point or portage".[40] To Mohawks, the name refers to "the neck", pronounced "onyara"; the portage or neck of land between lakes Erie and Ontario onyara.[41]

History edit

 
Louis Hennepin is depicted in front of the falls in this 1698 print.[42]

Many figures have been suggested as first circulating a European eyewitness description of Niagara Falls. The Frenchman Samuel de Champlain visited the area as early as 1604 during his exploration of what is now Canada, and members of his party reported to him the spectacular waterfalls, which he described in his journals. The first description of the falls is credited to Belgian missionary, Father Louis Hennepin in 1677, after traveling with the explorer René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle, thus bringing the falls to the attention of Europeans. French Jesuit missionary Paul Ragueneau likely visited the falls some 35 years before Hennepin's visit while working among the Huron First Nation in Canada. Jean de Brébeuf also may have visited the falls, while spending time with the Neutral Nation.[43] The Finnish-Swedish naturalist Pehr Kalm explored the area in the early 18th century and is credited with the first scientific description of the falls. In 1762, Captain Thomas Davies, a British Army officer and artist, surveyed the area and painted the watercolor, An East View of the Great Cataract of Niagara, the first eyewitness painting of the falls.[44][45]

 
Horseshoe Falls, 1869

During the 19th century, tourism became popular, and by the mid-century, it was the area's main industry. Theodosia Burr Alston (daughter of Vice President Aaron Burr) and her husband Joseph Alston were the first recorded couple to honeymoon there in 1801.[46] Napoleon Bonaparte's brother Jérôme visited with his bride in the early 19th century.[47] In 1825, British explorer John Franklin visited the falls while passing through New York en route to Cumberland House as part of his second Arctic expedition, calling them "so justly celebrated as the first in the world for grandeur".[48]

In 1843, Frederick Douglass joined the American Anti-Slavery Society's "One Hundred Conventions" tour throughout New York and the midwest. Sometime on this tour, Douglass visited Niagara Falls and wrote a brief account of the experience: "When I came into its awful presence the power of discription failed me, an irrisistible power closed my lips." [49] Being on the Canadian border, Niagara Falls was on one of the routes of the Underground Railroad. The falls were also a popular tourist attraction for Southern slaveowners, who would bring their enslaved workers on the trip. "Many a time the trusted body-servant, or slave-girl, would leave master or mistress in the discharge of some errand, and never come back."[50] This sometimes led to conflict. Early town father Peter Porter assisted slavecatchers in finding runaway slaves, even leading, in the case of runaway Solomon Moseby, to a riot in Niagara-on-the-Lake, Canada.[51] Much of this history is memorialized in the Niagara Falls Underground Railroad Heritage Center. After the American Civil War, the New York Central Railroad publicized Niagara Falls as a focus of pleasure and honeymoon visits. After World War II, the auto industry, along with local tourism boards, began to promote Niagara honeymoons.[52]

In about 1840, the English industrial chemist Hugh Lee Pattinson traveled to Canada, stopping at Niagara Falls long enough to make the earliest known photograph of the falls, a daguerreotype in the collection of Newcastle University. It was once believed that the small figure standing silhouetted with a top hat was added by an engraver working from imagination as well as the daguerreotype as his source, but the figure is clearly present in the photograph.[53] Because of the very long exposure required, of ten minutes or more, the figure is assumed by Canada's Niagara Parks agency to be Pattinson.[53] The image is left-right inverted and taken from the Canadian side.[54] Pattinson made other photographs of Horseshoe Falls; these were then transferred to engravings to illustrate Noël Marie Paymal Lerebours' Excursions Daguerriennes (Paris, 1841–1864).[55]

 
American Falls frozen over with people on the ice, 1911
 
Aerial photograph of Niagara Falls, 1931

On August 6, 1918, an iron scow became stuck on the rocks above the falls.[56] The two men on the scow were rescued, but the vessel remained trapped on rocks in the river, and is still visible there in a deteriorated state, although its position shifted by 50 meters (160 ft) during a storm on October 31, 2019.[57] Daredevil William "Red" Hill Sr. was particularly praised for his role in the rescue.[58]

After the First World War, tourism boomed as automobiles made getting to the falls much easier. The story of Niagara Falls in the 20th century is largely that of efforts to harness the energy of the falls for hydroelectric power, and to control the development on both sides that threaten the area's natural beauty. Before the late 20th century, the northeastern end of Horseshoe Falls was in the United States, flowing around the Terrapin Rocks, which were once connected to Goat Island by a series of bridges. In 1955, the area between the rocks and Goat Island was filled in, creating Terrapin Point.[2] In the early 1980s, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers filled in more land and built diversion dams and retaining walls to force the water away from Terrapin Point. Altogether, 400 ft (120 m) of Horseshoe Falls were eliminated, including 100 ft (30 m) on the Canadian side. According to author Ginger Strand, the Horseshoe Falls is now entirely in Canada.[59] Other sources say "most of" Horseshoe Falls is in Canada.[60]

The only recorded freeze-up of the river and falls was caused by an ice jam on March 29, 1848. No water (or at best a trickle) fell for as much as 40 hours. Waterwheels stopped, and mills and factories shut down for having no power.[61] In 1912, American Falls was completely frozen, but the other two falls kept flowing. Although the falls commonly ice up most winters, the river and the falls do not freeze completely. The years 1885, 1902, 1906, 1911, 1932, 1936, 2014, 2017 and 2019 are noted for partial freezing of the falls.[62][63][64] A so-called ice bridge was common in certain years at the base of the falls and was used by people who wanted to cross the river before bridges had been built. During some winters, the ice sheet was as thick as 40 to 100 feet (12 to 30 m), but that thickness has not occurred since 1954. The ice bridge of 1841 was said to be at least 100 feet thick.[65] On February 4, 1912, the ice bridge which had formed on January 15 began breaking up while people were still on it. Many escaped, but three died during the event, later named the Ice Bridge Tragedy.[66]

Bridge crossings edit

 
Hand-colored lithograph of the (double-decked) Niagara Suspension Bridge, c. 1856
 
Niagara Cantilever Bridge, c. 1895

A number of bridges have spanned the Niagara River in the general vicinity of the falls. The first, not far from the whirlpool, was a suspension bridge above the gorge. It opened for use by the public in July 1848 and remained in use until 1855. A second bridge in the Upper Falls area was commissioned, with two levels or decks, one for use by the Great Western Railway. This Niagara Falls Suspension Bridge opened in 1855. It was used by conductors on the Underground Railroad to escort runaway slaves to Canada.[67] In 1882, the Grand Trunk Railway took over control of the second deck after it absorbed the Great Western company. Significant structural improvements were made in the late 1870s and then in 1886; this bridge remained in use until 1897.[68]

Because of the volume of traffic, the decision was made to construct a new arch bridge nearby, under and around the existing bridge. After it opened in September 1897, a decision was made to remove and scrap the railway suspension bridge. This new bridge was initially known as the Niagara Railway Arch, or Lower Steel Arch Bridge; it had two decks, the lower one used for carriages and the upper for trains. In 1937, it was renamed the Whirlpool Rapids Bridge and remains in use today. All of the structures built up to that time were referred to as Lower Niagara bridges and were some distance from the falls.[68]

The first bridge in the so-called Upper Niagara area (closer to the falls) was a two-level suspension structure that opened in January 1869; it was destroyed during a severe storm in January 1889. The replacement was built quickly and opened in May 1889. In order to handle heavy traffic, a second bridge was commissioned, slightly closer to American Falls. This one was a steel bridge and opened to traffic in June 1897; it was known as the Upper Steel Arch Bridge but was often called the Honeymoon Bridge. The single level included a track for trolleys and space for carriages and pedestrians. The design led to the bridge being very close to the surface of the river and in January 1938, an ice jam twisted the steel frame of the bridge which later collapsed on January 27, 1938.[69]

 
The Rainbow Bridge, the first bridge downstream from the falls

Another Lower Niagara bridge had been commissioned in 1883 by Cornelius Vanderbilt for use by railways at a location roughly approximately 200 feet south of the Railway Suspension Bridge. This one was of an entirely different design; it was a cantilever bridge to provide greater strength. The Niagara Cantilever Bridge had two cantilevers which were joined by steel sections; it opened officially in December 1883, and improvements were made over the years for a stronger structure. As rail traffic was increasing, the Michigan Central Railroad company decided to build a new bridge in 1923, to be located between the Lower Steel Arch Bridge and the Cantilever Bridge. The Michigan Central Railway Bridge opened in February 1925 and remained in use until the early 21st century. The Cantilever Bridge was removed and scrapped after the new rail bridge opened.[68] Nonetheless, it was inducted into the North America Railway Hall of Fame in 2006.[70][68]

There was a lengthy dispute as to which agency should build the replacement for the Niagara Railway Arch, or Lower Steel Arch Bridge in the Upper Niagara area. When that was resolved, construction of a steel bridge commenced in February 1940. Named the Rainbow Bridge, and featuring two lanes for traffic separated by a barrier, it opened in November 1941 and remains in use today.[69]

Industry and commerce edit

Hydroelectric power edit

 
New York side of Niagara Gorge, c. 1901

The enormous energy of Niagara Falls has long been recognized as a potential source of power. The first known effort to harness the waters was in 1750, when Daniel Joncaire built a small canal above the falls to power his sawmill.[71] Augustus and Peter Porter purchased this area and all of American Falls in 1805 from the New York state government, and enlarged the original canal to provide hydraulic power for their gristmill and tannery. In 1853, the Niagara Falls Hydraulic Power and Mining Company was chartered, which eventually constructed the canals that would be used to generate electricity.[72] In 1881, under the leadership of Jacob F. Schoellkopf, the Niagara River's first hydroelectric generating station was built. The water fell 86 feet (26 m) and generated direct current electricity, which ran the machinery of local mills and lit up some of the village streets.

The Niagara Falls Power Company, a descendant of Schoellkopf's firm, formed the Cataract Company headed by Edward Dean Adams,[73] with the intent of expanding Niagara Falls' power capacity. In 1890, a five-member International Niagara Commission headed by Sir William Thomson among other distinguished scientists deliberated on the expansion of Niagara hydroelectric capacity based on seventeen proposals but could not select any as the best combined project for hydraulic development and distribution. In 1893, Westinghouse Electric (which had built the smaller-scale Ames Hydroelectric Generating Plant near Ophir, Colorado, two years earlier) was hired to design a system to generate alternating current on Niagara Falls, and three years after that a large-scale AC power system was created (activated on August 26, 1895).[74] The Adams Power Plant Transformer House remains as a landmark of the original system.

 
Ten 5,000 HP Westinghouse generators at Edward Dean Adams Power Plant

By 1896, financing from moguls including J. P. Morgan, John Jacob Astor IV, and the Vanderbilts had fueled the construction of giant underground conduits leading to turbines generating upwards of 100,000 horsepower (75 MW), sent as far as Buffalo, 20 mi (32 km) away. Some of the original designs for the power transmission plants were created by the Swiss firm Faesch & Piccard, which also constructed the original 5,000 hp (3.7 MW) waterwheels. Private companies on the Canadian side also began to harness the energy of the falls. The Government of Ontario eventually brought power transmission operations under public control in 1906, distributing Niagara's energy to various parts of the Canadian province.

