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Did the mother and 5 year old son jump in Niagara Falls?

NEW YORK - The mother who fell with her 5-year-old son from New York's famed Niagara Falls was seen climbing over the railing before plummeting to her death, a source confirmed to Fox News Digital. The 34-year-old woman and her son plunged approximately 90 feet from the state park on Monday afternoon.



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A woman died, and her 5-year-old son miraculously survived, when the pair plummeted 90 feet from New York's famed Niagara Falls in what authorities have said does not appear to be an accident.

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To this day, Woodward, a seven-year-old who was neither a daredevil nor a stuntman, was the first person to survive a plunge over the Horseshoe Falls not in a barrel. Niagara Falls in 1994.

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'We don't believe it's an accident': Woman dies and 5-year-old son in critical condition after falling into gorge at Niagara Falls. A scene from the location of a fall at Niagara Falls on Feb. 13, 2023.

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Back on July 9, 1960, a seven-year-old boy named Roger Woodward was swept over Horseshoe Falls, wearing only a lifejacket and somehow survived.

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No accidents or injuries have occurred on the Maid of the Mist except when one of the vessels was disabled when a drift log fouled it's propellers.

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In 2002, Egypt experts in Atlanta delivered the verdict: One mummy from the Niagara collection has been positively identified as Pharaoh Rameses I. He would soon be sent back to Egypt. So, I'm the guy who sold Rameses I. That's funny, Jamieson, now deceased, said at the time.

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On August 18th 1954, teenagers, Ted Mercier, Joseph Hawryluk and Graham Scott swam across the Niagara River from the Canadian shore near Seneca Street to the American shore approximately 400 yards (the length of 4 football fields) downstream.

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The deepest section in the Niagara River is just below the falls. It is so deep that it equals the height of the falls above: 52 metres (170 ft.) The Upper Niagara River extends 35 kilometres (22 mi.) from Lake Erie to the Cascade Rapids, which begin 1 kilometre (0.6 mi.)

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But no feat has attracted more visitors than a scientific survey conducted in 1969. That year, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers turned off American Falls. The engineers wanted to find a way to remove the unseemly boulders that had piled up at its base since 1931, cutting the height of the falls in half.

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Back in 1969, the Falls were “turned off.” Here's why and how it happened. Niagara Falls thrills visitors with a constant flow of wonder, but have you ever imagined a time when the Falls were not technically … the Falls?

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