Burlington’s Giant Ravine [Stuck in Vermont 711]
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 19 มี.ค. 2024
- Burlington’s Giant Ravine [Stuck in Vermont 711]
The serpentine ravine that bisected Burlington up until the 19th century is the stuff of legend. It’s hard to imagine, but the city’s downtown was separated from the Hill Section by a deep gully with a stream running through it. It was most likely thousands of years old and more than a mile long.
From the Old North End, the gulch twisted across Pearl Street and through the downtown core - including where the Fletcher Free Library now stands - emptying into Lake Champlain south of Maple Street. Where the former VFW building and the Hood Plant parking lot are now, the ravine was about 25 to 35 feet deep and may have stretched as wide as a city block. Multiple bridges allowed people and carts to pass over the chasm.
As if this weren’t weird enough, in the 1850s the Vermont Central Railroad used the ravine as a train route to connect Burlington to its main line in Essex Junction. After the track was relocated in the early 1860s, the gully became an open sewer and garbage dump. In the 1870s, a brick-and-stone sewer was built in the gulch, and the area around it was filled in. But signs of the ravine remain, if you know where to look.
If you want to take a tour, visit King Street where it nose-dives like a roller coaster between South Winooski Avenue and lower Church Street. From the middle of the dip, you're basically standing where the ravine was. Look north to Main Street, and you will see a steep hill. To the south, the Hood Plant parking lot was once a large pond, and a precipitous hill along its southern edge shows the lip of the ravine.
Over the years, many people have become obsessed with documenting this unusual geologic feature that defined the Queen City’s early history. The ravine attracts cultlike interest, and local historians have dug into its secrets.
Recently there has been a lot of literal digging, too. As part of its Great Streets Initiative, the Department of Public Works is rerouting the flow of the approximately 150-year-old ravine sewer. This much-needed infrastructure work will allow for aboveground improvements in the next few years.
In her latest episode of “Stuck in Vermont,” Seven Days senior multimedia producer Eva Sollberger joined the ravine-obsessed. She toured the area with engineer and self-described “map geek” Hugo Martínez Cazón and pored over old maps with Jeffrey Marshall, library professor emeritus, at the University of Vermont’s Silver Special Collections. She viewed two portions of the recently uncovered sewer with DPW senior engineer Laura Wheelock and, with DPW director Chapin Spencer, examined some of the historic bottles that have been unearthed during this massive project. She even climbed to the top of the College Street Congregational Church steeple to get a bird’s-eye view.
greatstreetsbtv.com/
Music: E’s Jammy Jams, “The Entertainer,” Composed by Scott Joplin
/ @ethaneubanks749
Nat Keefe & Hot Buttered Rum, “Waltz in Low Light”
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This episode of Stuck in Vermont was supported by New England Federal Credit Union.
bit.ly/nefcusiv
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I wish SIV would do more episodes about our history
To this very day the rain water is still looking for that pond.
This was so informative, I love learning the history of the Queen City. Thank you!
I bought a little house in Burlington 4/5 years ago. I love it here and appreciate learning about where I plan to stay.
Interesting to learn about the history of Burlington and how it has evolved over the years!
Really captivating! I thoroughly enjoyed this video. Thanks for making it!
Most excellent investigation into this long mysterious artifact.
Always wondered why things were odd walking about Burlington.
Had to watch this with a hand on the pause button to look at the old maps closely and figure out where stuff was... fascinating!!! Thank you for all the work that went into gathering this...
I know, I spent many hours staring at those maps!!
Great story with excellent speakers. It's so nice to see people sharing their knowledge and history. The photos bring history to life.
Great story, well done, well researched, thank you.
This is AWESOME!
Very interesting. Thanks!
That was awesome!
I love this. Thank you. I've lived in Burlington close to six years and had no idea.
I was born in Burlington in 1968 at Mary Fletcher Hospital.. Then at 5 years old my family moved to Bennington, Vermont.. In hindsight I wish I NEVER LEFT Burlington! Even though I only lived in Burlington for 5 years I have fond memories of the little city.. Totally different animal' down here in Bennington... My Father was the Director of finances for UVM..
There was a great sink hole on riverside
ave between 70s and 90s I guess forget when.is it connected to that revine?
7:13 dead ... cats?