Other hydropower plants were being built along the Niagara River. But in 1956, disaster struck when the region's largest hydropower station was partially destroyed in a landslide. This drastically reduced power production and put tens of thousands of manufacturing jobs at stake. In 1957, Congress passed the Niagara Redevelopment Act,[75] which granted the New York Power Authority the right to fully develop the United States' share of the Niagara River's hydroelectric potential.[76]

In 1961, when the Niagara Falls hydroelectric project went online, it was the largest hydropower facility in the Western world. Today, Niagara is still the largest electricity producer in New York state, with a generating capacity of 2.4 GW. Up to 1,420 cubic metres (380,000 US gal) of water per second is diverted from the Niagara River through conduits under the city of Niagara Falls to the Lewiston and Robert Moses power plants. Currently between 50% and 75% of the Niagara River's flow is diverted via four huge tunnels that arise far upstream from the waterfalls. The water then passes through hydroelectric turbines that supply power to nearby areas of Canada and the United States before returning to the river well past the falls.[77] When electrical demand is low, the Lewiston units can operate as pumps to transport water from the lower bay back up to the plant's reservoir, allowing this water to be used again during the daytime when electricity use peaks. During peak electrical demand, the same Lewiston pumps are reversed and become generators.[76]

 
Robert Moses Niagara Power Plant in Lewiston, New York

To preserve Niagara Falls' natural beauty, a 1950 treaty signed by the U.S. and Canada limited water usage by the power plants. The treaty allows higher summertime diversion at night when tourists are fewer and during the winter months when there are even fewer tourists.[78] This treaty, designed to ensure an "unbroken curtain of water" flowing over the falls, states that during daylight time during the tourist season (April 1 to October 31) there must be 100,000 cubic feet per second (2,800 m3/s) of water flowing over the falls, and during the night and off-tourist season there must be 50,000 cubic feet per second (1,400 m3/s) of water flowing over the falls. This treaty is monitored by the International Niagara Board of Control, using a NOAA gauging station above the falls. During winter, the Power Authority of New York works with Ontario Power Generation to prevent ice on the Niagara River from interfering with power production or causing flooding of shoreline property. One of their joint efforts is an 8,800-foot-long (2,700 m) ice boom, which prevents the buildup of ice, yet allows water to continue flowing downstream.[76] In addition to minimum water volume, the crest of Horseshoe falls was reduced to maintain an uninterrupted "curtain of water".[79]

In August 2005, Ontario Power Generation, which is responsible for the Sir Adam Beck stations, started a major civil engineering project, called the Niagara Tunnel Project, to increase power production by building a new 12.7-metre (42 ft) diameter, 10.2-kilometre-long (6.3 mi) water diversion tunnel. It was officially placed into service in March 2013, helping to increase the generating complex's nameplate capacity by 150 megawatts. It did so by tapping water from farther up the Niagara River than was possible with the preexisting arrangement. The tunnel provided new hydroelectricity for approximately 160,000 homes.[80][81]

Transport edit

 
The Welland Canal connects Lake Ontario and Lake Erie through a series of eight locks, allowing ships to bypass the 51 m (167 ft) high Niagara Falls

Ships can bypass Niagara Falls by means of the Welland Canal, which was improved and incorporated into the Saint Lawrence Seaway in the mid-1950s. While the seaway diverted water traffic from nearby Buffalo and led to the demise of its steel and grain mills, other industries in the Niagara River valley flourished with the help of the electric power produced by the river. However, since the 1970s the region has declined economically.

The cities of Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada, and Niagara Falls, New York, United States, are connected by two international bridges. The Rainbow Bridge, just downriver from the falls, affords the closest view of the falls and is open to non-commercial vehicle traffic and pedestrians. The Whirlpool Rapids Bridge lies one mile (1.6 km) north of the Rainbow Bridge and is the oldest bridge over the Niagara River. Nearby Niagara Falls International Airport and Buffalo Niagara International Airport were named after the waterfall, as were Niagara University, countless local businesses, and even an asteroid.[82]

Over the falls edit

Jumps, plunges and walks edit

 
Bobby Leach and his barrel after his trip over Niagara Falls, (1911 photo)

The first recorded publicity stunt using the Falls was the wreck of the schooner Michigan in 1827. Local hotel owners acquired a former Lake Erie freighter, loaded it with animals and effigies of people, towed it to a spot above the falls and let it plunge over the brink. Admission of fifty cents was charged.[83]

In October 1829, Sam Patch, who called himself "the Yankee Leapster", jumped from a high tower into the gorge below the falls and survived; this began a long tradition of daredevils trying to go over the falls. Englishman Captain Matthew Webb, the first man to swim the English Channel, drowned in 1883 trying to swim the rapids downriver from the falls.[84]

On October 24, 1901, 63-year-old Michigan school teacher Annie Edson Taylor became the first person to go over the falls in a barrel as a publicity stunt; she survived, bleeding, but otherwise unharmed. Soon after exiting the barrel, she said, "No one ought ever do that again."[85] Days before Taylor's attempt, her domestic cat was sent over the falls in her barrel to test its strength. The cat survived the plunge unharmed and later posed with Taylor in photographs.[86] Since Taylor's historic ride, over a dozen people have intentionally gone over the falls in or on a device, despite her advice. Some have survived unharmed, but others have drowned or been severely injured. Survivors face charges and stiff fines, as it is now illegal, on both sides of the border, to attempt to go over the falls. Charles Stephens, a 58-year-old barber from Bristol, England, went over the falls in a wooden barrel in July 1920 and was the first person to die in an endeavor of this type.[87] Bobby Leach went over Horseshoe Falls in a crude steel barrel in 1911 and needed rescuing by William "Red" Hill Sr.[88] Hill again came to the rescue of Leach following his failed attempt to swim the Niagara Gorge in 1920. In 1928, "Smiling Jean" Lussier tried an entirely different concept, going over the falls in a large rubber ball; he was successful and survived the ordeal.[89]

 
Annie Edson Taylor posing with her wooden barrel (1901)

In the "Miracle at Niagara", on July 9, 1960, Roger Woodward, a seven-year-old American boy, was swept over Horseshoe Falls after the boat in which he was cruising lost power; two tourists pulled his 17-year-old sister Deanne from the river only 20 ft (6.1 m) from the lip of the Horseshoe Falls at Goat Island.[90] Minutes later, Woodward was plucked from the roiling plunge pool beneath Horseshoe Falls after grabbing a life ring thrown to him by the crew of the Maid of the Mist boat.[91][92] The children's uncle, Jim Honeycutt, who had been steering the boat, was swept over the edge to his death.[93][94]

On July 2, 1984, Canadian Karel Soucek from Hamilton, Ontario, plunged over Horseshoe Falls in a barrel with only minor injuries. Soucek was fined $500 for performing the stunt without a license. In 1985, he was fatally injured while attempting to re-create the Niagara drop at the Houston Astrodome. His aim was to climb into a barrel hoisted to the rafters of the Astrodome and to drop 180 ft (55 m) into a water tank on the floor. After his barrel released prematurely, it hit the side of the tank, and he died the next day from his injuries.[95][96]

In August 1985, Steve Trotter, an aspiring stuntman from Rhode Island, became the youngest person ever (age 22) and the first American in 25 years to go over the falls in a barrel. Ten years later, Trotter went over the falls again, becoming the second person to go over the falls twice and survive. It was also the second "duo"; Lori Martin joined Trotter for the barrel ride over the falls. They survived the fall, but their barrel became stuck at the bottom of the falls, requiring a rescue.[97]

On September 28, 1989, Niagara natives Peter DeBernardi and Jeffery James Petkovich became the first "team" to make it over the falls in a two-person barrel. The stunt was conceived by DeBenardi, who wanted to discourage youth from following in his path of addictive drug use. The pair emerged shortly after going over with minor injuries and were charged with performing an illegal stunt under the Niagara Parks Act.[98]

 
Charles Stephens in his barrel, prior to his fatal July 1920 attempt

On June 5, 1990, Jesse Sharp, a whitewater canoeist from Tennessee paddled over the falls in a closed deck canoe. He chose not to wear a helmet to make his face more visible for photographs of the event. He also did not wear a life vest because he believed it would hinder his escape from the hydraulics at the base of the falls. His boat flushed out of the falls, but his body was never found.[99] On September 27, 1993, John "David" Munday, of Caistor Centre, Ontario, completed his second journey over the falls.[100] On October 1, 1995, Robert Douglas "Firecracker" Overacker went over the falls on a Jet Ski to raise awareness for the homeless. His rocket-propelled parachute failed to open and he plunged to his death. Overacker's body was recovered before he was pronounced dead at Niagara General Hospital.[101]

Kirk Jones of Canton, Michigan, became the first known person to survive a plunge over Horseshoe Falls without a flotation device on October 20, 2003. According to some reports, Jones had attempted to commit suicide,[102] but he survived the fall with only battered ribs, scrapes, and bruises.[103][104] Jones tried going over the falls again in 2017, using a large inflatable ball, but died in the process.[105][106] Later reports revealed that Jones had arranged for a friend to shoot video clips of his stunt.[107]

On March 11, 2009, a man survived an unprotected trip over Horseshoe Falls. When rescued from the river he suffered from severe hypothermia and a large wound to his head. His identity was never released. Eyewitnesses reported seeing the man intentionally enter the water.[108][109] On May 21, 2012, an unidentified man became the fourth person to survive an unprotected trip over Horseshoe Falls. Eyewitness reports show he "deliberately jumped" into the Niagara River after climbing over a railing.[110][111] On July 8, 2019, at roughly 4 am, officers responded to a report of a person in crisis at the brink of the Canadian side of the falls. Once officers got to the scene, the man climbed the retaining wall, jumped into the river and went over Horseshoe Falls. Authorities subsequently began to search the lower Niagara River basin, where the man was found alive but injured sitting on the rocks at the water's edge.[112]

Tightrope walkers edit

 
Blondin carrying his manager, Harry Colcord, on a tightrope[113]

Tightrope walkers drew huge crowds to witness their exploits. Their wires ran across the gorge, near the current Rainbow Bridge, not over the waterfall. Jean François "Blondin" Gravelet was the first to cross Niagara Gorge on June 30, 1859, and did so again eight times that year. His most difficult crossing occurred on August 14, when he carried his manager, Harry Colcord, on his back.[114] His final crossing, on September 8, 1860, was witnessed by the Prince of Wales.[115][116] Author Ginger Strand argues that these performances may have had symbolic meanings at the time relating to slavery and abolition.[117]

Maria Spelterini, a 23-year-old Italian was the first and only woman to cross the Niagara River gorge; she did so on a tightrope on July 8, 1876. She repeated the stunt several times during the same month. During one crossing she was blindfolded and during another, her ankles and wrists were handcuffed. On July 12, she crossed wearing peach baskets strapped to her feet.[118]

Among the many competitors was Ontario's William Hunt, who billed himself as "The Great Farini"; his first crossing was in 1860. Farini competed with Blondin in performing outrageous stunts over the gorge.[119] On August 8, 1864, however, an attempt failed and he needed to be rescued.[120]

On June 15, 2012, high wire artist Nik Wallenda became the first person to walk across the falls area in 116 years, after receiving special permission from both governments.[121] The full length of his tightrope was 1,800 feet (550 m).[122] Wallenda crossed near the brink of Horseshoe Falls, unlike walkers who had crossed farther downstream. According to Wallenda, it was the longest unsupported tightrope walk in history.[123] He carried his passport on the trip and was required to present it upon arrival on the Canadian side of the falls.[124]

Tourism edit

 
Advertising broadside for trip to Niagara Falls from Massachusetts, 1895
 
A ring-billed gull flies by a rainbow over the Horseshoe Falls

Peak visitor traffic occurs in the summertime, when Niagara Falls is both a daytime and evening attraction. From the Canadian side, floodlights illuminate both sides of the falls for several hours after dark (until midnight). The number of visitors in 2007 was expected to total 20 million, and by 2009 the annual rate was expected to top 28 million tourists.[125]

The oldest and best known tourist attraction at Niagara Falls is the Maid of the Mist boat cruise, named for an alleged ancient Ongiara Indian mythical character, which has carried passengers into the rapids immediately below the falls since 1846. Cruise boats operate from boat docks on both sides of the falls, with the Maid of the Mist operating from the American side and Hornblower Cruises (originally Maid of the Mist until 2014[126]) from the Canadian side.[127][128] In 1996, Native American groups threatened to boycott the boat companies if they would not stop playing what they said was a fake story on their boats. The Maid of the Mist dropped the audio.[129]

