![]() ![]() In the downpour, the creek outside of the mountain was rising. Deep in that labyrinth of stone, they had no way of knowing what was coming. For hours, they’d climbed and crawled their way through the dark, winding tunnels of the cave, exploring a part of the world no one had ever seen. If only 7 to10 men worked on it for only 1 year in the1760 ‘s as I have read,I would say they were very hard workers,and very determined.John Ogden and five of his friends were 3.2 kilometers (2 mi) deep into an unmapped part of England’s Mossdale Caverns in 1967 when the rain began to fall. Myself ,I would not consider it a shallow prospect at all. You have plenty of space to easily walk around and explore inside. Now as for each chamber,they are both approximately the same size and extend 25to30feetaway from you upon entering,both in the same direction.Floor to ceiling height is7to8feethighand I would say at least 8feet wide,maybe 10 feet wide,each. While viewing each chamber as a whole,the ceiling,to me,resembles the silhouette of Mickey Mouse. It is here that you can see the ceiling of the cave/mine,and I remember it as quite impressive and beautiful. In reply to the last comment,It depends on what you mean by shallow prospects.As I remember, there are two side by side chambers which are accessed by crawling,headfirst and at a slightly downward angle through the small opening/entrance.After crawling 4 to 6 feet you find that you are on a sort of rock shelf where you can sit up, turn your body so you are now feet first and then step down 3 to 4 feet to the chamber floor which is relatively level. This is Paradise!…Please respect this beautiful home!”Īuthor’s Note: special thanks to The Roxborough, Manayunk and Wissahickon Historical Society, who helped with research for this article. He has a guestbook for his cave, which reads in part, “Please love this space as God provided, read the Good Book and see that the earth will be renewed. There is no gold to be found, but this man seems to have found riches here of another kind. The other tunnel however is still open, and shows evidence of occasional habitation by a modern-day Kelpius. Shortly after, the hole largely filled up again with dirt, as it remains today. He recounts that this tunnel forks like a “Y” and goes back 30-40 feet. One of the entrances had become silted up, and had to be dug out before Jones could crawl inside. The caves were rediscovered in 1854 by a young local historian named Horatio Gates Jones. Whatever they were searching for, legend says the miners found nothing and the mines were abandoned by 1764 (Another legend says that during the Revolutionary War large amounts of grain were hidden there from pillaging Hessian mercenaries.) We know that the immigrants of Germantown believed strongly in the power of dowsing and would often dig for treasure where the hazel stick pointed. Dowsing is a pseudo-scientific way of finding precious metals underground with a forked stick. This is plausible, but can’t be confirmed. Local legend says that the Roxborough miners were looking for gold and were led to dig at this spot by a dowsing rod. Today the rock contains nothing of value, so it is puzzling why they would have dug there at all. The company, whose goal was to uncover “ores and minerals,” consisted of just seven men, several of them were German immigrants from Germantown, apparently under the leadership of Barnard Gratz. What we do know is that the caves are man-made, excavated with hand-powered rock drills and black powder by the Roxborough Mining Company in 1763-1764, which means they are among the oldest mines in North America. They remain shrouded in legend, purported to be the hiding place of robbers, Indians, and patriots. ![]() Further downstream, a small hole in the hillside blows cold air, hinting at still larger spaces underground.Īlmost nothing about the caves is known for certain. At its foot, a dark, low tunnel reaches back twenty feet into the rock. Near the intersection of these two creeks, a 20 foot rock outcrop thrusts itself off the hillside like the prow of a stone ship. In the steep hills of Wissahickon Park, Gorgas Creek tumbles through a thickly-wooded valley on its way to join Wissahickon Creek. But there is another set of caves on the Wissahickon that few have heard of, and fewer still have entered. In a previous article, I wrote about Johanas Kelpius, the merry monk who lived as a hermit in a cave by the Wissahickon. ![]()
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