Tory's Cave (New Milford, Connecticut)
Appearance
Tory Cave (or Tory's Cave) is a marble solutional cave near New Milford, Connecticut.[1]
The big room has enough space for two dozen people. To protect bat colonies, the cave is closed to the public. Its name is based on a tale from the American Revolution, in which a Tory (a loyalist to the English monarchy) hid in the cave.[2][3][4] The cave is near the Housatonic River.
In 1996, Joe Hurley, writing in the Record Journal, reported that the cave's unique ecology was threatened by blasting from a nearby quarry.[2] The cave is home to a blind shrimp-like amphipod called a Stygobromus.
See also
[edit]References
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"Woman rescued from New Milford cave". Fox News. 2013-08-13. Retrieved 2013-08-26.
Firefighters tell The News-Times of Danbury the woman and a male companion were inside Tory's Cave off Route 7 Monday afternoon when she went into an 8-foot crevice and could not get out.
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Joe Hurley (1996-06-02). "Creatures lurk in features of Tory's Cave". Record Journal. p. 2. Retrieved 2013-08-26.
The cave is alive with creatures like bats and pale-hued cave crickets. The Stugobromus also calls the cave home. The Stugobromus is a blind albine amphipod, or many-footed animal, somewhat like a tiny shrimp.
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Clay Perry (1939). Underground New England. Stephen Daye Press. p. 86. Retrieved 2013-08-26.
Connecticut is well stocked with "Indian Caves," all over the state, but only in the extreme northwestern corner does it have true caves, like the Twin Lakes Caves. A true limestone cavern and a beautiful one, is Tory Cave at New Milford.
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"The Speleo Digest". Pittsburgh Grotto Press. 1959. pp. 1–143. Retrieved 2013-08-26.
TORT CAVE (Connecticut) Tory Cave is in a sandy limestone. Its most interesting single feature is a series of chimneys, one on top of the other; and what is more, interconnected in some cases by crawlways.
41°37′N 73°28′W / 41.61°N 73.46°W