http://www.snopes.com/photos/natural/niagarafalls.asp

Niagara Falls Frozen

Claim:   Photograph shows Niagara Falls frozen in 1911.

Status:   Undetermined.

Example:   [Collected via e-mail, 2006]

Thought you might appreciate seeing this old photo. I've read of this but never saw the photo before. Makes you wonder just HOW COLD and HOW LONG it was that cold!!

Click to enlarge

THIS PICTURE WAS TAKEN WHEN NIAGARA FALLS WAS COMPLETELY FROZEN IN THE YEAR 1911. A VERY RARE PHOTO.

Origins:   Niagara Falls (actually the collective name for a set of three waterfalls along the Niagara River that forms the border between New York and Ontario: the American Falls,
the Bridal Veil Falls, and the Canadian/Horseshoe Falls) is the celebrated natural phenomenon that has awed generations of honeymooners. Although it may seem astounding to contemplate, the tremendous volume of rushing water (hundreds of thousands of gallons per second) that is Niagara Falls does "freeze" from time to time, although not quite "completely" as suggested in the text accompanying the above-displayed image. (Despite the abundance of ice visible in the image, water can still be seen flowing over the falls in several distinct streams.) During occasional periods of prolonged cold weather falling water and spray from Niagara Falls may freeze into ice formations, and ice mounds or floes may form in the Niagara River (sometimes creating ice bridges that stretch across the width of the river), but only once in recorded history has freezing weather actually stopped water from flowing over the falls. This instance occurred in March 1848 when a preponderance of ice above the falls reduced the flow of water over the falls to a trickle, as reported in the Buffalo Express newspaper:
The Falls of Niagara can be compared to nothing but a mere mill dam this morning. In the memory of the oldest inhabitants, never was there so little water running over Niagara's awful precipice, as at this moment! Hundreds of people are now witnessing that which never has, and probably never may again be witnessed on the Niagara River.

Last night at 11 o'clock the factories fed from the waters of this majestic river were in full operation, and at 12 o'clock the water was shut off, the wheel suddenly ceased their revolutions, and everything was hushed into silence. Various are the conjectures as to the cause; the most reasonable of which is that Lake Erie must be making a grand delivery of ice, and this the mouth of the Niagara, although large, is not quite enough to take in the whole at once, and that the consequences are, back water.
The sepia-toned photograph appears to correspond to a view of the American Falls:


Although we don't really have any doubts that the photograph in question is a genuine image produced at a time when much of the water around the American Falls was frozen, we don't know the original source of this picture and thus can't verify the year in which it was taken. Although the text that accompanies the image in e-mail forwards usually states that the photo dates from 1911, other sources assign a variety of different dates to it. Much of the Niagara River around the falls was frozen in 1912, which resulted in a tragic accident when an ice bridge across the river broke free from its shoring as several people were traversing it. Three people were unable to make it back to shore in time and were killed as the loosened ice plunged down the river.

Later versions of the forwarded e-mail included additional (undated) photographs, obviously not all dating from the same period:

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Last updated:   23 January 2007

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  Sources Sources:
    Boston Cultivator.   "Phenomenon at Niagara Falls."
    15 April 1848   (p. 125).

    Los Angeles Times.   "A Crash and Death."
    5 February 1912   (p. I1).

    The New York Times.   "Swept to Death on Niagara Ice."
    5 February 1912   (p. 1).