Jump to content

Stumphouse Mountain Tunnel: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 34°48′38.39″N 83°07′25.32″W / 34.8106639°N 83.1237000°W / 34.8106639; -83.1237000
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Mpen01 (talk | contribs)
Line 42: Line 42:
* [http://www.oconeecountry.com/stumphouse.html Stumphouse Tunnel Park and Issaqueena Falls]
* [http://www.oconeecountry.com/stumphouse.html Stumphouse Tunnel Park and Issaqueena Falls]
* [https://www.hdcarolina.com/episode/stumphouse-tunnel-park Video overview of Stumphouse Tunnel and Issaqueena Falls]
* [https://www.hdcarolina.com/episode/stumphouse-tunnel-park Video overview of Stumphouse Tunnel and Issaqueena Falls]
*[https://www.rootsandrecall.com/oconee/buildings/stumphouse-tunnel-complex/ Stumphouse Tunnel Complex] photos and history


{{National Register of Historic Places in South Carolina}}
{{National Register of Historic Places in South Carolina}}

Revision as of 19:40, 8 August 2017

Stumphouse Tunnel Complex
Stumphouse Mountain Tunnel is located in South Carolina
Stumphouse Mountain Tunnel
Stumphouse Mountain Tunnel is located in the United States
Stumphouse Mountain Tunnel
LocationOconee County
Nearest cityWalhalla, South Carolina
Coordinates34°48′38.39″N 83°07′25.32″W / 34.8106639°N 83.1237000°W / 34.8106639; -83.1237000
Area42 acres (17 ha)
Built1853
ArchitectBangs, Anson, & Co.
NRHP reference No.71000793[1]
Added to NRHPApril 7, 1971

Stumphouse Mountain Tunnel in Oconee County, South Carolina is an incomplete railroad tunnel for the Blue Ridge Railroad of South Carolina in Sumter National Forest.[2][3] This is now a Walhalla park which also features nearby Isaqueena Falls.

It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1971.[1]

History

Sign near entrance to the tunnel
Back of sign

The tunnel was first proposed in 1835 by residents of Charleston, South Carolina as a new and shorter route for the Blue Ridge Railroad between Charleston and the Ohio river valley area which until then was only accessible by bypassing the mountains entirely to the South and then traveling up north through Georgia and middle Tennessee. In 1852, 13 miles of tunnel were proposed to cross the Blue Ridge Mountains through South Carolina, North Carolina, and into Tennessee. Construction on the railway was begun in the late 1850s and was successful through most of South Carolina until hitting the mountains around Wallhalla in Oconee County. There Stumphouse tunnel along with three other tunnels was to be built.[4]

Construction on Stumphouse tunnel began in 1856 when the George Collyer Company of London brought many Irish workers into the area for this project. Many of the workers lived in housing on top of Stumphouse mountain called Tunnel Hill. By 1859, the State of South Carolina had spent over a million dollars on the tunnel and refused to spend any more on the project, therefore the tunnel work was abandoned. The tunnel had been excavated to a length of 1,617 feet of the planned 5,863 total feet.[5][6] Today, where the tunnel was meant to end on the other side of the mountain, there remains a mound of earth (intended for the railway tracks) submerged during the summer months under Crystal Lake, located just west of Highway 28.

As a part of the planned Blue Ridge Railroad, two other tunnels were begun in the 1850s and are all connected by terrain at railroad grade. Middle Tunnel, a quarter mile from Stumphouse Tunnel was successfully completed but mostly collapsed and was partially sealed off in the mid-1900s. It is only accessible by foot. Saddle Tunnel, the last of the South Carolina complex was also begun for a short distance 1.5 miles north of Middle Tunnel. Saddle is partially completed yet is mostly submerged by a small lake. Only the entrance to the tunnel is visible.

Beginning in the 1950s Stumphouse tunnel was used by Clemson University to grow blue cheese until the 1970s when the blue cheese operation was relocated to air-conditioned cheese ripening rooms where the tunnel environment was duplicated.[7]

Today, Stumphouse tunnel is operated as a public park along with nearby Isaqueena Falls by the city of Walhalla. It is open daily except Christmas Day and during inclement weather from 10am until 5pm. Inside the tunnel the temperature is a constant 50 degrees with humidity of 85%. The tunnel is easily accessible by foot, a few yards from a gravel parking lot. The structural integrity of the tunnel is solid and almost no cracking is apparent minus an enlarged vent halfway through the tunnel. In 1999 this vent was impacted by a rock slide, however in 2000 the town of Walhalla re-excavated the tunnel and safely returned it to public use.

After a developer attempted to purchase the property from the City of Walhalla in 2007, Naturaland Trust, a conservation agency created by C. Thomas Wyche, pledged about $2 million to protect the surrounding property; and a consortium of non-profit conservation groups, private individuals, and the state of South Carolina provided the money and resources to preserve the mountain for public use.[8]

References

  1. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  2. ^ Schuette, Mary (August 29, 1970). "Stumphouse Tunnel Complex" (pdf). National Register of Historic Places - Nomination and Inventory. Retrieved 29 July 2012. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  3. ^ "Stumphouse Tunnel Complex, Oconee County (S.C. Sec. Rd. 226, Walhalla vicinity)". National Register Properties in South Carolina. South Carolina Department of Archives and History. Retrieved 29 July 2012.
  4. ^ Plisco, B.L. (2002) A Rocky Road to Nowhere, Blue Granite Books, Salem, SC. ISBN 0-9724096-1-0
  5. ^ "Stumphouse Tunnel Park and Issaqueena Falls". Retrieved 2013-01-29. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  6. ^ George Benet Shealy, Walhalla: A German Settlement in Upstate South Carolina (Seneca, SC: Blue Ridge Art Association, 1990), 1:89-101,187-190.
  7. ^ Edgar, W. (ed.) (2006) South Carolina Encyclopedia. University of South Carolina Press. ISBN 1-57003-598-9.
  8. ^ Tonya Maxwell, "Wyche recalled for conservation efforts," Greenville News, January 27, 2015, 7A.