From the U.S. side, American Falls can be viewed from walkways along Prospect Point Park, which also features the Prospect Point Observation Tower and a boat dock for the Maid of the Mist. Goat Island offers more views of the falls and is accessible by foot and automobile traffic by bridge above American Falls. From Goat Island, the Cave of the Winds is accessible by elevator and leads hikers to a point beneath Bridal Veil Falls. Also on Goat Island are the Three Sisters Islands, the Power Portal where a statue of Nikola Tesla (the inventor whose patents for the AC induction motor and other devices for AC power transmission helped make the harnessing of the falls possible) can be seen, and a walking path that enables views of the rapids, the Niagara River, the gorge, and all of the falls. Most of these attractions lie within the Niagara Falls State Park.[130]

 
Prospect Point Observation Tower (also known as the Niagara Falls Observation Tower)

The Niagara Scenic Trolley offers guided trips along American Falls and around Goat Island. Panoramic and aerial views of the falls can also be viewed by helicopter. The Niagara Gorge Discovery Center showcases the natural and local history of Niagara Falls and the Niagara Gorge. A casino and luxury hotel was opened in Niagara Falls, New York, by the Seneca Indian tribe. The Seneca Niagara Casino & Hotel occupies the former Niagara Falls Convention Center. The new hotel is the first addition to the city's skyline since completion of the United Office Building in the 1920s.[130][131]

On the Canadian side, Queen Victoria Park features manicured gardens, platforms offering views of American, Bridal Veil, and Horseshoe Falls, and underground walkways leading into observation rooms that yield the illusion of being within the falling waters. Along the Niagara River, the Niagara River Recreational Trail runs 35 mi (56 km) from Fort Erie to Fort George, and includes many historical sites from the War of 1812.[132]

 
Skylon Tower as seen from a helicopter on the Canadian side

The observation deck of the nearby Skylon Tower offers the highest view of the falls, and in the opposite direction gives views as far as Toronto. Along with the Tower Hotel (built as the Seagrams Tower, later renamed the Heritage Tower, the Royal Inn Tower, the Royal Center Tower, the Panasonic Tower, the Minolta Tower, and most recently the Konica Minolta Tower[133] before receiving its current name in 2010), it is one of two towers in Canada with a view of the falls.[134] The Whirlpool Aero Car, built in 1916 from a design by Spanish engineer Leonardo Torres Quevedo, is a cable car that takes passengers over the Niagara Whirlpool on the Canadian side. The Journey Behind the Falls consists of an observation platform and series of tunnels near the bottom of the Horseshoe Falls on the Canadian side.[135] There are two casinos on the Canadian side of Niagara Falls, the Niagara Fallsview Casino Resort and Casino Niagara.[136]

 
Whirlpool Aero Car above Niagara River whirlpool

Touring by helicopter over the falls, from both the US and the Canadian side, was described by The New York Times as still popular a year after a serious crash.[137] Although The New York Times had long before described attempting to tour the falls as "bent on suicide"[37] and despite a number of fatal crashes, the "as many as 100 eight-minute rides each day" are hard to regulate; two countries and various government agencies would have to coordinate.[138] These flights have been available "since the early 1960s."[137]

Media edit

Movies and television edit

 
The opening title from the theatrical trailer of the 1953 film Niagara.

Already a huge tourist attraction and favorite spot for honeymooners, Niagara Falls visits rose sharply in 1953 after the release of Niagara, a movie starring Marilyn Monroe and Joseph Cotten.[139] The 1956 animated short Niagara Fools featured Woody Woodpecker attempting to go over the falls in a barrel.[140] The falls was a featured location in the major motion picture Superman II in 1980[141] and was the subject of a popular IMAX movie, Niagara: Miracles, Myths and Magic.[142] Illusionist David Copperfield performed a trick in which he appeared to travel over Horseshoe Falls in 1990.[143]

The falls, or more particularly, the tourist-supported complex near the falls, was the setting of the short-lived Canadian-shot U.S. television show Wonderfalls in early 2004. Location footage of the falls was shot in October 2006 to portray "World's End" of the movie Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End.[144] Professional kayaker Rafa Ortiz's preparation to paddle over the falls in a kayak is documented in the 2015 film Chasing Niagara.[145]

Kevin McMahon's 1991 documentary film The Falls explored the place of Niagara Falls in the world's collective imagination, covering both positive and negative aspects of the culture around the falls.[146]

Literature edit

 
José María Heredia y Heredia plaque at Table Rock

The Niagara Falls area features as the base camp for a German aerial invasion of the United States in the H. G. Wells novel The War in the Air.[147] Many poets have been inspired to write about the falls.[148] Among them was the Cuban poet José Maria Heredia, who wrote the poem "Niagara". There are commemorative plaques on both sides of the falls recognizing the poem.[149] In 1818, American poet John Neal published the poem "Battle of Niagara," which is considered the best poetic description of Niagara Falls up to that time.[150] In 1835, as a poetical illustration "The Indian Girl" to accompany a plate of the Horse-Shoe Falls—artist Thomas Allom,[151] Letitia Elizabeth Landon imagines an Indian girl who, having saved the life of a captured young European man, takes him as her husband only to be later abandoned by him. In her despair she guides her canoe over the falls in dramatic fashion: 'Upright, within that slender boat, they saw the pale girl stand, her dark hair streaming far behind—uprais’d her desperate hand.'[152]

Lydia Sigourney wrote two dramatic poems on the falls, Niagara, in 1836 and again in her Scenes in my native Land, Niagara, in 1845.[153][154] In 1848, the Rev. C. H. A. Bulkley, of Mount Morris, New York published Niagara: A Poem, a 132-page, 3,600 line blank verse poem presenting the wonders of the falls as "the theme of a single poem."[155]

In 1893, Mark Twain wrote a satirical sketch called "The First Authentic Mention of Niagara Falls," in which Adam and Eve are living at the Falls.[156]

Music edit

Composer Ferde Grofé was commissioned by the Niagara Falls Power Generation project in 1960 to compose the Niagara Falls Suite in honor of the completion of the first stage of hydroelectric work at the falls.[157] In 1997, composer Michael Daugherty composed Niagara Falls, a piece for concert band inspired by the falls.[158]

Fine art edit

Niagara Falls was such an attraction to landscape artists that, writes John Howat, they were "the most popular, the most often treated, and the tritest single item of subject matter to appear in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century European and American landscape painting".[159] Author Ginger Strand states that "Every time there was an advance in picture-making, folks raced to the Falls to try it out." She cites engravings, chromolithographs, photographs, panoramas, camera obscuras, early movies, Cinerama, and IMAX technologies as examples.[160]

Panoramic views edit

 
Niagara Falls, c. 1921
 
Rainbow bridge, the American, Bridal Veil, and Horseshoe Falls as seen from the Skylon Tower in 2016

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Berton, Pierre (1992). Niagara: A History of the Falls. McClelland & Stewart. ISBN 978-1-4384-2928-1.
  • Dubinsky, Karen (1999). The Second Greatest Disappointment: Honeymooning and Tourism at Niagara Falls. Between the Lines. ISBN 9781896357232.
  • Grant, John and Ray Jones (2006). Niagara Falls: An Intimate Portrait. Globe Pequot Press. ISBN 9780762740253.
  • Gromosiak, Paul and Christopher Stoianoff (2012). Niagara Falls: 1850-2000. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 9780738576954.
  • Holley, George Washington (1882). The Falls of Niagara and Other Famous Cataracts. Hodder and Stoughton.
  • Macfarlane, Daniel (2020). Fixing Niagara Falls: Environment, Energy, and Engineers at the World's Most Famous Waterfall. UBC Press. ISBN 9780774864237.
  • McGreevy, Patrick (1994). Imagining Niagara: The Meaning and Making of Niagara Falls. University of Massachusetts Press. ISBN 9780870239168.
  • Strand, Ginger (2008). Inventing Niagara: Beauty, Power, and Lies. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 9781416564812.

External links edit

  •   Niagara Falls travel guide from Wikivoyage
  • Waterfalls of Ontario - Niagara Falls
  • Panorama Niagara Falls Panorama found at Queen's Park, Toronto.
  • Historic Niagara Digital Collections
  • The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers completely blocked the flow of water over the American Falls in 1969.
  • The History of Niagara Falls
  • "Niagara Power Goes Under Ground" Popular Mechanics, April 1952, pp. 115–117.
  • Niagara Power Vista – visitors center for the Niagara Falls hydro electric plant with displays, a scaled down map of the project, and documentaries on construction, situated atop the cement wall of the plant on the Niagara Gorge.
  • Niagara, 1978, Archives of Ontario YouTube Channel.

