The
name is forgotten, maybe because those who remember simply want to forget.
But
the memory lingers like a child’s nightmare, the repressed one deep in the seat
of the subconscious, this one deep in the woods outside Toronto, taking one
deep in time, back to Camp Crumb, where time seems to cease.
The
tale of the Hanging Tree has been passed on from generation to generation until
now it looms high with other urban legends. Is it truly legend, a myth worthy of the lunatic with the prosthetic
hook, or just another haunted forest yarn to scare schoolboys on pitch dark, campfire
nights?
As
the legend goes, a distraught man hanged himself near the cliffs at Camp Crumb sometime
during the 1930s. Camp Crumb is
situated a quarter-mile up Sloane’s Run along the northeastern base of Wallace
Hill. During the latter decade of
the 19th century and the first decades of the 20th, it
was a popular site for picnics and other outdoor excursions. Hundreds of initials tattooed into the
bald gray beech trees still attest to this day how popular Camp Crumb once was.
These
ancient gray trees cast gentle shadows of upon a terrace tasseled with ferns rimming bench-sized sandstones velveted with moss and lichens, a site during the day Zen-like, an ambience tranquil enough to meditate.
But after the sun goes down…“That’s where a man hanged himself,” s said Dick Walker, who has lived all his 54 years in Toronto.
"My mother and some old-timers told me
how the man hanged himself with a chain at Camp Crum and
that he remained
missing for two weeks until his dog drug his hand home. When the search party
arrived at Camp
Crum all they found was the man’s head swinging from a chain wrapped around a
limb of a beach tree near a cliff.”
His late mother told Walker the hanged
man’s name, but he can only remember the gruesome details
and that the man
worked for Mike Henry probably during the 1930s at the White Front Café.
“I heard too many people talk about the Hanging
Tree to pass it off as some campfire tale,” Walker
said. “Besides, something is weird up there
at night. Just makes your skin crawl. Me and five other
guys tried camping out there overnight when
we were young, but it’s just too spooky.
Plenty of other
guys have tried sleeping out up Camp Crum and nobody can
claim he made it to daylight.”
“I remember one night like it was
yesterday, said Pat Daughtery about an adventure he shared with
Walker at Camp
Crumb. “There were six of us
laughing up a storm, telling stories and suddenly we
heard a chain clanging
high in the beech trees. We took
off so fast we forgot to pick up our beer.”
“We called it the Hanging Tree,” said Joe
Nemitt Sr. recalling boyhood excursions to the tragic site.
We got scared quickly and didn’t stick
around long.”
|
Some old-timers believe this lightning-charred beech tree is the notorious Hanging Tree of Camp Crum. Others claim the victim boosted himself upon "Scaffold Rock" before completing the deed. |
“I wouldn’t camp out there with 50 guys
and two kegs and a bucket of holy water,” added Daughtery,
“and I bet no one
else would last there more than a couple of hours.”
EDITOR'S NOTE: I, too, tried camping out at Camp Crumb. I did not last two hours.