BRISTOL,TENN-VA COLLECTIBLE BOTTLES & HISTORY

The QUARRY CAVE, STONE "SHED" - 2nd IRON DOOR

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*In Search of COL. JAMES KING'S IRON WORKS
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The CHIMNEY
Clifton Heights & The Chimney
The CISTERN & The IRON DOORS
The QUARRY CAVE, STONE "SHED" - 2nd IRON DOOR
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*WHITE'S MILL
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          On another occasion,  my brothers, Mike & John ,and I were exploring an area around Steele Creek. We spent a lot of time at Steele Creek in those days of our youth. It was just a stream flowing through fields and woods back then and ,as a plus - there was the swimming hole at The Bend.
   On this particular day we were snooping around the old rock quarry and the small cave in one of its sides. We'd already explored the cave some time ago and it didn't go very far.

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  Recently there had been rumors of wild dogs living in the cave and coming out at night to kill & eat  the nearby farmer's calves, so we were being particularly quiet & cautious while in the vicinity. 
    (That very day , we had encountered a dead cow lying in a nearby field. Upon examining the carcass, we saw a partially birthed calf protruding from the cow. It was dead too.We guessed in its struggles to be born, it had encountered difficulty and died, killing its mother in the process. There was no evidence of any dog attack or indication any animals had been lunching on the carcass.)

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               I wander too much.........
    Back to the quarry : we decided to head up behind the quarry to seek out any sinkholes or other caves. There were several sinkholes, a few were open but the hole was too small for any entry. We kept heading upward and in an easterly direction and soon entered an open grassy area with a tiny limestone rock structure off to one side. It was about 6 feet square, with a sloping tin roof and with a crude wooden door hanging off its hinges. Peering cautiously through the doorway and into the darkened interior, I noted it had a dirt floor. 

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   Up the steep hillside & easterly from the building I saw another smaller limestone rock structure enclosed with an iron door and, upon opening it , I discovered naught but a small concrete-lined box like area, maybe 2-3 feet square, indicating it had been used to store potatoes or other vegetables. There was no sign of water at all...nor of a cave running through the hillside. 
(ahhhhh, Jr. what would I have done without you to prod my imagination? HA!)
   As kids we returned here many times to play and hang out on our way to & from the swimming hole. It was a good place to rest before continuing the walk home, or to The Bend.

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Update: Feb 2008...
Today I returned to the limestone "shed" and the 2nd iron door. I was astounded to see the building still intact, with only the tin roof missing. Seems it is a well-build structure indeed. Up the steep rock-strewn and leaf-covered hillside, I espied the limestone-framed opening which once had been enclosed by the 2nd iron door. Seems that door was now absent.
I also dropped by the rock quarry and checked some sinkholes. Near one of them, I located the remnants of an old surface dumping area, circa 1920s' and recovered a few complete,common corker bottles.

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The structure remains a mystery to me even after all these ensuing years: why built, why there on such a secluded and steep hillside, ,who built it and, what was the purpose of the iron door covered "box?"
 
The who may be answered: looking down at the back of the "shed" - on the top front of the left wall is inscribed - MADE BY....PICKETT (or Puckett),followed by several illegible letters.
On the top front of the right wall are what appears to be mostly illegible numbers, ( a date?), two of which may be a 1 and a 9. Perhaps in time, both inscriptions can be deciphered and an attribution made.

Additional info: In his book, Witness to An Epoch, Chas.J Harkrader states, "There was an iron ore mine on West Broad Street where ore was mined and hauled on a dump car line a mile away to a big iron furnace ( Furnace Bottom),on Pierce St. (now Morrison Blvd.) Small chunks of highly magnetic ore could be picked up all over the fields adjoining the ore mine. The kids gathered up these small fragments and used them to pick up pins & nails. To suspend a small bit of magnetic ore from a hair of a horse's tail, and observe it to find the North & South poles was an unforgettable experience to a child's mind."

For more information about Steele Creek Park click the link below:

Friends of Steele Creek Nature Center & Park Website

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Sources - Bibliography
 
i)      Library of King College, Bristol,Tenn. - Newspaper Microfilms
ii)     Bristol,TN-VA Public Library - Newspaper Microfilms &  City Directories
iii)     1904 Bristol Herald  Industrial Supplement 
iv)     Bristol-Goodson Industry & Resources in 1885  -W.F.Henry/Reporter
v)      Witness To An Epoch   - Chas.J. Harkrader
vi)     Double Destiny   - Robert Loving
vii)    Historic Sites of Sullivan County  - Muriel Spoden
viii)   Bristol Tennessee-Virginia : A History   - V.N. "Bud" Phillips
ix)     Spirits & Medicinal Bottles of Bristol, Tenn.-Va.   - Charlie Barnette 
x)       The Passing Years   - Bristol Historical Association
xi)      City of Bristol @ 1915
xii)     A Pictorial History -  Bristol Historical Association
xiii)    Whiskey, An American Pictorial History  - Oscar Getz
xiv)    Prohibition, 13 Years That Changed America - Edward Behr
xv)     The Shadow Of The Bottle -  Review & Herald Publishing Co.
xvi)    Historic Sullivan - Oliver Taylor
xvii)   One Year At A Time - Bristol - 1907 - Lonnie & Kim Blevins
xviii)   Honoring Our Heritage: Faces & Places From The Past -
                       Lonnie & Kim Blevins and Roy & Carolyn Williams
xvix)   Between the States: Bristol Tennessee - Virginia During the Civil War  - V.N. "Bud" Phillips
xx)      Pioneers in Paradise - Bristol, Tenn-Va.  - V.N. "Bud" Phillips
xxi)     A Good Place to Live - Bristol, Tenn-Va. - V.N. "Bud" Phillips
 
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