Most people don’t realize South Carolina is home to what should have been (at the time) the longest train tunnel in America. But the tunnel was never finished. The project was to build a tunnel connecting a trade route from the Mississippi to the coast. The project was to carve through more then a mile of solid rock. The project was abandoned just prior to the Civil War and never revisited for completion. Let’s take a closer look at this abandoned train tunnel in South Carolina – and even learn about another never completed tunnel that now lies under a small lake.
Stumphouse Mountain Tunnel was hand carved by Irish workers imported just for the job of building the tunnel.
The George Collyer Company of London brought the workers over to build the more than a mile long tunnel. Workers lived in a makeshift village on top of the tunnel. The village was called Tunnel Hill.
The tunnel was part of a complex of three nearby tunnels all part of the same project.
Was also completed and now lies mostly submerged by a nearby lake whose name is rarely shared. The only nearby lake we found is approximately 1.5 miles from Stumphouse Tunnel.
It's called Crystal Lake. There are reports that the entrance to the tunnel can be seen above the waterline. Little else is known about "Saddle Tunnel" and its exact location is, as we said, unknown.
In the 1940s, Clemson University moved into the abandoned tunnel to make cheese.
The cheese making operation flourished for many years, until the invention of air conditioning which allowed the process to be moved to a more traditional indoor facility.
The only portion of the three-tunnel complex visitors can explore is the short section that remains open of Stumphouse Tunnel.
Admission is free and the park is open 7 days a week from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.
If you haven’t done so already, this abandoned train tunnel in South Carolina is absolutely worthy of a visit. Did you know about Stumphouse Tunnel before now – or that there are THREE tunnels here? Sound off in the comments!
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