Fiction edit

niagara, falls, this, article, about, waterfalls, canada, united, states, border, other, uses, disambiguation, group, three, waterfalls, southern, niagara, gorge, spanning, border, between, province, ontario, canada, state, york, united, states, largest, three. This article is about the waterfalls on the Canada United States border For other uses see Niagara Falls disambiguation Niagara Falls n aɪ ˈ ae ɡ er e is a group of three waterfalls at the southern end of Niagara Gorge spanning the border between the province of Ontario in Canada and the state of New York in the United States The largest of the three is Horseshoe Falls which straddles the international border of the two countries 1 It is also known as the Canadian Falls 2 The smaller American Falls and Bridal Veil Falls lie within the United States Bridal Veil Falls is separated from Horseshoe Falls by Goat Island and from American Falls by Luna Island with both islands situated in New York Niagara FallsNiagara Falls seen from the Canadian side of the river including three individual falls from left to right American Falls Bridal Veil Falls and Horseshoe Falls Niagara FallsShow map of OntarioNiagara FallsShow map of CanadaLocationNiagara River into the Niagara Gorge on the border of New York in the United States and Ontario in CanadaCoordinates43 04 48 N 79 04 29 W 43 0799 N 79 0747 W 43 0799 79 0747 Niagara Falls TypeCataractTotal height167 ft 51 m Number of drops3WatercourseNiagara RiverAverageflow rate85 000 cu ft s 2 400 m3 s Formed by the Niagara River which drains Lake Erie into Lake Ontario the combined falls have the highest flow rate of any waterfall in North America that has a vertical drop of more than 50 m 160 ft During peak daytime tourist hours more than 168 000 m3 5 9 million cu ft of water goes over the crest of the falls every minute 3 Horseshoe Falls is the most powerful waterfall in North America as measured by flow rate 4 Niagara Falls is famed for its beauty and is a valuable source of hydroelectric power Balancing recreational commercial and industrial uses has been a challenge for the stewards of the falls since the 19th century Niagara Falls is 27 km 17 mi northwest of Buffalo New York and 69 km 43 mi southeast of Toronto between the twin cities of Niagara Falls Ontario and Niagara Falls New York Niagara Falls was formed when glaciers receded at the end of the Wisconsin glaciation the last ice age and water from the newly formed Great Lakes carved a path over and through the Niagara Escarpment en route to the Atlantic Ocean Contents 1 Characteristics 2 Geology 2 1 Future of the falls 2 2 Preservation efforts 3 Toponymy 4 History 5 Bridge crossings 6 Industry and commerce 6 1 Hydroelectric power 6 2 Transport 7 Over the falls 7 1 Jumps plunges and walks 7 2 Tightrope walkers 8 Tourism 9 Media 9 1 Movies and television 9 2 Literature 9 3 Music 10 Fine art 11 Panoramic views 12 See also 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External links 15 1 FictionCharacteristics edit nbsp Canadian Horseshoe Falls at rightHorseshoe Falls is about 57 m 187 ft high 5 while the height of the American Falls varies between 21 and 30 m 69 and 98 ft because of the presence of giant boulders at its base The larger Horseshoe Falls is about 790 m 2 590 ft wide while the American Falls is 320 m 1 050 ft wide The distance between the American extremity of Niagara Falls and the Canadian extremity is 1 039 m 3 409 ft The peak flow over Horseshoe Falls was recorded at 6 370 m3 225 000 cu ft per second 6 The average annual flow rate is 2 400 m3 85 000 cu ft per second 7 Since the flow is a direct function of the Lake Erie water elevation it typically peaks in late spring or early summer During the summer months at least 2 800 m3 99 000 cu ft per second of water traverse the falls some 90 of which goes over Horseshoe Falls while the balance is diverted to hydroelectric facilities and then on to American Falls and Bridal Veil Falls This is accomplished by employing a weir the International Control Dam with movable gates upstream from Horseshoe Falls nbsp American Falls large waterfall center left and Bridal Veil Falls right The water flow is halved at night and during the low tourist season winter months and only attains a minimum flow of 1 400 cubic metres 49 000 cu ft per second Water diversion is regulated by the 1950 Niagara Treaty and is administered by the International Niagara Board of Control 8 The verdant green color of the water flowing over Niagara Falls is a byproduct of the estimated 60 tonnes minute of dissolved salts and rock flour very finely ground rock generated by the erosive force of the Niagara River 9 The Niagara River is an Important Bird Area due to its impact on Bonaparte s gulls ring billed gulls and herring gulls Several thousand birds migrate and winter in the surrounding area 10 Geology editThe features that became Niagara Falls were created by the Wisconsin glaciation about 10 000 years ago 11 The retreat of the ice sheet left behind a large amount of meltwater see Lake Algonquin Lake Chicago Glacial Lake Iroquois and Champlain Sea that filled up the basins that the glaciers had carved thus creating the Great Lakes as we know them today 12 13 Scientists posit there is an old valley St David s Buried Gorge buried by glacial drift at the approximate location of the present Welland Canal nbsp Niagara Escarpment in red Niagara Falls is center right between Lake Ontario and Lake Erie When the ice melted the upper Great Lakes emptied into the Niagara River which followed the rearranged topography across the Niagara Escarpment In time the river cut a gorge through the north facing cliff or cuesta 14 Because of the interactions of three major rock formations the rocky bed did not erode evenly The caprock formation is composed of hard erosion resistant limestone and dolomite of the Lockport Formation Middle Silurian That hard layer of stone eroded more slowly than the underlying materials 14 Immediately below the caprock lies the weaker softer sloping Rochester Formation Lower Silurian This formation is composed mainly of shale though it has some thin limestone layers It also contains ancient fossils In time the river eroded the soft layer that supported the hard layers undercutting the hard caprock which gave way in great chunks This process repeated countless times eventually carving out the falls Submerged in the river in the lower valley hidden from view is the Queenston Formation Upper Ordovician which is composed of shales and fine sandstones All three formations were laid down in an ancient sea their differences of character deriving from changing conditions within that sea About 10 900 years ago the Niagara Falls was between present day Queenston Ontario and Lewiston New York but erosion of the crest caused the falls to retreat approximately 6 8 miles 10 9 km southward 15 The shape of Horseshoe Falls has changed through the process of erosion evolving from a small arch to a horseshoe bend to the present day V shape 16 Just upstream from the falls current location Goat Island splits the course of the Niagara River resulting in the separation of Horseshoe Falls to the west from the American and Bridal Veil Falls to the east Engineering has slowed erosion and recession 17 Future of the falls edit The current rate of erosion is approximately 30 centimeters 0 98 feet per year down from a historical average of 0 91 m 3 0 ft per year At this rate in about 50 000 years Niagara Falls will have eroded the remaining 32 km 20 mi to Lake Erie and the falls will cease to exist 9 Preservation efforts edit In the 1870s sightseers had limited access to Niagara Falls and often had to pay for a glimpse and industrialization threatened to carve up Goat Island to further expand commercial development 18 Other industrial encroachments and lack of public access led to a conservation movement in the U S known as Free Niagara led by such notables as Hudson River School artist Frederic Edwin Church landscape designer Frederick Law Olmsted and architect Henry Hobson Richardson Church approached Lord Dufferin governor general of Canada with a proposal for international discussions on the establishment of a public park 19 nbsp Damage from wind and ice on Goat Island 1903Goat Island was one of the inspirations for the American side of the effort William Dorsheimer moved by the scene from the island brought Olmsted to Buffalo in 1868 to design a city park system which helped promote Olmsted s career In 1879 the New York state legislature commissioned Olmsted and James T Gardner to survey the falls and to create the single most important document in the Niagara preservation movement a Special Report on the preservation of Niagara Falls 20 The report advocated for state purchase restoration and preservation through public ownership of the scenic lands surrounding Niagara Falls Restoring the former beauty of the falls was described in the report as a sacred obligation to mankind 21 In 1883 New York Governor Grover Cleveland drafted legislation authorizing acquisition of lands for a state reservation at Niagara and the Niagara Falls Association a private citizens group founded in 1882 mounted a great letter writing campaign and petition drive in support of the park Professor Charles Eliot Norton and Olmsted were among the leaders of the public campaign while New York Governor Alonzo Cornell opposed 22 Preservationists efforts were rewarded on April 30 1885 when Governor David B Hill signed legislation creating the Niagara Reservation New York s first state park New York State began to purchase land from developers under the charter of the Niagara Reservation State Park In the same year the province of Ontario established the Queen Victoria Niagara Falls Park for the same purpose On the Canadian side the Niagara Parks Commission governs land usage along the entire course of the Niagara River from Lake Erie to Lake Ontario 23 In 1887 Olmsted and Calvert Vaux issued a supplemental report detailing plans to restore the falls Their intent was to restore and conserve the natural surroundings of the Falls of Niagara rather than to attempt to add anything thereto and the report anticipated fundamental questions such as how to provide access without destroying the beauty of the falls and how to restore natural landscapes damaged by man They planned a park with scenic roadways paths and a few shelters designed to protect the landscape while allowing large numbers of visitors to enjoy the falls 24 Commemorative statues shops restaurants and a 1959 glass and metal observation tower were added later Preservationists continue to strive to strike a balance between Olmsted s idyllic vision and the realities of administering a popular scenic attraction 25 Preservation efforts continued well into the 20th century J Horace McFarland the Sierra Club and the Appalachian Mountain Club persuaded the United States Congress in 1906 to enact legislation to preserve the falls by regulating the waters of the Niagara River 26 The act sought in cooperation with the Canadian government to restrict diversion of water and a treaty resulted in 1909 that limited the total amount of water diverted from the falls by both nations to approximately 56 000 cubic feet per second 1 600 m3 s That limitation remained in effect until 1950 27 nbsp American and Bridal Falls diverted during erosion control efforts in 1969Erosion control efforts have always been of importance Underwater weirs redirect the most damaging currents and the top of the falls has been strengthened In June 1969 the Niagara River was completely diverted from American Falls for several months through construction of a temporary rock and earth dam 28 During this time two bodies were removed from under the falls including a man who had been seen jumping over the falls and the body of a woman which was discovered once the falls dried 29 30 While Horseshoe Falls absorbed the extra flow the U S Army Corps of Engineers studied the riverbed and mechanically bolted and strengthened any faults they found faults that would if left untreated have hastened the retreat of American Falls A plan to remove the huge mound of talus deposited in 1954 was abandoned owing to cost 31 and in November 1969 the temporary dam was dynamited restoring flow to American Falls 32 Even after these undertakings Luna Island the small piece of land between the American Falls and Bridal Veil Falls remained off limits to the public for years owing to fears that it was unstable and could collapse into the gorge Commercial interests have continued to encroach on the land surrounding the state park including the construction of several tall buildings most of them hotels on the Canadian side The result is a significant alteration and urbanisation of the landscape One study found that the tall buildings changed the breeze patterns and increased the number of mist days from 29 per year to 68 per year 33 34 but another study disputed this idea 35 In 2013 New York State began an effort to renovate Three Sisters Islands located south of Goat Island Funds were used from the re licensing of the New York Power Authority hydroelectric plant downriver in Lewiston New York to rebuild walking paths on the Three Sisters Islands and to plant native vegetation on the islands The state also renovated the area around Prospect Point at the brink of American Falls in the state park Toponymy editTheories differ as to the origin of the name of the falls The Native American word Ongiara means thundering water 36 The New York Times used this in 1925 37 According to Iroquoian scholar Bruce Trigger Niagara is derived from the name given to a branch of the local native Neutral Confederacy who