Screaming Tunnel

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Screaming Tunnel-Southern Entrance Screaming Tunnel-Southern Entrance- Niagara Falls-Ontario-20220205.jpg
Screaming Tunnel-Southern Entrance

The Screaming Tunnel is a small limestone tunnel, running underneath what once was a Grand Trunk Railway line (now the Canadian National Railway), located in the northwest corner of Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada. The actual location of the attraction is just off Warner Road. It was originally built for a North to South line for the Grand Trunk Railway. But the plans were changed. Some say the reason was lack of funding, but the actual reason is unknown. The tunnel was abandoned and used as drainage tunnel so the water could be removed from the farmlands nearby.[ citation needed ] This water would go underneath the Grand Trunk Railway and down to the valley below. Throughout the 1900’s, farmers used this tunnel to transport goods and animals safely underneath the busy railroad above.

The tunnel, constructed at some point in the 1800s, is 16 feet (4.9 m) in height and 125 feet (38 m) long.

A local legend recounts that the tunnel is haunted by the ghost of a young woman whose clothing had caught fire. She died in the tunnel trying to find the nearest house. [1] All versions of these legends ends with the girl's screams filling up the tunnel as she was burning to death.

The tunnel was used as a set during the filming of David Cronenberg's 1983 film adaptation of Stephen King's horror novel The Dead Zone . [2]

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References

  1. "Screaming Tunnel". Niagara Falls Ontario Public Library. Retrieved 2009-07-15.
  2. John Robert Colombo, Mysterious Canada (Doubleday Canada Limited,1988, ISBN   0-385-25150-5), pp. 183–184.

43°08′43″N79°08′42″W / 43.14518°N 79.14497°W / 43.14518; -79.14497