October 1995
the monthly newsletter for people who live, work or play on the Upper Mississippi River
Vol. 3, No. 10
$2.50
Death on the River Toll and Tip By Pamela Eyden
By Mike Krapfl
The Mississippi River has a split personality.
This is Dubuque, home of famous canned hams,
It moves mountains of sand with hardly a ripple. It looks
so we had to eat pork for dinner. And this is the Tollbridge Inn, a fancy restaurant overlooking Dubuque's Lock and Dam 11, so we had to sit at a window seat. That means calling early, making a reservation and asking for the best view available. What you get with your window seat is a great combination of food, drink and river. On this particular night, the pork was tender, the salmon was good, the beer and wine flowed easily and the river was busy with pleasure boats, a big barge locking through, a few old fishermen, and lots of people walking, jogging and biking along the riverside below. But more about all that later. Let's get to first things first: How did a restaurant that serves "gazpacho," that salsa-like soup, get built into the side of a Mississippi River bluff? In Dubuque? The answer, it turns out, is right in the restaurant's name. The Tollbridge Inn sits at the end of Rhomberg
slow, but moves fast. Wayward currents, shifting sandbars, changing water levels, winds, weather, hidden obstacles and other unpredictable forces take a lot of people by surprise. The risks have always been part of river life. Heidi Giese grew up in a family that spent all its spare time on or in the river. She remembers sitting in the sand as a toddler, watching her mother water-ski. Her father used to pile kids in the back of his pickup truck and take them all down to fish on the river bank. Heidi is passing on the river tradition by teaching her own children to fish . Unfortunately, her river-loving father drowned on July 23, 1979, a few days after she turned 19. He was out in a boat with three friends, fishing at a favorite place just below the Trempealeau dam. "Three of the men had grown up on the river and were old friends. They knew it was a dangerous place, but they
Their boat capsized in a turbulent rush of water when the roller gates opened. liked fishing there anyway," Heidi said. "There are so many fish there." Their boat capsized in a turbulent rush of water when the roller gates opened. Two climbed out, unhurt. Another was pulled out, injured. Her father went under and disappeared. Search-and-rescue teams dragged the river that night and the next two days, finding nothing. Her uncles joined the search. (Death continued on page 2)
(Toll continued on page 4)
WHAT'S INSIDE ...
Letter from the Editor New Office, New Staff Member
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Current Events Shipping News, Spookyworld
5
River Calendar & Almanac Fall Color Information, Apple Fests
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