Journey to the Bottomless Pit: The Story of Stephen Bishop & Mammoth Cave

“A fascinating story.” —LeVar Burton

The thrilling adventures of a slave who became known worldwide for his explorations of Mammoth Cave.

If you toured Mammoth Cave in Kentucky in the year 1838, you would have been led by candlelight through dark, winding tunnels to the edge of a terrifying bottomless pit. Your guide would have been seventeen-year-old Stephen Bishop, an African American slave who became known around the world for his knowledge of Mammoth Cave.

Bishop needed bravery, intelligence, and curiosity to explore the vast cavern. Using only a lantern, rope, and other basic caving equipment, he found a way to cross the bottomless pit and discover many more miles of incredible grottoes and tunnels. For the rest of his life he guided visitors through the cave, showing them how to stoop, bend, and crawl through passageways that were sometimes far from the traditional tour route.

Based on the narratives of those who toured the cave with him, Journey to the Bottomless Pit is the first book for young readers ever written about Stephen Bishop. New to this edition: A free teacher’s guide to this book, as well as an interview with current-day Mammoth Cave guide Jerry Bransford, great-great-grandson of Stephen Bishop’s fellow guide, Mat Bransford.

1114939638
Journey to the Bottomless Pit: The Story of Stephen Bishop & Mammoth Cave

“A fascinating story.” —LeVar Burton

The thrilling adventures of a slave who became known worldwide for his explorations of Mammoth Cave.

If you toured Mammoth Cave in Kentucky in the year 1838, you would have been led by candlelight through dark, winding tunnels to the edge of a terrifying bottomless pit. Your guide would have been seventeen-year-old Stephen Bishop, an African American slave who became known around the world for his knowledge of Mammoth Cave.

Bishop needed bravery, intelligence, and curiosity to explore the vast cavern. Using only a lantern, rope, and other basic caving equipment, he found a way to cross the bottomless pit and discover many more miles of incredible grottoes and tunnels. For the rest of his life he guided visitors through the cave, showing them how to stoop, bend, and crawl through passageways that were sometimes far from the traditional tour route.

Based on the narratives of those who toured the cave with him, Journey to the Bottomless Pit is the first book for young readers ever written about Stephen Bishop. New to this edition: A free teacher’s guide to this book, as well as an interview with current-day Mammoth Cave guide Jerry Bransford, great-great-grandson of Stephen Bishop’s fellow guide, Mat Bransford.

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Journey to the Bottomless Pit: The Story of Stephen Bishop & Mammoth Cave

Journey to the Bottomless Pit: The Story of Stephen Bishop & Mammoth Cave

Journey to the Bottomless Pit: The Story of Stephen Bishop & Mammoth Cave

Journey to the Bottomless Pit: The Story of Stephen Bishop & Mammoth Cave

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Overview

“A fascinating story.” —LeVar Burton

The thrilling adventures of a slave who became known worldwide for his explorations of Mammoth Cave.

If you toured Mammoth Cave in Kentucky in the year 1838, you would have been led by candlelight through dark, winding tunnels to the edge of a terrifying bottomless pit. Your guide would have been seventeen-year-old Stephen Bishop, an African American slave who became known around the world for his knowledge of Mammoth Cave.

Bishop needed bravery, intelligence, and curiosity to explore the vast cavern. Using only a lantern, rope, and other basic caving equipment, he found a way to cross the bottomless pit and discover many more miles of incredible grottoes and tunnels. For the rest of his life he guided visitors through the cave, showing them how to stoop, bend, and crawl through passageways that were sometimes far from the traditional tour route.

