- Eleven Jones Cave
Eleven Jones Cave is located by
Beargrass Creek inLouisville, Kentucky . It is convert|1600|ft|m southeast of the corner of Eastern Parkway and Poplar Level Road on the west bank, between Louisville Cemetery and Calvary Cemetery, near St. X High School. It is developed in LouisvilleLimestone 448 feet above sea level. A spring discharges water into Beargrass Creek.cite journal|title="Filson Club Historic Quarterly|number=48|year=1974|pages=342|author=George, Angelo I.]The cave is the best known and best documented in Jefferson County. It is popularly said to be named for being used by eleven brothers named Jones; [ [http://www.bizjournals.com/louisville/stories/2001/05/07/focus1.html When it's hot, they're cool - Business First of Louisville: ] ] however, some believe it was actually named from early residents Levin Powell and John Jones. [Kleber, John E. "Encyclopedia of Louisville". (University of Kentucky Press). pg.270.]
The stoopway entrance that is convert|4.5|ft|m high and convert|2.5|ft|m wide leads to a forty foot passage into a fairly normal
limestone crawlway conduit cave.Kleber]The legend
The Jones were supposed to have used the cave as a hideout in the 1800s. They were reportedly bank robbers, counterfeiters, and murderers. They stashed their ill-gotten gains within the cave. The brothers also created eleven rooms to live in within the cave. The Jones eventually left the area, and their treasure reportedly hid behind collapsed rocks. Since the rooms have never been found, legend often says the gang sealed them off by collapsing the cave roof. The cave was supposedly once large enough to drive a horse and carriage through, but has since shrunk. ["George", 343]
Three-inch bars on a gate are supposed to further decrease the chances that someone might find Jones' gold, silver, and jewels. These bars prevent access to a main passage, which is also supposed to be guarded by a cannon. A book published by University of Kentucky Press has called this account "mythical".
Early descriptions of the area, as late as 1822, make no mention of the cave or legends surrounding it, but it was known to locals as the source of a spring by 1831. It was first definitively called Eleven Jones Cave in 1848. Eight entrances were said to have been located along Beargrass Creek, although none but the main entrance were ever found. ["George", 344-347]
tudies
In 1967 there were two physical surveys trips into cave, but neither found evidence of the Jones Brothers story, or for a story that in 1949 an army saber from the
American Civil War was found within the cave. All it found was that the cave had no entrance other than the reliable spring entrance on Beargrass Creek.There is reportedly high levels of
carbon dioxide in the cave. [http://www.fws.gov/southeast/es/pdf/9cb.PDF]It is the only known location for living Louisville cave beetles, "
Pseudanophthalmus troglodytes ". This insect is reddish-brown, small, eyeless, and eats invertebrates. The Louisville cave beetle was described in 1973 from specimens collected from Oxmoor Cave (nearOxmoor Center ). During 1994, surveys of other caves that could potentially support the species were conducted and the species was found in only one additional cave: Eleven Jones Cave. [ [http://www.fws.gov/policy/library/05-9283.html 2005 Federal Register, 70 FR 24870; Centralized Library: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service - FR Doc 05-9283 ] ] Oxmoor Cave was bulldozed over in 1990. It has been listed as "imperiled" by the Kentucky Natural Heritage Program. Since 1994 it has been a candidate for ESA protection, but currently has no state or federal protections. [ [http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/swcbd/Programs/bdes/cp/ky.html Center for Biological Diversity - Candidate Project ] ]References
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