On May 3 it will be a decade suince The Great Stone Face was noticed missing from Profile Mountain in New Hampshire. They’re planning special events.
in the time since the fall, they’ve put up a special “viewing plaza” where you can go to see the side of the mountain, and can sight along special viewing stakes that give you a sense of what it looked like.
Sadly, I never knew of the existence of this wonderful structure until it did collapse, that generating nationwide news. I’d love to have seen it and envy those that had the chance.
I live close enough that I could have made the trip to see it, but never did. (I’ve driven through the area since then, but at night.) How could you not know of it, though, unless you’ve never been to New Hampshire? It was the only thing they had to be proud of. It was on their license plates, their state route markers, and their state quarter.
I saw it many times, having gone up there on vacation as a kid. After I moved to the Boston area, I’d drive up that way at least once a year, and often stopped to look at the Profile. as robot arm notes, it’s all over the place – on State Route signs, brochures, the state quarter, license plates and elsewhere.
Nathaniel Hawthorne wrote a story based on it, the Great Stone Face. The point – about the longevity and toughness of that Profile (and a man who shared its qualities) sems ironic now.
There had been news reports about visiting the rock, and its retaining cables, because it had been loose for quite a long time, but I thought those were going to keep it in place. Evidently not.
I drove through Franconia Notch dozens of times, probably close to 100 while the Old Man was still up there. I always took a look as I drove past the point where the blocks lined up to form the face and have some nice photos that I took after hikes in the area. I’m up there a dozen times a year and still take a look when driving past the spot. I’m not a rock climber so I never climbed the route that went over his forehead but I’ve hiked down to the top of that climb.
I remember where I was (Rt 9 in Newton) when I heard the radio report of his demise. Wow, 10 years.
Unfortunately, the retaining cables were only attached to the top of the formation; it collapsed from the bottom.
As a native New Hampshirite, I can say that while there is a twinge of regret when I’m visiting home and up in Franconia Notch, it is not something that I spend any other energy thinking about. My St. Louis wife, who only saw it once, is actually sadder about it than me (because she wanted to show it to her dad).
Those cables may have delayed the inevitable a little bit, but there’s no way they were going to stop those rocks from falling. They were mostly done for show and tradition; I would have preferred that they were never installed.
Holy crap- 10 years? This was big enough news(in New England, anyway), that I actually remember where I was when I heard about it. Always wanted to see it, never got around to it.
Are features like this common in the US or was this the inspiration for a storyline in the Simpsons where Homer wrecks a local stone face called Geezer Rock about which Lisa has written a poem? The episode was called Fraudcast News.
Given both the timeline (the episode apparently aired the year after the formation collapsed) and the images I’ve found online, I think it’s almost certain that Geezer Rock was based on the Old Man. The actual Old Man was considerably farther away from the viewing area than that picture, but the overall shape and concept is more or less identical.
I was able to see the Old Man when I visited New Hampshire in 1985. It was pouring rain when I was passing through, but I decided to pull off the highway and see him anyway. I did, and got soaked, but he was quite something to see.
I was saddened to hear that he had fallen down, but glad that I had been able to see him anyway. Hard to believe it’s been ten years since he fell.