| Two exciting days in January of 1938 yet again attracted worldwide attention.
A combination of cold weather and a warm south-west wind sent vast masses of Lake
Erie ice plunging down the upper Niagara River and over the two cataracts forming
another stupendous ice jam. This build up of ice on Tuesday, January 25, 1938
shattered the docks of the Maid of the Mist and crumpled the Maid of the Mist
caretaker's home. The loud humming of the great generators in the Ontario Power
Generating Plant were stopped when they were buried by great heaps of ice. An
even greater tragedy was about to happen.
Ice began to accumulate against the lower girders of the Falls View Bridge. It
was feared the Honeymoon Bridge, as it was also popularly known, could not withstand
the massive ice build up. All traffic was stopped on the bridge at approximately
9:15 a.m. on January 26. The story of the bridge's impending doom travelled quickly
and within hours, crowds of people stood by waiting for the moment when tons of
steel would go crashing down onto the ice bridge below.
At 4:10 p.m. on Thursday, January 27, a crushing force of massive ice ended
the bridge's 40 years of life high above the waters. All that remained was a steely
"W", the shape created when it crashed onto the ice bridge below.
There were no injuries in this spectacular crash and sightseers flocked daily
to see what the forces of nature had created. When the mild weather arrived, this
mighty structure sank to the bottom of Niagara.
In 1941, the new Rainbow Bridge was built just north of the Honeymoon Bridge.
To ensure its safety, the girders were situated much higher above the level of
the Niagara River.
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Info Niagara would like to thank Royal
Specialty Sales
for their gracious assistance in this production. During your stay in Niagara
Falls be sure to pick up a copy of their most recent publication, The
Magic of Niagara by noted Niagara watcher
George Bailey. The Magic of Niagara is the best publication
available for those with a genuine interest in Niagara's past and present
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