are described as the Niagagarega people on several late 17th century French maps of the area 38 According to George R Stewart it comes from the name of an Iroquois town called Onguiaahra meaning point of land cut in two 39 In 1847 an Iroquois interpreter stated that the name came from Jaonniaka re meaning noisy point or portage 40 To Mohawks the name refers to the neck pronounced onyara the portage or neck of land between lakes Erie and Ontario onyara 41 History edit nbsp Louis Hennepin is depicted in front of the falls in this 1698 print 42 Many figures have been suggested as first circulating a European eyewitness description of Niagara Falls The Frenchman Samuel de Champlain visited the area as early as 1604 during his exploration of what is now Canada and members of his party reported to him the spectacular waterfalls which he described in his journals The first description of the falls is credited to Belgian missionary Father Louis Hennepin in 1677 after traveling with the explorer Rene Robert Cavelier Sieur de La Salle thus bringing the falls to the attention of Europeans French Jesuit missionary Paul Ragueneau likely visited the falls some 35 years before Hennepin s visit while working among the Huron First Nation in Canada Jean de Brebeuf also may have visited the falls while spending time with the Neutral Nation 43 The Finnish Swedish naturalist Pehr Kalm explored the area in the early 18th century and is credited with the first scientific description of the falls In 1762 Captain Thomas Davies a British Army officer and artist surveyed the area and painted the watercolor An East View of the Great Cataract of Niagara the first eyewitness painting of the falls 44 45 nbsp Horseshoe Falls 1869During the 19th century tourism became popular and by the mid century it was the area s main industry Theodosia Burr Alston daughter of Vice President Aaron Burr and her husband Joseph Alston were the first recorded couple to honeymoon there in 1801 46 Napoleon Bonaparte s brother Jerome visited with his bride in the early 19th century 47 In 1825 British explorer John Franklin visited the falls while passing through New York en route to Cumberland House as part of his second Arctic expedition calling them so justly celebrated as the first in the world for grandeur 48 In 1843 Frederick Douglass joined the American Anti Slavery Society s One Hundred Conventions tour throughout New York and the midwest Sometime on this tour Douglass visited Niagara Falls and wrote a brief account of the experience When I came into its awful presence the power of discription failed me an irrisistible power closed my lips 49 Being on the Canadian border Niagara Falls was on one of the routes of the Underground Railroad The falls were also a popular tourist attraction for Southern slaveowners who would bring their enslaved workers on the trip Many a time the trusted body servant or slave girl would leave master or mistress in the discharge of some errand and never come back 50 This sometimes led to conflict Early town father Peter Porter assisted slavecatchers in finding runaway slaves even leading in the case of runaway Solomon Moseby to a riot in Niagara on the Lake Canada 51 Much of this history is memorialized in the Niagara Falls Underground Railroad Heritage Center After the American Civil War the New York Central Railroad publicized Niagara Falls as a focus of pleasure and honeymoon visits After World War II the auto industry along with local tourism boards began to promote Niagara honeymoons 52 In about 1840 the English industrial chemist Hugh Lee Pattinson traveled to Canada stopping at Niagara Falls long enough to make the earliest known photograph of the falls a daguerreotype in the collection of Newcastle University It was once believed that the small figure standing silhouetted with a top hat was added by an engraver working from imagination as well as the daguerreotype as his source but the figure is clearly present in the photograph 53 Because of the very long exposure required of ten minutes or more the figure is assumed by Canada s Niagara Parks agency to be Pattinson 53 The image is left right inverted and taken from the Canadian side 54 Pattinson made other photographs of Horseshoe Falls these were then transferred to engravings to illustrate Noel Marie Paymal Lerebours Excursions Daguerriennes Paris 1841 1864 55 nbsp American Falls frozen over with people on the ice 1911 nbsp Aerial photograph of Niagara Falls 1931On August 6 1918 an iron scow became stuck on the rocks above the falls 56 The two men on the scow were rescued but the vessel remained trapped on rocks in the river and is still visible there in a deteriorated state although its position shifted by 50 meters 160 ft during a storm on October 31 2019 57 Daredevil William Red Hill Sr was particularly praised for his role in the rescue 58 After the First World War tourism boomed as automobiles made getting to the falls much easier The story of Niagara Falls in the 20th century is largely that of efforts to harness the energy of the falls for hydroelectric power and to control the development on both sides that threaten the area s natural beauty Before the late 20th century the northeastern end of Horseshoe Falls was in the United States flowing around the Terrapin Rocks which were once connected to Goat Island by a series of bridges In 1955 the area between the rocks and Goat Island was filled in creating Terrapin Point 2 In the early 1980s the U S Army Corps of Engineers filled in more land and built diversion dams and retaining walls to force the water away from Terrapin Point Altogether 400 ft 120 m of Horseshoe Falls were eliminated including 100 ft 30 m on the Canadian side According to author Ginger Strand the Horseshoe Falls is now entirely in Canada 59 Other sources say most of Horseshoe Falls is in Canada 60 The only recorded freeze up of the river and falls was caused by an ice jam on March 29 1848 No water or at best a trickle fell for as much as 40 hours Waterwheels stopped and mills and factories shut down for having no power 61 In 1912 American Falls was completely frozen but the other two falls kept flowing Although the falls commonly ice up most winters the river and the falls do not freeze completely The years 1885 1902 1906 1911 1932 1936 2014 2017 and 2019 are noted for partial freezing of the falls 62 63 64 A so called ice bridge was common in certain years at the base of the falls and was used by people who wanted to cross the river before bridges had been built During some winters the ice sheet was as thick as 40 to 100 feet 12 to 30 m but that thickness has not occurred since 1954 The ice bridge of 1841 was said to be at least 100 feet thick 65 On February 4 1912 the ice bridge which had formed on January 15 began breaking up while people were still on it Many escaped but three died during the event later named the Ice Bridge Tragedy 66 Bridge crossings edit nbsp Hand colored lithograph of the double decked Niagara Suspension Bridge c 1856 nbsp Niagara Cantilever Bridge c 1895A number of bridges have spanned the Niagara River in the general vicinity of the falls The first not far from the whirlpool was a suspension bridge above the gorge It opened for use by the public in July 1848 and remained in use until 1855 A second bridge in the Upper Falls area was commissioned with two levels or decks one for use by the Great Western Railway This Niagara Falls Suspension Bridge opened in 1855 It was used by conductors on the Underground Railroad to escort runaway slaves to Canada 67 In 1882 the Grand Trunk Railway took over control of the second deck after it absorbed the Great Western company Significant structural improvements were made in the late 1870s and then in 1886 this bridge remained in use until 1897 68 Because of the volume of traffic the decision was made to construct a new arch bridge nearby under and around the existing bridge After it opened in September 1897 a decision was made to remove and scrap the railway suspension bridge This new bridge was initially known as the Niagara Railway Arch or Lower Steel Arch Bridge it had two decks the lower one used for carriages and the upper for trains In 1937 it was renamed the Whirlpool Rapids Bridge and remains in use today All of the structures built up to that time were referred to as Lower Niagara bridges and were some distance from the falls 68 The first bridge in the so called Upper Niagara area closer to the falls was a two level suspension structure that opened in January 1869 it was destroyed during a severe storm in January 1889 The replacement was built quickly and opened in May 1889 In order to handle heavy traffic a second bridge was commissioned slightly closer to American Falls This one was a steel bridge and opened to traffic in June 1897 it was known as the Upper Steel Arch Bridge but was often called the Honeymoon Bridge The single level included a track for trolleys and space for carriages and pedestrians The design led to the bridge being very close to the surface of the river and in January 1938 an ice jam twisted the steel frame of the bridge which later collapsed on January 27 1938 69 nbsp The Rainbow Bridge the first bridge downstream from the fallsAnother Lower Niagara bridge had been commissioned in 1883 by Cornelius Vanderbilt for use by railways at a location roughly approximately 200 feet south of the Railway Suspension Bridge This one was of an entirely different design it was a cantilever bridge to provide greater strength The Niagara Cantilever Bridge had two cantilevers which were joined by steel sections it opened officially in December 1883 and improvements were made over the years for a stronger structure As rail traffic was increasing the Michigan Central Railroad company decided to build a new bridge in 1923 to be located between the Lower Steel Arch Bridge and the Cantilever Bridge The Michigan Central Railway Bridge opened in February 1925 and remained in use until the early 21st century The Cantilever Bridge was removed and scrapped after the new rail bridge opened 68 Nonetheless it was inducted into the North America Railway Hall of Fame in 2006 70 68 There was a lengthy dispute as to which agency should build the replacement for the Niagara Railway Arch or Lower Steel Arch Bridge in the Upper Niagara area When that was resolved construction of a steel bridge commenced in February 1940 Named the Rainbow Bridge and featuring two lanes for traffic separated by a barrier it opened in November 1941 and remains in use today 69 Industry and commerce editHydroelectric power edit See also List of Niagara Falls hydroelectric generating plants nbsp New York side of Niagara Gorge c 1901The enormous energy of Niagara Falls has long been recognized as a potential source of power The first known effort to harness the waters was in 1750 when Daniel Joncaire built a small canal above the falls to power his sawmill 71 Augustus and Peter Porter purchased this area and all of American Falls in 1805 from the New York state government and enlarged the original canal to provide hydraulic power for their gristmill and tannery In 1853 the Niagara Falls Hydraulic Power and Mining Company was chartered which eventually constructed the canals that would be used to generate electricity 72 In 1881 under the leadership of Jacob F Schoellkopf the Niagara River s first hydroelectric generating station was built The water fell 86 feet 26 m and generated direct current electricity which ran the machinery of local mills and lit up some of the village streets The Niagara Falls Power Company a descendant of Schoellkopf s firm formed the Cataract Company headed by Edward Dean Adams 73 with the intent of expanding Niagara Falls power capacity In 1890 a five member International Niagara Commission headed by Sir William Thomson among other distinguished scientists deliberated on the expansion of Niagara hydroelectric capacity based on seventeen proposals but could not select any as the best combined project for hydraulic development and distribution In 1893 Westinghouse Electric which had built the smaller scale Ames Hydroelectric Generating Plant near Ophir Colorado two years earlier was hired to design a system to generate alternating current on Niagara Falls and three years after that a large scale AC power system was created activated on August 26 1895 74 The Adams Power Plant Transformer House remains as a landmark of the original system nbsp Ten 5 000 HP Westinghouse generators at Edward Dean Adams Power PlantBy 1896 financing from moguls including J P Morgan John Jacob Astor IV and the Vanderbilts had fueled the construction of giant underground conduits leading to turbines generating upwards of 100 000 horsepower 75 MW sent as far as Buffalo 20 mi 32 km away Some of the original designs for the power transmission plants were created by the Swiss firm Faesch amp Piccard which also constructed the original 5 000 hp 3 7 MW waterwheels Private companies on the Canadian side also began to harness the energy of the falls The Government of Ontario eventually brought power transmission operations under public control in 1906 distributing Niagara s energy to various parts of the Canadian province Other hydropower plants were being built along the Niagara River But in 1956 disaster struck when the region s largest hydropower station was partially destroyed in a landslide This drastically reduced power production and put tens of thousands of manufacturing jobs at stake In 1957 Congress passed the Niagara Redevelopment Act 75 which granted the New York Power Authority the right to fully develop the United States share of the Niagara River s hydroelectric potential 76 In 1961 when the Niagara Falls