Based on the narratives of those who toured the cave with him, Journey to the Bottomless Pit is the first book for young readers ever written about Stephen Bishop. New to this edition: A free teacher’s guide to this book, as well as an interview with current-day Mammoth Cave guide Jerry Bransford, great-great-grandson of Stephen Bishop’s fellow guide, Mat Bransford.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781504057691
Publisher: Open Road Distribution
Publication date: 03/19/2019
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 112
File size: 12 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.
Age Range: 8 - 13 Years

About the Author

About The Author
ELIZABETH MITCHELL was raised in Omaha, Nebraska, but her grandparents lived in Louisville, Kentucky, and she visited them frequently on summer vacation. During one trip they took her to Mammoth Cave. Many years later, Mitchell took her son to see the cave. There she noticed the brief mention in a park service brochure of a cave guide named Stephen Bishop. Captivated by the few details it offered, she began researching his life for a book. She read newspaper articles about Bishop as well as firsthand reports written in the 1840s and 1950s. Modern-day cave guides and the official Mammoth Cave historian also contributed information. Mitchell is an award-winning science fiction editor who has worked for publishers such as Del Rey, a division of Random House; Bantam Books; Open Road Integrated Media, and more. She and her family live in Brooklyn, New York.

Kelynn Z. Alder is of Mexican American heritage and grew up with a family that lived in several countries and traveled extensively. At a young age, she learned to appreciate a wide range of the world’s living cultures and became fascinated by peoples’ diverse backgrounds. Portraits of everyday people from all corners of the world, but most especially Mexico remain her favorite subject matter. This, combined with the need to draw and paint, developed into a love of portraiture. Alder defines herself as a “visual essayist with a wanderlust,” because she follows traditional expeditionary methods of painting in the field, combined with work in the studio. Her work has been commissioned by such notable publications as the New Yorker, Time Magazine, and Australian Geographic. She currently resides on the north shore of Long Island with her husband, two children, and two “nearly human” Australian Shepherds. Visit her website at kelynnalder.com.

 

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

The New Guide

The young slave brushed aside branches and vines as he followed his master down the trail. Today he would start learning to guide visitors through Mammoth Cave. He was excited, but he was worried as well. Would he do a good job?

Seventeen-year-old Stephen Bishop had seen many caves in his life. He had grown up in the state of Kentucky, and Kentucky is full of caves, from animal dens in the sides of hills to holes larger than a house. But Mammoth Cave was so big that people came from all over to see it. And now it belonged to Stephen's master, Franklin Gorin.

Mr. Gorin led the way. He talked to Stephen as they crossed a wooden bridge over a small stream.

"I want everything to be ready by the end of April," he said. "That means you, too. You have to learn the trails quickly so you can start leading tours."

Franklin Gorin was a lawyer, but he was not a rich man. He had agreed to buy Mammoth Cave for $5,000. He had paid the first $1,000, but he needed to earn the rest of the money by charging people to tour the underground cavern.

Young Stephen had lived with his mother and his brother on Gorin's property in Glasgow, Kentucky. But Gorin reasoned that he could make more money on every tour if he used Stephen as a guide. He didn't have to pay Stephen, the way he would have to pay a free man. That is why he brought Stephen to the cave.

It was the year 1838, and about 180,000 slaves lived in Kentucky. Most toiled in the fields, clearing land, planting and weeding crops, and taking care of livestock. House slaves worked long hours inside their masters' homes, cooking, cleaning, and caring for the children.

A few slaves were taught a useful trade such as blacksmithing, fancy sewing, or cobbling shoes. But no one that Stephen knew had ever worked as a cave guide. Stephen felt proud that Mr. Gorin thought he could do this job.

Mr. Gorin carried one lantern and Stephen carried another. Both lanterns were filled with lard oil. Stephen also carried a bag over his shoulder. Inside were a tin box filled with matches, some spare wicks for the lamp, a canister filled with more oil, and enough lunch for two men. Mr. Gorin had told Stephen he would spend all day in the cave.

They rounded a bend in the trail, pushing past branches that were just sprouting new leaves. Now Stephen could hear the sound of someone sawing wood. In a clearing ahead of them he saw a group of men at work under the shade of a big tree. They were splitting logs and shaping boards.

Stephen recognized two of the men. They were slaves who usually worked at Mr. Gorin's house in Glasgow, fixing fences and doing carpentry.

