Floyd Collins

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Floyd Collins
Collins in Cave City circa 1924
Born(1887-07-20)July 20, 1887
Diedc. February 13, 1925(1925-02-13) (aged 37)
Resting placeMammoth Cave Baptist Church Cemetery, Mammoth Cave, Kentucky
Occupation(s)Cave owner, cave explorer
Known forCave exploration in Central Kentucky; being trapped in Sand Cave and dying before a rescue party could get to him

William Floyd Collins (July 20, 1887 – c. February 13, 1925) was an American cave explorer, principally in a region of Kentucky that houses hundreds of miles of interconnected caves, today a part of Mammoth Cave National Park, the longest known cave system in the world.

In the early 20th century, in an era known as the Kentucky Cave Wars,[1] spelunkers and owners entered into a bitter competition to exploit the bounty of caves for commercial profit from tourists, who paid to see the caves. In 1917 and 1918, Collins discovered and commercialized Great Crystal Cave in the Flint Ridge Cave System, but the cave was remote and visitors were few. Collins had an ambition to find another cave he could open to the public closer to the main roads, and entered into an agreement with a neighbor to open up Sand Cave, a small cave on the neighbor's property.

On January 30, 1925, while working to enlarge the small passage in Sand Cave, Collins became trapped in a narrow crawlway 55 feet (17 m) below ground. The rescue operation to save him became a national media sensation and one of the first major news stories to be reported using the new technology of broadcast radio. After four days, during which time rescuers were able to bring water and food to Collins, a rock collapse in the cave closed the entrance passageway, stranding him inside, except for voice contact, for more than two weeks. Collins died of thirst and hunger compounded by exposure through hypothermia after being isolated for fourteen days, and three days before a rescue shaft reached his position. Collins' body was recovered two months later.

Although Collins was an unknown figure for most of his lifetime, the fame he gained from the rescue efforts and his death led to him being memorialized on his tombstone as the "Greatest Cave Explorer Ever Known".[2]

Early life

Collins home (left) and 2nd cave ticket booth (right)
Collins home {1st cave ticket booth} (left) and 2nd cave ticket booth (right)

William Floyd Collins was born on July 20, 1887 , on the Collins family farm, located approximately 4 miles (6.4 km) east of Mammoth Cave near the Green River in Kentucky. He was the third child of Leonidas "Lee" Collins and Martha Jane Burnett, who gave birth to eight children: Elizabeth (died at three months of age), James "Jim", Floyd, Annie, Andy Lee, Marshall, Nellie, and Homer.[2] Floyd began entering caves by himself at the age of six in search of Native American artifacts to sell to tourists at the Mammoth Cave Hotel.[3] In 1910 Floyd discovered his first cave, Donkey's Cave, on the Collins farm. In 1912, Edmund Turner, a geologist, hired Floyd to show him caves of the region. Consequently, Turner and Floyd assisted with the discovery of Dossey's Dome Cave in 1912 and Great Onyx Cave in 1915. Later in 1915, Floyd's mother passed away due to tuberculosis and Lee Collins married a Mammoth Cave guide's widow, Serilda Jane "Miss Jane" Buckingham.[4]

Great Crystal Cave

Stone stairway built by Floyd and his family leading down to Great Crystal Cave (later Floyd Collins' Crystal Cave)
Stairway built by Floyd and his brothers leading down to Great Crystal Cave
Stone entryway with metal door leading to Great Crystal Cave (later Floyd Collins' Crystal Cave)
Collins entrance to Great Crystal Cave

In September 1917, while climbing up a bluff on the Collins farm, Floyd noticed cool air coming from a hole in the ground. Upon widening the hole, he was able to drop down into a cavity that was part of a passage blocked by breakdown.[3] In December 1917, after further excavation of the breakdown, Floyd discovered the sinkhole entrance to what he would later name "Great Crystal Cave."[4] Lee Collins deeded Floyd a half interest in the cave and they immediately decided to commercialize it. After tremendous preparation by the entire family, the transformed show cave was opened to tourists in April 1918. However, the cave attracted a low number of tourists due to its remote location.[3]