hydroelectric project went online it was the largest hydropower facility in the Western world Today Niagara is still the largest electricity producer in New York state with a generating capacity of 2 4 GW Up to 1 420 cubic metres 380 000 US gal of water per second is diverted from the Niagara River through conduits under the city of Niagara Falls to the Lewiston and Robert Moses power plants Currently between 50 and 75 of the Niagara River s flow is diverted via four huge tunnels that arise far upstream from the waterfalls The water then passes through hydroelectric turbines that supply power to nearby areas of Canada and the United States before returning to the river well past the falls 77 When electrical demand is low the Lewiston units can operate as pumps to transport water from the lower bay back up to the plant s reservoir allowing this water to be used again during the daytime when electricity use peaks During peak electrical demand the same Lewiston pumps are reversed and become generators 76 nbsp Robert Moses Niagara Power Plant in Lewiston New YorkTo preserve Niagara Falls natural beauty a 1950 treaty signed by the U S and Canada limited water usage by the power plants The treaty allows higher summertime diversion at night when tourists are fewer and during the winter months when there are even fewer tourists 78 This treaty designed to ensure an unbroken curtain of water flowing over the falls states that during daylight time during the tourist season April 1 to October 31 there must be 100 000 cubic feet per second 2 800 m3 s of water flowing over the falls and during the night and off tourist season there must be 50 000 cubic feet per second 1 400 m3 s of water flowing over the falls This treaty is monitored by the International Niagara Board of Control using a NOAA gauging station above the falls During winter the Power Authority of New York works with Ontario Power Generation to prevent ice on the Niagara River from interfering with power production or causing flooding of shoreline property One of their joint efforts is an 8 800 foot long 2 700 m ice boom which prevents the buildup of ice yet allows water to continue flowing downstream 76 In addition to minimum water volume the crest of Horseshoe falls was reduced to maintain an uninterrupted curtain of water 79 In August 2005 Ontario Power Generation which is responsible for the Sir Adam Beck stations started a major civil engineering project called the Niagara Tunnel Project to increase power production by building a new 12 7 metre 42 ft diameter 10 2 kilometre long 6 3 mi water diversion tunnel It was officially placed into service in March 2013 helping to increase the generating complex s nameplate capacity by 150 megawatts It did so by tapping water from farther up the Niagara River than was possible with the preexisting arrangement The tunnel provided new hydroelectricity for approximately 160 000 homes 80 81 Transport edit nbsp The Welland Canal connects Lake Ontario and Lake Erie through a series of eight locks allowing ships to bypass the 51 m 167 ft high Niagara FallsShips can bypass Niagara Falls by means of the Welland Canal which was improved and incorporated into the Saint Lawrence Seaway in the mid 1950s While the seaway diverted water traffic from nearby Buffalo and led to the demise of its steel and grain mills other industries in the Niagara River valley flourished with the help of the electric power produced by the river However since the 1970s the region has declined economically The cities of Niagara Falls Ontario Canada and Niagara Falls New York United States are connected by two international bridges The Rainbow Bridge just downriver from the falls affords the closest view of the falls and is open to non commercial vehicle traffic and pedestrians The Whirlpool Rapids Bridge lies one mile 1 6 km north of the Rainbow Bridge and is the oldest bridge over the Niagara River Nearby Niagara Falls International Airport and Buffalo Niagara International Airport were named after the waterfall as were Niagara University countless local businesses and even an asteroid 82 Over the falls editSee also List of people to have gone over Niagara Falls Jumps plunges and walks edit nbsp Bobby Leach and his barrel after his trip over Niagara Falls 1911 photo The first recorded publicity stunt using the Falls was the wreck of the schooner Michigan in 1827 Local hotel owners acquired a former Lake Erie freighter loaded it with animals and effigies of people towed it to a spot above the falls and let it plunge over the brink Admission of fifty cents was charged 83 In October 1829 Sam Patch who called himself the Yankee Leapster jumped from a high tower into the gorge below the falls and survived this began a long tradition of daredevils trying to go over the falls Englishman Captain Matthew Webb the first man to swim the English Channel drowned in 1883 trying to swim the rapids downriver from the falls 84 On October 24 1901 63 year old Michigan school teacher Annie Edson Taylor became the first person to go over the falls in a barrel as a publicity stunt she survived bleeding but otherwise unharmed Soon after exiting the barrel she said No one ought ever do that again 85 Days before Taylor s attempt her domestic cat was sent over the falls in her barrel to test its strength The cat survived the plunge unharmed and later posed with Taylor in photographs 86 Since Taylor s historic ride over a dozen people have intentionally gone over the falls in or on a device despite her advice Some have survived unharmed but others have drowned or been severely injured Survivors face charges and stiff fines as it is now illegal on both sides of the border to attempt to go over the falls Charles Stephens a 58 year old barber from Bristol England went over the falls in a wooden barrel in July 1920 and was the first person to die in an endeavor of this type 87 Bobby Leach went over Horseshoe Falls in a crude steel barrel in 1911 and needed rescuing by William Red Hill Sr 88 Hill again came to the rescue of Leach following his failed attempt to swim the Niagara Gorge in 1920 In 1928 Smiling Jean Lussier tried an entirely different concept going over the falls in a large rubber ball he was successful and survived the ordeal 89 nbsp Annie Edson Taylor posing with her wooden barrel 1901 In the Miracle at Niagara on July 9 1960 Roger Woodward a seven year old American boy was swept over Horseshoe Falls after the boat in which he was cruising lost power two tourists pulled his 17 year old sister Deanne from the river only 20 ft 6 1 m from the lip of the Horseshoe Falls at Goat Island 90 Minutes later Woodward was plucked from the roiling plunge pool beneath Horseshoe Falls after grabbing a life ring thrown to him by the crew of the Maid of the Mist boat 91 92 The children s uncle Jim Honeycutt who had been steering the boat was swept over the edge to his death 93 94 On July 2 1984 Canadian Karel Soucek from Hamilton Ontario plunged over Horseshoe Falls in a barrel with only minor injuries Soucek was fined 500 for performing the stunt without a license In 1985 he was fatally injured while attempting to re create the Niagara drop at the Houston Astrodome His aim was to climb into a barrel hoisted to the rafters of the Astrodome and to drop 180 ft 55 m into a water tank on the floor After his barrel released prematurely it hit the side of the tank and he died the next day from his injuries 95 96 In August 1985 Steve Trotter an aspiring stuntman from Rhode Island became the youngest person ever age 22 and the first American in 25 years to go over the falls in a barrel Ten years later Trotter went over the falls again becoming the second person to go over the falls twice and survive It was also the second duo Lori Martin joined Trotter for the barrel ride over the falls They survived the fall but their barrel became stuck at the bottom of the falls requiring a rescue 97 On September 28 1989 Niagara natives Peter DeBernardi and Jeffery James Petkovich became the first team to make it over the falls in a two person barrel The stunt was conceived by DeBenardi who wanted to discourage youth from following in his path of addictive drug use The pair emerged shortly after going over with minor injuries and were charged with performing an illegal stunt under the Niagara Parks Act 98 nbsp Charles Stephens in his barrel prior to his fatal July 1920 attemptOn June 5 1990 Jesse Sharp a whitewater canoeist from Tennessee paddled over the falls in a closed deck canoe He chose not to wear a helmet to make his face more visible for photographs of the event He also did not wear a life vest because he believed it would hinder his escape from the hydraulics at the base of the falls His boat flushed out of the falls but his body was never found 99 On September 27 1993 John David Munday of Caistor Centre Ontario completed his second journey over the falls 100 On October 1 1995 Robert Douglas Firecracker Overacker went over the falls on a Jet Ski to raise awareness for the homeless His rocket propelled parachute failed to open and he plunged to his death Overacker s body was recovered before he was pronounced dead at Niagara General Hospital 101 Kirk Jones of Canton Michigan became the first known person to survive a plunge over Horseshoe Falls without a flotation device on October 20 2003 According to some reports Jones had attempted to commit suicide 102 but he survived the fall with only battered ribs scrapes and bruises 103 104 Jones tried going over the falls again in 2017 using a large inflatable ball but died in the process 105 106 Later reports revealed that Jones had arranged for a friend to shoot video clips of his stunt 107 On March 11 2009 a man survived an unprotected trip over Horseshoe Falls When rescued from the river he suffered from severe hypothermia and a large wound to his head His identity was never released Eyewitnesses reported seeing the man intentionally enter the water 108 109 On May 21 2012 an unidentified man became the fourth person to survive an unprotected trip over Horseshoe Falls Eyewitness reports show he deliberately jumped into the Niagara River after climbing over a railing 110 111 On July 8 2019 at roughly 4 am officers responded to a report of a person in crisis at the brink of the Canadian side of the falls Once officers got to the scene the man climbed the retaining wall jumped into the river and went over Horseshoe Falls Authorities subsequently began to search the lower Niagara River basin where the man was found alive but injured sitting on the rocks at the water s edge 112 Tightrope walkers edit nbsp Blondin carrying his manager Harry Colcord on a tightrope 113 Tightrope walkers drew huge crowds to witness their exploits Their wires ran across the gorge near the current Rainbow Bridge not over the waterfall Jean Francois Blondin Gravelet was the first to cross Niagara Gorge on June 30 1859 and did so again eight times that year His most difficult crossing occurred on August 14 when he carried his manager Harry Colcord on his back 114 His final crossing on September 8 1860 was witnessed by the Prince of Wales 115 116 Author Ginger Strand argues that these performances may have had symbolic meanings at the time relating to slavery and abolition 117 Maria Spelterini a 23 year old Italian was the first and only woman to cross the Niagara River gorge she did so on a tightrope on July 8 1876 She repeated the stunt several times during the same month During one crossing she was blindfolded and during another her ankles and wrists were handcuffed On July 12 she crossed wearing peach baskets strapped to her feet 118 Among the many competitors was Ontario s William Hunt who billed himself as The Great Farini his first crossing was in 1860 Farini competed with Blondin in performing outrageous stunts over the gorge 119 On August 8 1864 however an attempt failed and he needed to be rescued 120 On June 15 2012 high wire artist Nik Wallenda became the first person to walk across the falls area in 116 years after receiving special permission from both governments 121 The full length of his tightrope was 1 800 feet 550 m 122 Wallenda crossed near the brink of Horseshoe Falls unlike walkers who had crossed farther downstream According to Wallenda it was the longest unsupported tightrope walk in history 123 He carried his passport on the trip and was required to present it upon arrival on the Canadian side of the falls 124 Tourism edit nbsp Advertising broadside for trip to Niagara Falls from Massachusetts 1895 nbsp A ring billed gull flies by a rainbow over the Horseshoe FallsPeak visitor traffic occurs in the summertime when Niagara Falls is both a daytime and evening attraction From the Canadian side floodlights illuminate both sides of the falls for several hours after dark until midnight The number of visitors in 2007 was expected to total 20 million and by 2009 the annual rate was expected to top 28 million tourists 125 The oldest and best known tourist attraction at Niagara Falls is the Maid of the Mist boat cruise named for an alleged ancient Ongiara Indian mythical character which has carried passengers into the rapids immediately below the falls since 1846 Cruise boats operate from boat docks on both sides of the falls with the Maid of the Mist operating from the American side and Hornblower Cruises originally Maid of the Mist until 2014 126 from the Canadian side 127 128 In 1996 Native American groups threatened to boycott the boat companies if they would not stop playing what they said was a fake story on their boats The Maid of the Mist dropped the audio 129 From the U S side American Falls can be viewed from walkways along Prospect Point Park which also features the Prospect