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Who is the man in the wheelbarrow at Niagara Falls?

On June 30, 1859, Charles Blondin became the first man in history to walk on a tightrope across Niagara Falls from the United States into Canada.



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Roger Woodward looks up as he's being rescued by The Maid of the Mist. It's enough to make anyone believe in miracles. 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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The barrel was quickly toward the crest of the Falls. Steven Trotter had survived the plunge uninjured. He became the youngest person, aged 22, to ever survive the plunge in a barrel. Trotter had received a short lived notoriety and appeared on several national television talk shows.

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Bell is the woman who drowned on Dec. 8 after driving her sedan into the Niagara River, The Buffalo News has confirmed. Beverly Bell. An undated childhood photo of Beverly Bell, provided by her cousin Geoffrey Drew-Brook.

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The Discovery of Niagara Falls The first European to document the area was a French priest, Father Louis Hennepin. During a 1678 expedition, he was overwhelmed by the size and significance of Niagara Falls.

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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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