Sand Cave – 1925 incident

Sand Cave at Mammoth Cave National Park

Collins hoped to find another entrance to the Mammoth Cave or possibly an unknown cave along the road to Mammoth Cave and draw more visitors and greater profits. He made an agreement with three farmers, who owned land closer to the main highway. If he found a cave, they would form a business partnership and share in the responsibilities of operating this tourist attraction. Working alone, within three weeks, he had explored and expanded a hole that would later be called "Sand Cave" by the news media. On January 30, 1925, after several hours of work, Collins managed to squeeze through several narrow passageways; he claimed he had discovered a large grotto chamber, though this was never verified. Because his lamp was dying, he had to leave quickly before losing all light to the chamber, but became trapped in a small passage on his way out. Collins accidentally knocked over his lamp, putting out the light, and was caught by a 26-pound (12 kg) rock that fell from the cave ceiling, pinning his left leg. He was trapped 150 feet (46 m) from the entrance.

After he was found the next day by his younger brother, crackers were sent to him and an electric light was run down the passage to provide him lighting and some warmth. Collins survived for more than a week while rescue efforts were organized. On February 4, the cave passage collapsed in two places. Rescue leaders, led by Henry St. George Tucker Carmichael, determined the cave impassable and too dangerous and began to dig a shaft to reach the chamber behind Collins.[5] The 55-foot (17 m) shaft and subsequent lateral tunnel intersected the cave just above Collins, but when he was finally reached on Monday, February 16, by miner Ed Brenner, he was "cold and apparently dead."[3][4] Having been appointed as the members of a coroner's jury, Floyd's friend, Johnnie Gerald, a few other acquaintances of Floyd, were allowed to go into the lateral tunnel and positively identify the body. Dr. William Hazlett and Captain C.E. Francis, National Guard medical officer, were then unsuccessful in an attempt to reach the body but Brenner went in front of them to the body and was able to follow their examination instructions for the official death declaration to be made.[3] It was estimated Floyd had been dead for three to five days,[4] with February 13 the most likely date.[2] Because he could not be reached from behind, the rescuers could not free his leg. Carmichael decided that Floyd's body would be left in place and the shaft would be filled with debris. After being allowed to enter the shaft, Skeets Miller and another reporter corroborated Carmichael's claim that it would be too dangerous to retrieve the body.

Media attention

NPS marker describing Carnival Sunday and indicating the location of the barbed wire barrier constructed to keep people away from Sand Cave during the attempted rescue of Floyd Collins.

Newspaper reporter William Burke "Skeets" Miller from The Courier-Journal in Louisville reported on the rescue efforts from the scene. Miller, of small stature, was able to remove a lot of earth from around Collins. He also interviewed Collins in the cave, receiving a Pulitzer Prize for his coverage[6] and playing a part in Collins' attempted rescue. Miller's reports were distributed by telegraph and were printed by newspapers across the country and abroad, and the rescue attempts were followed by regular news bulletins on the new medium of broadcast radio (the first broadcast radio station KDKA having been established in 1920). Shortly after the media arrived, the publicity drew crowds of tourists to the site, at one point numbering in the tens of thousands. Collins' neighbors sold hamburgers for 25 cents. Other vendors set up stands to sell food and souvenirs, creating a circus-like atmosphere. The Sand Cave rescue attempt grew to become the third-biggest media event between the world wars. (The biggest media events of that time both involved Charles Lindbergh—the trans-Atlantic flight and his son's kidnapping—and Lindbergh actually had a minor role in the Sand Cave rescue, too, having been hired to fly photographic negatives from the scene for a newspaper.)[6] Since the nearest telegraph station was in Cave City, some miles from the cave, two amateur radio operators with the callsigns 9BRK and 9CHG provided the link to pass messages to the authorities and the press.[7]

Burials and exhibition of body

Floyd Collins' final grave, with epitaph
Mammoth Cave Baptist Church, established in 1827 - the cemetery to the left of the church is the burial ground of famed cavers Edmund Turner and Floyd Collins.