"How are things coming, Tapscott?" Mr. Gorin called to the man in charge.

"Just fine, sir," the carpenter answered. "We'll have this railing finished in another few days."

While Mr. Gorin talked to Mr. Tapscott, Stephen noticed something very strange. The day was warm, warm enough that he didn't need any kind of a coat. But all of a sudden he could feel a chilly breeze coming from somewhere nearby. He looked around, puzzled.

Mr. Gorin noticed him. "You feel it, don't you?" he asked Stephen. "That's air blowing out of the cave. It's always nice and cool down there. Even on the hottest summer day, you'll feel as though you're stepping into the middle of October."

Stephen followed Mr. Gorin around one more curve in the trail. There, an amazing sight met his eyes.

Stephen was facing a steep hillside. The hill was made of layers of rock, but it looked as though many layers had fallen away, leaving a huge opening downhill from where he was standing. Bushes and trees grew all around the opening, and a small stream cascaded from the top. It was the mouth of Mammoth Cave.

"The first job is to build a stairway down into the entrance, so that people can get inside safely," Mr. Gorin said to Stephen. "We've already measured eight miles of cave passage. People will pay well for tours, once we let them know we're ready for business. Come now. Here's someone for you to meet."

A young white man who had been watching the workers came over to join Stephen and Mr. Gorin. Mr. Gorin shook the man's hand and handed him the lantern he had been carrying.

"This is Archibald Miller," Mr. Gorin told Stephen. "He's been a guide here for about five years, and his daddy was a guide, too. You mind him well, and he'll teach you what you need to know."

Gorin turned back to the trail. He was headed to the top of the hill, where another gang of laborers was repairing and enlarging an old inn. Mammoth was located nine miles from the main stagecoach line between Louisville, Kentucky, and Nashville, Tennessee, and Gorin hoped that many travelers would stop to see his cave.

Archibald Miller looked Stephen up and down. Other men had done this before, making Stephen feel like a plow mule or a milk cow they were thinking of buying. But Mr. Miller just seemed to be taking his measure.

Miller looked only a few years older than Stephen. If you learned this cave, then I can, too, Stephen said to himself. For a moment he thought of his mother and brother back in Glasgow. They were so proud he had been chosen as a guide. Up until now, only white men had led visitors into Mammoth Cave.

"You'll need a good pair of boots," Mr. Miller said at last. "The cave floor is rough and rocky in a lot of places. I'll tell Mr. Gorin."

Mr. Miller and Stephen stopped at the edge of the deep hole. Steps made of broken rock led downward. A new wooden handrail extended part of the way, but below that Stephen had to be careful. The stream that ran off the top of the hillside fell alongside the steps. It splashed into a natural pond at the bottom of the stairway.

"This is where the visitors will fill their canteens," said Mr. Miller. "There is hardly any water inside the cave. Here, fill these up." He handed over two water bottles and waited while Stephen filled them to the top. They slung the bottles over their shoulders and Miller led the way forward.

Stephen gazed up as they stepped into the huge mouth of the cave. He felt very strange. Part of him was excited to be going into this new and very different place. But another part of him was scared. He had not imagined the cave would be so big. It looked very dark inside. What if he lost his way in the passages? What if other people got lost following him?

No time for worrying now. A dirt path led past the waterfall and into the cave. The opening began to narrow.

The cold air was all around him now, rushing out of the cave mouth. "It's no good lighting the lanterns until you're inside," Miller told him. "The wind blows them right out. Always carry a good supply of oil and wicks. And keep all the lanterns clean and dry. We don't want anyone telling horror stories about getting lost in the dark." Stephen agreed with that!

The breeze blew fiercely as they passed through a narrow opening. Then they stopped to light the lanterns. Stephen looked over his shoulder. The cave mouth was not far behind him, but already the daylight could hardly be seen.

He held up his lantern and looked around.