Point Observation Tower and a boat dock for the Maid of the Mist Goat Island offers more views of the falls and is accessible by foot and automobile traffic by bridge above American Falls From Goat Island the Cave of the Winds is accessible by elevator and leads hikers to a point beneath Bridal Veil Falls Also on Goat Island are the Three Sisters Islands the Power Portal where a statue of Nikola Tesla the inventor whose patents for the AC induction motor and other devices for AC power transmission helped make the harnessing of the falls possible can be seen and a walking path that enables views of the rapids the Niagara River the gorge and all of the falls Most of these attractions lie within the Niagara Falls State Park 130 nbsp Prospect Point Observation Tower also known as the Niagara Falls Observation Tower The Niagara Scenic Trolley offers guided trips along American Falls and around Goat Island Panoramic and aerial views of the falls can also be viewed by helicopter The Niagara Gorge Discovery Center showcases the natural and local history of Niagara Falls and the Niagara Gorge A casino and luxury hotel was opened in Niagara Falls New York by the Seneca Indian tribe The Seneca Niagara Casino amp Hotel occupies the former Niagara Falls Convention Center The new hotel is the first addition to the city s skyline since completion of the United Office Building in the 1920s 130 131 On the Canadian side Queen Victoria Park features manicured gardens platforms offering views of American Bridal Veil and Horseshoe Falls and underground walkways leading into observation rooms that yield the illusion of being within the falling waters Along the Niagara River the Niagara River Recreational Trail runs 35 mi 56 km from Fort Erie to Fort George and includes many historical sites from the War of 1812 132 nbsp Skylon Tower as seen from a helicopter on the Canadian sideThe observation deck of the nearby Skylon Tower offers the highest view of the falls and in the opposite direction gives views as far as Toronto Along with the Tower Hotel built as the Seagrams Tower later renamed the Heritage Tower the Royal Inn Tower the Royal Center Tower the Panasonic Tower the Minolta Tower and most recently the Konica Minolta Tower 133 before receiving its current name in 2010 it is one of two towers in Canada with a view of the falls 134 The Whirlpool Aero Car built in 1916 from a design by Spanish engineer Leonardo Torres Quevedo is a cable car that takes passengers over the Niagara Whirlpool on the Canadian side The Journey Behind the Falls consists of an observation platform and series of tunnels near the bottom of the Horseshoe Falls on the Canadian side 135 There are two casinos on the Canadian side of Niagara Falls the Niagara Fallsview Casino Resort and Casino Niagara 136 nbsp Whirlpool Aero Car above Niagara River whirlpoolTouring by helicopter over the falls from both the US and the Canadian side was described by The New York Times as still popular a year after a serious crash 137 Although The New York Times had long before described attempting to tour the falls as bent on suicide 37 and despite a number of fatal crashes the as many as 100 eight minute rides each day are hard to regulate two countries and various government agencies would have to coordinate 138 These flights have been available since the early 1960s 137 Media editMovies and television edit nbsp The opening title from the theatrical trailer of the 1953 film Niagara Already a huge tourist attraction and favorite spot for honeymooners Niagara Falls visits rose sharply in 1953 after the release of Niagara a movie starring Marilyn Monroe and Joseph Cotten 139 The 1956 animated short Niagara Fools featured Woody Woodpecker attempting to go over the falls in a barrel 140 The falls was a featured location in the major motion picture Superman II in 1980 141 and was the subject of a popular IMAX movie Niagara Miracles Myths and Magic 142 Illusionist David Copperfield performed a trick in which he appeared to travel over Horseshoe Falls in 1990 143 The falls or more particularly the tourist supported complex near the falls was the setting of the short lived Canadian shot U S television show Wonderfalls in early 2004 Location footage of the falls was shot in October 2006 to portray World s End of the movie Pirates of the Caribbean At World s End 144 Professional kayaker Rafa Ortiz s preparation to paddle over the falls in a kayak is documented in the 2015 film Chasing Niagara 145 Kevin McMahon s 1991 documentary film The Falls explored the place of Niagara Falls in the world s collective imagination covering both positive and negative aspects of the culture around the falls 146 Literature edit nbsp Jose Maria Heredia y Heredia plaque at Table RockThe Niagara Falls area features as the base camp for a German aerial invasion of the United States in the H G Wells novel The War in the Air 147 Many poets have been inspired to write about the falls 148 Among them was the Cuban poet Jose Maria Heredia who wrote the poem Niagara There are commemorative plaques on both sides of the falls recognizing the poem 149 In 1818 American poet John Neal published the poem Battle of Niagara which is considered the best poetic description of Niagara Falls up to that time 150 In 1835 as a poetical illustration The Indian Girl to accompany a plate of the Horse Shoe Falls artist Thomas Allom 151 Letitia Elizabeth Landon imagines an Indian girl who having saved the life of a captured young European man takes him as her husband only to be later abandoned by him In her despair she guides her canoe over the falls in dramatic fashion Upright within that slender boat they saw the pale girl stand her dark hair streaming far behind uprais d her desperate hand 152 Lydia Sigourney wrote two dramatic poems on the falls Niagara in 1836 and again in her Scenes in my native Land Niagara in 1845 153 154 In 1848 the Rev C H A Bulkley of Mount Morris New York published Niagara A Poem a 132 page 3 600 line blank verse poem presenting the wonders of the falls as the theme of a single poem 155 In 1893 Mark Twain wrote a satirical sketch called The First Authentic Mention of Niagara Falls in which Adam and Eve are living at the Falls 156 Music edit Composer Ferde Grofe was commissioned by the Niagara Falls Power Generation project in 1960 to compose the Niagara Falls Suite in honor of the completion of the first stage of hydroelectric work at the falls 157 In 1997 composer Michael Daugherty composed Niagara Falls a piece for concert band inspired by the falls 158 Fine art editNiagara Falls was such an attraction to landscape artists that writes John Howat they were the most popular the most often treated and the tritest single item of subject matter to appear in eighteenth and nineteenth century European and American landscape painting 159 Author Ginger Strand states that Every time there was an advance in picture making folks raced to the Falls to try it out She cites engravings chromolithographs photographs panoramas camera obscuras early movies Cinerama and IMAX technologies as examples 160 nbsp A General View of the Falls of Niagara by Alvan Fisher 1820 nbsp Distant View of Niagara Falls by Thomas Cole 1830 nbsp Niagara Falle Les chutes du Niagara Niagara Falls by Karl Bodmer circa 1832 nbsp Voute sous la Chute du Niagara Niagara Falls circa 1841 nbsp Niagara by Frederic Edwin Church 1857 nbsp Underneath Niagara Falls by Ferdinand Richardt 1862 nbsp Niagara by Louis Remy Mignot circa 1866 nbsp Falls of Niagara from Below by Albert Bierstadt 1869 nbsp Niagara Falls by William Morris Hunt 1878 nbsp Niagara Falls circa 1880Panoramic views edit nbsp Niagara Falls c 1921 nbsp Rainbow bridge the American Bridal Veil and Horseshoe Falls as seen from the Skylon Tower in 2016See also edit nbsp Earth Sciences portal nbsp Canada portal nbsp Ontario portal nbsp New York state portal nbsp National Register of Historic Places portalFederal Power Commission v Tuscarora Indian Nation 1960 United States Supreme Court casePages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback International Control Dam International Niagara Board of Control Incline railways at Niagara Falls Table Rock Niagara Falls Former rock formationReferences edit Niagara Falls britannica com Retrieved July 11 2022 a b Berton Pierre 2009 Niagara A History of the Falls SUNY Press pp 1 20 21 ISBN 978 1 4384 2928 1 Retrieved December 1 2010 Niagara Falls Geology Facts and Figures Niagara Parks Archived from the original on October 2 2017 Retrieved October 18 2017 City Profile for Niagara Falls Ontario Archived from the original on September 21 2020 Retrieved October 6 2008 Niagara Falls Geology Facts amp Figures Archived April 18 2017 at the Wayback Machine Niagara Parks Government of Ontario Canada Retrieved July 26 2014 Niagara Falls History of Power Historical and engineering data on the U S and Canadian power stations Retrieved September 24 2006 Niagara Falls World Waterfall Database Retrieved November 15 2013 INBC International Niagara Board of Control Archived from the original on July 26 2009 Retrieved March 19 2007 a b Niagara Falls Geology Facts amp Figures Niagara Parks Archived from the original on July 19 2011 Retrieved April 29 2011 GORGE OUS GULLS OF THE NIAGARA IN WINTER New York State Parks November 26 2019 Retrieved July 11 2023 Irving H Tesmer Jerold C Bastedo 1981 Colossal Cataract The Geologic History of Niagara Falls SUNY Press pp 41 44 ISBN 978 0 87395 522 5 Larson Grahame Schaetzl R 2001 Origin and evolution of the Great Lakes PDF Journal of Great Lakes Research 27 4 518 546 Bibcode 2001JGLR 27 518L doi 10 1016 S0380 1330 01 70665 X Archived from the original PDF on October 31 2008 Retrieved March 4 2009 Niagara Falls Geological History InfoNiagara Archived from the original on October 6 2014 Retrieved March 3 2007 a b Hugh J Gayler 1994 Niagara s Changing Landscapes McGill Queen s Press pp 20 ISBN 978 0 88629 235 5 Parker E Calkin and Carlton E Brett Ancestral Niagara River drainage Stratigraphic and paleontologic setting GSA Bulletin August 1978 v 89 no 8 pp 1140 1154 Geological Past of Niagara Falls and the Niagara Region Archived from the original on August 4 2020 Retrieved December 21 2008 Irving H Tesmer Jerold C Bastedo Colossal Cataract The Geologic History of Niagara Falls SUNY Press 1981 ISBN 0 87395 522 6 p 75 MCLEOD DUNCAN 1955 NIAGARA FALLS WAS A HELL RAISING TOWN Macleans Archived from the original on October 26 2020 Retrieved February 24 2020 Linda L Revie 2010 The Niagara Companion Explorers Artists and Writers at the Falls from Discovery through the Twentieth Century Wilfrid Laurier Univ Press p 144 ISBN 978 1 55458 773 5 THE GARDNER REPORT www mobot org Laura Wood Roper FLO A Biography of Frederick Law Olmsted Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press 1973 pp 378 81 The New Niagara Tourism Technology and the Landscape of Niagara Falls 1776D1917 Penn State Press 1996 pp 74 76 ISBN 0 271 04222 2 Wentzell Tyler 2018 The Court amp the Cataracts Ontario History 106 100 125 doi 10 7202 1050723ar New York State Commissioners of state reservation at Niagara Albany The Argus Company printers 1887 The New York State Preservationist Vol 6 No 1 Fall Winter 2002 Falling for Niagara pp 14 15 Burton Act U S Statutes at Large Vol 34 Part 1 Chap 3621 pp 626 28 An Act For the control and regulation of the waters of Niagara River for the preservation of Niagara Falls and for other purposes H R 18024 Public Act No 367 This remarkable event had occurred only once before when an upstream ice jam stopped almost all water flow over Niagara Falls on March 29 1848 Fischer Nancy January 23 2016 Niagara Falls is going to go dry again The Buffalo News Retrieved August 16 2021 Niagara Falls Geological History The American Dry Falls Niagara Falls USA niagarafallsinfo com Archived from the original on January 31 2016 Retrieved January 24 2016 The Department of State Bulletin Office of Public Communication Bureau of Public Affairs 1969 p 346 Patricia Corrigan Geoffrey H Nash 2007 Waterfalls Infobase Publishing pp 60 ISBN 978 1 4381 0671 7 What causes the mist rising from Niagara Falls OPSEU 217 Retrieved April 28 2011 Binns Corey July 18 2006 Two Studies of Increasing Mist at Niagara Falls Find Two Different Culprits The New York Times Bursik Marcus Temperatures Not Hotels Likely Alter Niagara Falls Mist University at Buffalo Retrieved April 28 2011 Honeymoon not over Tampa Bay Times May 14 1995 a b gt Saving the Thundering Niagara Falls Bent on Suicide The New York Times August 30 1925 Retrieved August 23 2022 Bruce Trigger The Children of Aataentsic McGill Queen s University Press Kingston and Montreal 1987 ISBN 0 7735 0626 8 p 95 Stewart George R 1967 Names on the Land Boston Houghton Mifflin Company p 83 Delage Denys 2006 Aboriginal Influence on the Canadians and French at the time of New France In Christie Gordon ed Aboriginality and Governance A Multidisciplinary Approach Penticton Indian Reserve British Columbia Theytus Books p 28 ISBN 1894778243 Schoolcraft Henry R 1847 Notes on the Iroquois pp 453 454 Saut ou chute d eau de Niagara qui se voit entre le Lac Ontario amp le Lac Erie The Jesuit Relations and Allied Documents Volume 33 Puffin creighton edu Archived from the original on March 21 2016 Retrieved October 16 2010 Captain Thomas Davies 1737 1812 An East View of the Great Cataract of Niagara Christie s April 1 2015 Dickenson Victoria 1998 Drawn from Life Science and Art in the Portrayal of the New World University of Toronto Press p 195 ISBN 978 0 8020 8073 8 Sherman Zavitz City of Niagara Falls Official Historian Niagara Falls Moment CJRN 710 Radio June 26 2008 Niagara Falls is such a cool honeymoon destination even Napoleon