A. V. Shirk Sledding Down "Devil's Hill" Sled Run

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A. V. Shirk Sledding Down "Devil's Hill" Sled Run is a picture, with genre photograph.

It was created in December 1989.

This color photograph shows A. V. Shirk sledding down a sled run in the Colonial Hills neighborhood, known as "Devil's Hill," in December, 1989. He is shown sledding away from the camera, at some distance from it.

A. V. Shirk's parents moved to Colonial Hills in 1947 and would take him and his younger brother to sled in the winter; fifteen years later, Shirk took his young son there. According to Shirk, "From the late 1940s, and quite possibly earlier, until at least sometime in the 1990s, there was a sled run, called 'Devil’s Hill' (there was nothing devilish about it) on the south side of Rush Creek (now called 'Rush Run'). It went down toward the creek, making a left hand turn well before it reached the bank."

The Devil’s Hill sled run in Colonial Hills has survived in some form to this day. It begins at the top of the south rim of the Park Boulevard Park, drops steeply from a guardrail on Lake Ridge Road, then banks west in a gentle glide parallel to Rush Run.

According to the recollections of former Colonial Hills resident John Snouffer, who also sledded there in the 1950s, the current Devil’s Hill is actually an "easy" run compared to the hill with the "tree of a thousand roots." In an oral history recorded in 2019, Snouffer recalled, "And so you had this hill that swooped down and around along the creek. And then you had another hill that went straight down and had a little dip. So that was called the Devil’s Hill, because it was a tough place to go."

According to an April 7, 1993, story in "The Columbus Dispatch," during a Park Boulevard Park improvement project, the "most dangerous” of the two Devil’s Hill sled runs was deliberately planted over "to prevent future use."

It covers the topics sledding, snow and winter.

It features the person Albin (A. V.) Vineyard Shirk, 1938-.

It covers the city Worthington. It covers the area Colonial Hills.

The original is in a private collection.

This file was reformatted digital in the format video/jpeg.

The Worthington Memory identification code is wcd0462.

This metadata record was human prepared by Worthington Libraries on November 30, 2022.