With Collins's body remaining in the cave, funeral services were held on the surface. Homer Collins was not pleased with Sand Cave as his brother's grave, and two months later, he and some friends reopened the shaft. They dug a new tunnel to the opposite side of the cave passage and recovered Floyd Collins' remains on April 23, 1925.[6] The body was taken that day to Cave City for embalming at J.T. Geralds and Brothers funeral home. Following a 2-day visitation at the funeral home, on April 26, 1925, his body was transported to the Collins family farm[4] and buried on the hillside over Great Crystal Cave,[3] which Lee Collins renamed "Floyd Collins' Crystal Cave." In 1927, Lee Collins sold the homestead and cave to Dr. Harry Thomas, dentist and owner of Mammoth Onyx Cave and Hidden River Cave.[4] The new owner placed Collins' body in a glass-topped coffin and exhibited it in Crystal Cave for many years.[6][8] On the night of March 18–19, 1929, the body was stolen. The body was later recovered, having been found in a nearby field, but the injured left leg was missing. The people who stole the body and the severed left leg were never found.[6][8] After this desecration, the remains were kept in a secluded portion of Crystal Cave in a chained casket. In 1961, Crystal Cave was purchased by Mammoth Cave National Park and closed to the public.[8] The Collins family had objected to Collins' body being displayed in the cave and, at their request, the National Park Service re-interred him at Mammoth Cave Baptist Church Cemetery, Mammoth Cave, Kentucky in 1989.[6][8] It took a team of 15 men three days to remove the casket and tombstone from the cave.

Legacy

Collins' life and death inspired the musical Floyd Collins by Adam Guettel and Tina Landau,[9] as well as one film documentary, several books, a museum and many short songs.

In 2006, actor Billy Bob Thornton optioned the film rights to Trapped! The Story of Floyd Collins and a screenplay was adapted by Thornton's writing partner, Tom Epperson. However, Thornton's option expired and the film rights were acquired by producer Peter R. J. Deyell in 2011.[10]

Fiddlin' John Carson and Vernon Dalhart recorded "The Death of Floyd Collins" in 1925.[11]

Collins's story is recounted in an hour-long YouTube video by channel Internet Historian, titled Man In Cave.[12]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Cave Wars - Mammoth Cave National Park (U.S. National Park Service)". Archived from the original on 2018-12-15. Retrieved 2017-01-02.
  2. ^ a b c Murray & Brucker, Robert & Roger (1979). Trapped. G.P. Putnams Sons. ISBN 978-0-8131-0153-8.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Collins, Homer (2001). The life and death of Floyd Collins. John Lehrberger. St. Louis, MO: Cave Books. ISBN 0-939748-47-9. OCLC 58721613.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Benton, John (2017). The Floyd Collins Tragedy at Sand Cave. Bill Napper, Bob Thompson. San Francisco: Arcadia Publishing Inc. ISBN 978-1-4396-5950-2. OCLC 972292052.
  5. ^ "Cave floor expands and entombs Collins". Journal and Courier. February 5, 1925. p. 1. Archived from the original on December 28, 2017. Retrieved December 28, 2017 – via Newspapers.com.Open access icon
  6. ^ a b c d e f Bukro, Casey (March 26, 1989). "Folk hero's burial ends 3 generations of anguish". Chicago Tribune. p. 19. Archived from the original on December 28, 2017. Retrieved December 28, 2017 – via Newspapers.com.Open access icon
  7. ^ DeSotto, Clinton: 200 Meters & Down - The Story of Amateur Radio, 1936 - American Radio relay League p.162 ISBN 978-0-87259-001-4
  8. ^ a b c d Bukro, Casey (March 26, 1989). "Folk hero's burial ends 3 generations of anguish 2". Chicago Tribune. p. 20. Archived from the original on December 28, 2017. Retrieved December 28, 2017 – via Newspapers.com.Open access icon
  9. ^ "Blackfriars goes underground for new musical". Democrat and Chronicle. May 3, 2002. p. 19. Archived from the original on December 28, 2017. Retrieved December 28, 2017 – via Newspapers.com.Open access icon
  10. ^ "Floyd Collins Book Acquired by Producer Peter R.J. Deyell". Broadway World. 2011-04-26. Archived from the original on 2011-06-17. Retrieved 2011-06-26.
  11. ^ "The Death of Floyd Collins (Edison Blue Amberol: 5049)". 1925. Archived from the original on 2022-01-11. Retrieved 2018-01-20.
  12. ^ Man in Cave, retrieved 2022-11-11

External links