s Brother chose it Archived from the original on November 27 2020 Retrieved September 24 2006 Franklin John 1828 Narrative of a Second Expedition to the Shores of the Polar Sea Carey Lea and Carey p XV Douglass Frederick 1843 Niagara The Frederick Douglass Papers New Haven CT Yale University Press pp 2 3 doi 10 12987 9780300266283 009 ISBN 978 0 300 26628 3 Severance Frank H 1899 Underground Trails Old Trails on the Niagara Frontier Buffalo NY p 244 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Strand pp 116 119 Strand p 214 a b Backgrounder Pattinson Daguerreotype Niagara Parks an agency of the Government of Ontario since 1885 Archived from the original on December 28 2010 Retrieved November 30 2012 The assumption explained on the web page is that as Pattinson had ample time to walk into the picture he opened the shutter and then positioned himself at the chosen spot keeping still there for some minutes Photo Niagara Falls 1840 How academics found the first photograph to be taken in Canada The Walrus July August 2009 Archived from the original on January 29 2012 Retrieved November 29 2012 Hugh Lee Pattinson Newcastle University 2010 Archived from the original on November 7 2017 Retrieved November 29 2012 Boat trapped on rocks above Niagara Falls dislodged after 101 years KOAM November 2 2019 Archived from the original on November 4 2019 Retrieved November 4 2019 Boat trapped for 101 years near edge of Niagara Falls moves after Halloween night storm USA Today November 2 2019 Retrieved November 3 2019 Niagara Parks Hosts Centenary of the Iron Scow Rescue City of Niagara Falls July 19 2018 Retrieved November 3 2019 Strand Ginger 2009 Inventing Niagara Beauty Power and Lies Simon amp Schuster p 195 ISBN 978 1 4165 4657 3 Retrieved December 1 2010 Vanderwilt Dirk 2007 Niagara Falls With the Niagara Parks Clifton Hill and Other Area Attractions p 35 Channel Lake Inc ISBN 978 0 9792043 7 1 Alfred Randy March 30 2010 March 30 1848 Niagara Falls Runs Dry Wired com This Day in Tech Retrieved October 16 2010 Does Niagara Falls Freeze in the Winter Marriott Niagara Falls Hotel December 15 2016 FACT CHECK Do Photographs Capture Niagara Falls Frozen Snopes com January 23 2007 Does Niagara Falls Freeze Has Niagara Falls Frozen World Atlas July 15 2019 Retrieved November 4 2019 Ice Bridges of Niagara Falls Info Niagara July 11 2007 Retrieved November 4 2019 ICE BRIDGE TRAGEDY Niagara Falls Tourism February 22 2018 Retrieved November 4 2019 Strand p 114 a b c d THE LOWER NIAGARA BRIDGES Niagara Falls Museums February 10 2001 Retrieved January 10 2020 a b THE UPPER NIAGARA BRIDGES Niagara Falls Museums February 10 2001 Retrieved January 10 2020 MCR Cantilever Bridges NARHF June 10 2006 Archived from the original on August 4 2020 Retrieved January 10 2020 Peter Eisenstadt 2005 Encyclopedia of New York State Syracuse University Press p 1110 ISBN 978 0 8156 0808 0 William Pool 1897 Landmarks of Niagara County New York D Mason p 176 Honor for E D Adams Engineers to Award the John Fritz Medal for Niagara Development The New York Times March 17 1926 p 6 ProQuest 119063396 The electrical features of Niagara The Electrical World Volume 29 1897 Pub L Tooltip Public Law United States 85 159 H R 8643 71 Stat 401 enacted August 21 1957 a b c NYPA Niagara Nypa gov Archived from the original on January 14 2009 Retrieved October 16 2010 Niagara Falls Original Turbines National Museum of American History Smithsonian Institution Retrieved June 19 2008 Niagara Power Goes Under Ground Popular Mechanics April 1952 p 115 Macfarlane Daniel January 9 2018 How engineers created the icy wonderland at Niagara Falls The Washington Post Retrieved January 9 2018 Niagara Tunnel Project Technical Facts NiagaraFrontier com updated November 2012 Niagara Tunnel Now In Service Ontario Power Generation March 21 2013 Archived from the original on November 19 2013 Retrieved April 11 2013 Asteroid 12382 Niagara Falls was named after the falls Strand pp 65 68 Niagara Falls Daredevils a history Niagarafrontier com Retrieved August 21 2011 Thompson Carolyn July 2 2000 Seeking Out Death Or Defying It For Niagara Falls It s a Busy Season for Tourism Suicide and Daredevils Sun Sentinel Fort Lauderdale Florida p 3A Parish Charles Carlin Queen of the Mist The Story of Annie Edson Taylor First Person Ever to Go Over Niagara Falls and Survive Empire State Books Interlaken NY 1987 ISBN 0 932334 89 X p 55 Charles Stephens Info Niagara March 1 2016 Retrieved November 4 2019 THE FIRST DAREDEVIL TO LOSE HIS LIFE GOING OVER THE FALLS WAS CHARLES STEPHENS Berton Pierre July 27 2011 Niagara A History of the Falls Toronto Anchor Canada p 304 ISBN 978 0385659307 The ultimate guide to enjoying Niagara Falls Today July 11 2007 Retrieved November 4 2019 Over the Falls Retrieved September 24 2006 Account of Roger Woodward s Niagara Falls incident Retrieved October 3 2008 Pictures from the Niagara Falls Public Library Ont Includes a stamp issued to commemorate the event Retrieved October 3 2008 permanent dead link Roger Woodward Info Niagara July 11 2007 Retrieved November 4 2019 Maid History Niagara Falls Boat Rides amp Trips Maid of the Mist April 8 2022 Info Niagara Karel Soucek Archived from the original on January 9 2008 Retrieved February 8 2008 35 000 Watch as Barrel Misses Water Tank 180 Ft Drop Ends in Stunt Man s Death Los Angeles Times Associated Press January 21 1985 ISSN 0458 3035 Retrieved September 20 2018 Niagara Falls Daredevils a history Niagarafrontier com Retrieved August 21 2011 Niagara Falls Daredevils a history Niagarafrontier com Retrieved August 21 2011 Neill Michael June 25 1990 Tennessee Outdoorsman Jessie Sharp Challenged Niagara s Mighty Falls in a Tiny Canoe and Lost Vol 33 No 25 PEOPLE com Retrieved August 20 2017 Info Niagara Dave Munday Archived from the original on December 24 2007 Retrieved February 8 2008 Info Robert Overacker Archived from the original on December 24 2007 Retrieved February 8 2008 Law John June 16 2017 Kirk Jones could not survive Falls a second time Niagara Falls Review Archived from the original on June 16 2017 Retrieved June 16 2017 Niagara Falls survivor Stunt was impulsive CNN October 22 2003 Archived from the original on January 12 2008 Retrieved February 8 2008 thesurvivorsclub org Archived from the original on January 2 2021 Retrieved May 21 2012 Kirk Jones Info Niagara July 11 2007 Retrieved November 4 2019 Man dies after going over Niagara Falls inside inflatable ball CTV News The Associated Press June 16 2017 Retrieved June 16 2017 Few survive plunging over Niagara Falls Globe and Mail April 29 2018 Retrieved November 4 2019 Man survives plunge into Niagara Falls CBC News March 11 2009 Retrieved March 25 2009 Man survives plunge over Niagara Falls CNN March 11 2009 Archived from the original on September 15 2020 Retrieved March 11 2009 Man survives plunge over Niagara Falls only 3rd person without safety device to survive The Washington Post dead link Staff May 21 2012 Man Survives Plunge over Horseshoe Falls Niagara Gazette Retrieved May 25 2012 Man goes over Horseshoe Falls survives with non life threatening injuries WIVB July 8 2019 History Travel Arts Science People Places Smithsonian smithsonianmag com Archived from the original on June 25 2012 Retrieved June 20 2012 The Great Blondin Info Niagara July 11 2007 Retrieved November 4 2019 Anne Neville Daredevils who wire walked before Wallenda buffalonews com Blondin broadsheet Details Nflibrary ca February 27 2006 Retrieved August 21 2011 Strand pp 122 129 The ultimate guide to enjoying Niagara Falls Info Niagara July 11 2007 Retrieved November 4 2019 Niagara Falls Daredevils a history Niagarafrontier com Retrieved August 21 2011 The Great Farini Info Niagara July 11 2007 Retrieved November 4 2019 Hakim Danny Leyden Liz June 15 2012 Niagara Falls Fills with Excitement in Wait of Tightrope Walk The New York Times Niagara Falls tightrope walk Nik Wallenda succeeds guardian co uk June 16 2012 Retrieved June 16 2012 Michael Woods Liam Casey June 10 2012 Wallenda s plan for the falls Toronto Star NiagaraThisWeek com Retrieved June 20 2012 Emily Senger June 16 2012 Nik Wallenda makes historic Niagara Falls walk CTV News Retrieved June 16 2012 Niagara Falls Travelooce com Archived from the original on February 5 2013 Maid of the Mist completes its final voyage from Canada CTVNews October 24 2013 Retrieved June 12 2020 Maid of the Mist Maid of the Mist Steamboat Company Ltd Archived from the original on March 29 2007 Retrieved March 27 2007 American Indian Legends Legend of the Maid of the Mist www firstpeople us Archived from the original on November 27 2020 Retrieved March 27 2007 Strand pp 10 11 a b Niagara Falls State Park Niagara Falls State Park Retrieved March 27 2007 The Flight of Angels The Great American Balloon Company Retrieved March 27 2007 Niagara River Recreation Trail Niagara Parks Commission Archived from the original on March 29 2007 Retrieved March 27 2007 History of Niagara Falls Towers Minolta Tower Niagara Falls Ontario Niagara Falls Info February 3 2017 Retrieved June 12 2020 Let s Go Travel Guide 2004 Journey Behind the Falls Niagara Parks Commission Retrieved March 27 2007 James Cosgrave Thomas Klassen February 5 2009 Casino State Legalized Gambling in Canada University of Toronto Press p 116 ISBN 978 1 4426 9223 7 a b Niagara Falls Flights Still Popular After Crash The New York Times September 26 1993 Retrieved August 23 2022 James Dao September 30 1992 Niagara Crash Of 2 Copters Kills 4 People The New York Times Retrieved August 23 2022 Karen Dubinsky 1999 The Second Greatest Disappointment Honeymooning and Tourism at Niagara Falls Between The Lines p 212 ISBN 978 1 896357 23 2 Heritage Comic and Comic Art Signature Auction 821 Heritage Capital Corporation July 2006 p 229 ISBN 978 1 59967 063 8 permanent dead link Kidder returns to site of Superman II in Falls NiagaraThisWeek com April 9 2015 Niagara Falls IMAX Movie Ontario Canada Imaxniagara com Archived from the original on June 2 2008 Retrieved October 16 2010 MASTER ILLUSIONIST WILL CHALLENGE THE MIGHTY NIAGARA ON A FIERY RAFT DAVID COPPERFIELD CLAIMS THERE ARE NO CAMERA TRICKS March 24 1990 Pirates of the Caribbean At World s End 2007 IMDb Chasing Niagara July 5 2016 via www imdb com Mark Bastien The Falls Film shows beauty and beast Ottawa Citizen October 26 1991 W Warren Wagar September 22 2004 H G Wells Traversing Time Wesleyan University Press pp 140 ISBN 978 0 8195 6725 3 Severance Frank H 1899 Niagara and the Poets Old Trails on the Niagara Frontier Buffalo NY pp 275 321 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link John Robert Colombo January 1 1984 Canadian Literary Landmarks Dundurn p 141 ISBN 978 0 88882 073 0 Hayes Kevin J 2012 Chapter 13 How John Neal Wrote His Autobiography In Watts Edward Carlson David J eds John Neal and Nineteenth Century American Literature and Culture Lewisburg Pennsylvania Bucknell University Press p 275 ISBN 978 1 61148 420 5 Landon Letitia Elizabeth 1835 picture Fisher s Drawing Room Scrap Book 1836 Fisher Son amp Co Landon Letitia Elizabeth 1835 text on Niagara and poetical illustration Fisher s Drawing Room Scrap Book 1836 Fisher Son amp Co Zinzendorff and other poems New York Leavitt Lord amp co Boston Crocker amp Brewster 1836 Scenes in my native land 1845 Bulkley C H A 1848 Niagara A Poem New York Leavitt Trow amp Co Strand p 71 Dumych Daniel M 1998 Niagara Falls Volume 2 Arcadia Publishing ISBN 0 7385 5785 4 Daugherty Michael 1997 Niagara Falls for symphonic band Program Note by the Composer Retrieved May 20 2015 Howat John K Church Frederic Edwin 2005 Frederic Church Yale University Press p 69 ISBN 0 300 10988 1 Strand p 296Further reading editBerton Pierre 1992 Niagara A History of the Falls McClelland amp Stewart ISBN 978 1 4384 2928 1 Dubinsky Karen 1999 The Second Greatest Disappointment Honeymooning and Tourism at Niagara Falls Between the Lines ISBN 9781896357232 Grant John and Ray Jones 2006 Niagara Falls An Intimate Portrait Globe Pequot Press ISBN 9780762740253 Gromosiak Paul and Christopher Stoianoff 2012 Niagara Falls 1850 2000 Arcadia Publishing ISBN 9780738576954 Holley George Washington 1882 The Falls of Niagara and Other Famous Cataracts Hodder and Stoughton Macfarlane Daniel 2020 Fixing Niagara Falls Environment Energy and Engineers at the World s Most Famous Waterfall UBC Press ISBN 9780774864237 McGreevy Patrick 1994 Imagining Niagara The Meaning and Making of Niagara Falls University of Massachusetts Press ISBN 9780870239168 Strand Ginger 2008 Inventing Niagara Beauty Power and Lies Simon and Schuster ISBN 9781416564812 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Niagara Falls nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Niagara Falls image gallery nbsp Niagara Falls travel guide from Wikivoyage Waterfalls of Ontario Niagara Falls Panorama Niagara Falls Panorama found at Queen s Park Toronto Historic Niagara Digital Collections U S Army Corps of Engineers The U S Army Corps of Engineers completely blocked the flow of water over the American Falls in 1969 The History of Niagara Falls Niagara Power Goes Under Ground Popular Mechanics April 1952 pp 115 117 Niagara Power Vista visitors center for the Niagara Falls hydro electric plant with displays a scaled down map of the project and documentaries on construction situated atop the cement wall of the plant on the Niagara Gorge Niagara 1978 Archives of Ontario YouTube Channel Fiction edit The Day the Falls Stood Still by Cathy Marie Buchanan The Whirlpool by Jane Urquhart Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Niagara Falls amp oldid 1206673966, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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