They were in a low tunnel made of rock. The pathway underfoot was smooth clay. Overhead, the roof formed a rocky arch. Archibald Miller's lantern bobbed ahead of him.

"This part of the cave is called the Narrows," Miller said. He turned around. Stephen had stopped to touch the rocky wall alongside the trail. It felt chilly and damp.

"Don't lag behind, Stephen. That's how people get lost in here," Miller told him. "You'll have plenty of time to look around later. Today I'm going to show you the Church."

Church? What kind of strange church could be inside a cave? Stephen followed quickly. His eyes were getting used to the lamplight now. He could see a low, rocky roof overhead and rock walls on both sides of the pathway.

The narrow passageway was beginning to widen. The cave floor sloped gently downhill. Stephen noticed some wooden pipes running along the floor, and a pair of wagon ruts leading deeper into the cave. He wondered what animal had pulled a wagon into this strange place.

Suddenly the Narrows ended and Stephen could see only a great dark space in front of him.

Archibald Miller bent over a pile of broken-up wood. "Give me a hand," he said. Together they stacked enough wood to build a small fire. When the flame caught in the wood, Miller stood up and threw his arm wide.

"This is the first big room in the cave. We call it the Rotunda. Do you know that word?"

"No, sir." Stephen liked the sound of it, though. He loved learning new words.

"It means a large room with a high, domed ceiling." Miller raised his lantern.

Stephen looked up, and his eyes widened. Now he could see a vast rocky roof. It curved smoothly across a space so wide Stephen could not see any other wall from where he stood. The little fire they had built could not possibly light up this enormous room.

"The Rotunda is two hundred feet long, and the ceiling is as high as ten men," Miller said. "You must remember everything I tell you, because you will be telling the same things to everyone who takes the tour."

He pointed around the great, dark room at other supplies of wood, and at some large heaps of dirt that Stephen had not noticed before. "Light two or three fires, so that visitors can see how big the Rotunda is," Miller told him. "If they ask what all this dirt is, and those pipes along the wall, explain that they are old mine diggings left over from the War of 1812. I'll tell you more about that later."

Stephen nodded. He felt a strange emotion, part wonder and part excitement. Although he had spent only a few minutes inside this cave, already he was learning its secrets. He was sure the cave would reveal many more.

Miller picked up his lantern again and led the way through the Rotunda. Now the passage was higher, and much wider than the Narrows. Stephen looked at everything, although it was hard to see very far with only the two lanterns for light.

Miller stopped at the entrance to another passage. "Now here's something important," he told Stephen. "Before you announce the name of this room, you must be sure to tell any ladies that they are not to be alarmed. It is called the Little Bat Room. But there are no bats here in the warmer months, when we get most of our visitors."

Miller held his lantern high. "In wintertime, though, you should see this place. Thousands and thousands of bats, all crowded together, hanging upside down with their wings wrapped tight. They look like little men wearing capes. They sleep all winter long."

Stephen had watched bats flitting above the trees on a summer evening, hunting for bugs to eat. But he'd seen only a few at a time. He tried to imagine what thousands of bats would look like.

"Ladies come into the cave?" he asked Archibald Miller.

"They do indeed," the other man said. "Young ones mainly; the older ones often can't manage the entrance. You'll see all types of visitors soon."

The Little Bat Room wound deep into the rocky cave. In the dim light, Stephen could see a number of small holes leading into the walls on each side. None was big enough for a person to squeeze inside.

"There's a dangerous pit here at the back wall." Miller stopped and pointed. "You need to keep an eye on your people. Warn them to stay away from it. And make sure you walk in front."

Stephen gripped his lantern. Its shivering flame lit up the left-hand wall. He could see the floor slope down into a place of utmost darkness. Miller picked up a rock and threw it into the hole.

Stephen listened. It seemed a long time before the rock struck bottom. Miller told him, "This is Crevice Pit. It is two hundred and eighty-five feet deep. I know because I measured it myself. Tied a rock onto a rope and lowered it down until the rock struck bottom. Anybody falls in there, they ain't coming out again."

