Ed Zotti
02-28-2009, 12:06 AM
Dear Cecil:
Back in the late seventies or early eighties, there was a winter that was so cold that the surface of Lake Michigan froze all the way across -- solid enough that someone got the bright idea that he could use a house-moving truck to move his vacation home across the lake. (I don't remember whether the move was to, or from, Chicago.) Somewhere in the middle, the ice cracked, and the house slowly slid off the truck to the bottom of the lake, where it resides to this day, a vacation home for trout and carp. The breaking of the ice was slow enough that the truck driver was able to escape unharmed. In fact, it was slow enough that a photographer was able to drive out onto the lake and get pictures of the truck half in and half out of the ice. I'm not sure what ever happened to the truck -- probably towed back to shore, but it might have eventually gone under too.
I know this sounds like an urban legend, but I saw the pictures in the Chicago newspapers. I just can't find any reference to it online, and it seems to be completely forgotten. Maybe you could help.
Best regards,
Michael A.
Back in the late seventies or early eighties, there was a winter that was so cold that the surface of Lake Michigan froze all the way across -- solid enough that someone got the bright idea that he could use a house-moving truck to move his vacation home across the lake. (I don't remember whether the move was to, or from, Chicago.) Somewhere in the middle, the ice cracked, and the house slowly slid off the truck to the bottom of the lake, where it resides to this day, a vacation home for trout and carp. The breaking of the ice was slow enough that the truck driver was able to escape unharmed. In fact, it was slow enough that a photographer was able to drive out onto the lake and get pictures of the truck half in and half out of the ice. I'm not sure what ever happened to the truck -- probably towed back to shore, but it might have eventually gone under too.
I know this sounds like an urban legend, but I saw the pictures in the Chicago newspapers. I just can't find any reference to it online, and it seems to be completely forgotten. Maybe you could help.
Best regards,
Michael A.