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The
front of the cave

Looking
inside the cave
Looking
throught the cave
Here
is an article published in
the August 12, 1999, Washington
Post on Devil's Den
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On
an Eyes of Paint Branch hike in November 1998 through the wooded
and rocky Paint Branch Gorge, botanist John Parrish came across
an intriguing cavelike tunnel as he was scouting for rare plant
species. On Saturday, June 5, 1999, some 30 environmentalists,
archeologists, historians, engineers, geologists, photographers,
and residents of the surrounding community took part in another
Eyes of Paint Branch hike into the gorge, hoping to get a better
look at the cave.
The
gorge is on the Federal Research Center (FRC) property in the
White Oak area of Silver Spring, which is closed to the public.
The presence of such a cave on the property had been unknown to
FRC officials, and the cave does not appear on maps of the area.
The two hikes were led by Bob Ridgway, environmental officer at
the FRC, with special permission from the FRC.
Before
the cave's rediscovery, Eyes of Paint Branch (EOPB) had heard
of its possible existence. James Sorensen, archeologist for the
Montgomery County Parks Department, had told EOPB members of an
oral history account handed down through his family. His uncle,
Eugene Beall, who had played in these woods as a boy, had often
told them of a cave he had seen there that had been blasted out
of solid rock by a slave to earn his freedom. In other accounts
the cave was said to have served as a stop on the Underground
Railroad. But until recently, no one knew whether the cave still
existed. In the 1930s, local teens used to plan treks to the cave,
then called Devil's Den, and the nearby swimming hole, as recorded
in the neighborhood newsletter, The Hillandaler. But there is
no known record of the cave since then.
Since
the mid-1940s, the property has been a government compound, closed
to the public. FRC officials had speculated that the cave may
have been blasted to pieces when the sewer line was put in along
the stream decades ago.
The
multidisciplinary group of hikers was assembled by the Eyes of
Paint Branch to try to determine whether there was any truth to
these oral history accounts. As the group made its way down into
the gorge, historian Anthony M. Cohen, noted authority on the
Underground Railroad and director of the Menare Foundation, Inc.,
commented that "When trying to solve a mystery from the past,
it is always good to get a variety of viewpoints."
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The cave was hidden from view until the group was literally on
top of it. There were two entrances into the rock, about 30 to
35 feet apart across a saddle between two ridges, making the feature
more like a tunnel than a cave. The larger entrance was perhaps
5 feet high, and the smaller, perhaps 4 feet. A rock-walled chute
extended from each end, making the entire length of the feature
about 60 feet. The rock appeared to be layered schist. Vulture
feathers scattered about indicated recent nesting activity, and
Sorensen remembered stories from his uncle of snakes in the cave.
Several
explorers went into and through the tunnel. Inside it was damp
and cool, and the walls shone with mica. It was possible to stand
up straight while inside. Exiting out the other end, however,
required getting down onto hands and knees or belly to push through
the damp leaves that covered the floor at the point near the end
of the tunnel where the collapsed ceiling created a large mound
on the floor and a "skylight" above. (Future explorers are warned
that no one yet knows how strong the rest of the ceiling is and,
until that is known, people should stay off the roof of the tunnel.)
Geologist
Lewis Kozlosky remarked that "you wouldn't expect to see anything
like this occurring naturally in this type of bedrock." He added
that the rock is known as the Wissahickon schist. (The Wissahickon
schist is a Precambrian metamorphic rock over 600 million years
old.) The area of Devil's Den is on the "fall line," where the
Piedmont Plateau drops down to the Coastal Plain. The resulting
drop in elevation provides fast-moving water in the streams that
cross the fall line, which is why so many mills were built along
it.
Several 1-inch-diameter holes in the rock were discovered and
photographed. Kozlosky said these are "irrefutable evidence of
blasting." Archeologist Steve Israel said that the person who
made the tunnel used iron tools and black powder. Israel said
that the holes would have been hand-drilled and then the powder
tamped in.
Determining
why the tunnel had been made required the help of engineer Richard
Stowe and his wife Eileen Finnegan, editor of The Hillandaler.
Finnegan had been intrigued by the references to the Devil's Den
in old issues of the newsletter and had recently located a detailed
reference to the cave in a 1914 article by "The Rambler," J. Harry
Shannon, in the Washington Star. The Rambler wrote a regular column
on his walks in the wilderness surrounding the nation's capital,
and one long report focused on the Paint Branch valley.
He wrote, The account given on the spot to the Rambler concerning
the origin of this hand-hewed tunnel called the Devil's Den was
this: "It was designed to erect a mill there, and the millrace
[the canal through which the water flows to power the mill] to
be most effective would have to pass through the rock wall or
rock mass. The man who meant to build the mill had slaves and
to one very handy and able man he offered freedom if he would
cut a tunnel through the rock."
"The
slave labored with a sledge, drill, gunpowder, and fuse for many
months. Before the task was done slavery in Maryland was abolished,
but the tunnel cutting man kept at his work till the rock was
drilled."
Stowe
told the group that "Looking at the lay of the land as an engineer,
I'm convinced that the tunnel is a mill race, which is consistent
with the stories that Shannon heard in 1914." He showed the group
where the dam and the pond would have been. He added, "my personal
thinking is that the reason it was cut through rock was to carry
a good velocity of water, which would not have been possible with
a surface mill race. This velocity could have powered one of the
new turbines that were just beginning to be used [instead of the
wheel-type mills]. If the Rambler's story is correct, that would
closely date the tunnel's construction to around 1860 to 1870,
which was when the mills up in Delaware had been converted to
turbines. Otherwise, there would have been no reason to have a
tunnel rather than the usual open race."
But
although the tunnel was completed, the mill may have remained
a dream. According to Sorensen, "there is no sign of a structure
on the side where the mill would have been." But he theorized
that perhaps a flume had carried the water across the stream to
Mrs. Harper's Woolen Mill, a well-documented nearby mill. He added
that he had recently discovered that according to the 1850 Census
Mrs. Harper had owned one male slave. Two other mills in Montgomery
County are known to have been built with a flume across the stream,
one of them being the Valley Mill, which had been situated upstream
on the Paint Branch.
For
now the timing of the building of the tunnel will remain part
of the mystery, as will the story of the man who built it. One
of the neighbors on the hike, Gary Irby, described a visit from
an old man from California who knocked on his door several years
ago. He was visiting the area where he grew up, and he told Irby
that he used to play with the children in a family who lived "at
the top of the hill" and who were descendants of the man who built
Devil's Den.
The
mystery of whether there is an Underground Railroad connection
also remains. When asked about the likelihood of such a connection,
Cohen said, "The Underground Railroad doesn't give you its secrets
all of the time. There may be a connection, and there may not
be. But there's a story here, and the question is, why does it
persist?" He added that one factor in favor of the connection,
in addition to the oral history accounts, is that the site is
on a stream. Stream valleys provided the only good cover in those
days, when most of the land had been cleared for agriculture.
And documented Underground Railroad sites exist further downstream.
There were organized mill settlements nearby, and that fact could
also argue for a connection. But until further documentation is
found, Cohen said, "it is impossible to say." Nevertheless, as
Cohen worked his way through the tunnel, he turned and, with a
touch of excitement in his voice, told a companion, "This would
have been an ideal hiding place for the Underground Railroad."
--Roseanne Price
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