Stephen shivered. He couldn't imagine falling into a hole so dark and deep.

"I always invite people to sit down here and listen to a story." Miller set down his lantern and sat on a chunk of broken rock. "Long before I measured this hole, a fellow went down there on the end of a rope. He was a young slave — even younger than you. The story goes, his boss was looking for peter-dirt. That's one of the makings of gunpowder. They used to dig tons of it out of this cave. Anyway, somebody told the boss the best dirt of all was bound to be at the bottom of a pit, so he lowered a lantern down into that hole to see how deep it went.

"The story goes, the rope broke and he lost the lantern. So he sent this young slave down there. He was hardly more than a boy, so he didn't weigh much. A couple of men tied a good stout rope around him. They lowered him as far as the rope would reach — about forty-five feet.

"That young fellow told the wildest tale when they finally pulled him up. He was shivering and shaking. Swore he'd never go down there again, not for any money. He said that skinny little crevice opens out into an enormous cave room with a huge tunnel in the side. He never found the lamp. Not only that, he claimed he couldn't even see the bottom."

Miller stood up and dusted off his pants. "Nobody believed him. We've never found hide nor hair of any new cave passage. That pit is nothing but a hole in the ground. Now let's get moving. Past this room, the passage comes to an end. We're going back the way we came, to the Church."

Stephen followed obediently, but he was thinking hard. Why couldn't the slave's story be true? Why couldn't there be another level of caverns deep below? He had been in Mammoth Cave only a short while, but he had seen one or two small holes that looked as though they might go somewhere.

Stephen made a promise to himself. One day, he would find out what was at the bottom of Crevice Pit.

CHAPTER 2

The Church and the Steamboat

They retraced their steps to the Rotunda. Mr. Miller quizzed Stephen on the names of everything they passed, and made him go in front to show the way. It reminded Stephen of walking in the woods at night. But no nighttime forest was ever as dark as this.

And no forest was ever so quiet. All he could hear was the sound of their breathing and the scuff of their footsteps on the dusty floor.

By now his eyes had adjusted to the low light. He could see his surroundings much better. "This passage ends pretty soon after the Little Bat Room," he recited. "Back up here is the Rotunda." He led the way with his lantern.

Stephen was more fascinated by this cave every minute. It was unlike any other place he had ever known. And his master wanted him to learn all about it! He would be happy to oblige.

He thought of the long summer coming, when the field slaves would have to toil outside even on the hottest days. In the eastern part of Kentucky, hundreds of workers sweated in the hemp fields. Hemp is a plant used to make rope and a rough cloth in which the southern plantation owners wrapped their bales of cotton. It was the most important crop in Kentucky.

Then Stephen thought about himself. His mother always said that God had blessed him with a strong body and a quick mind. White people seemed to look on him with favor. He could have been a carriage driver or a house slave. House slaves mixed with the white masters much more than the field slaves did. That meant they wore better clothing, got better food, and usually had better places to sleep.

But now Stephen had no interest in being a house slave. He felt very lucky to be right where he was. He promised himself that he would become the best guide Mammoth Cave had ever known.

Back in the Rotunda, their little fire was burning down. Archibald Miller stamped it out and led the way across the huge room into another high passageway.

"This is what we call the Grand Gallery," he said. "On the left here are the Cliffs of Kentucky. They're named after the rocky cliffs along the Ohio River. Now, look where I'm pointing. See that hole up there?"

Stephen had to look hard before he located the gap, high up under the cave roof. Mr. Miller said, "You can get through there and climb down the other side, but it's dangerous. Lots of huge rocks, and half of 'em are loose, just lying on each other in a huge pile."

They moved straight ahead down a tall, wide tunnel. Stephen understood why it had been named the Grand Gallery. A gallery is a tall, wide passageway.

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "Journey to the Bottomless Pit"
by .
Copyright © 2004 Elizabeth Mitchell.
Excerpted by permission of OPEN ROAD INTEGRATED MEDIA.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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