21 Stories for Scouts

21 Stories for Scouts

This article was scraped from Rochester Subway. This is a blog about Rochester history and urbanism has not been published since 2017. The current owners are now publishing link spam which made me want to preserve this history.. The original article was published May 21, 2010 and can be found here.

Woman rappels down the side of the First Federal office tower Friday afternoon as the lunchtime crowd looked on from Main Street. (photo: Copyright (c) 2010, Paul Baker. All rights reserved.)


   If you happened to pass by Main Street on Friday afternoon you would have seen crowds of downtown workers staring up at the sky. That's because more than 70 members of the local business community were dangling from the First Federal Building as part of a fundraiser organized by the Seneca Waterways Council of the Boy Scouts of America.

Participants each raised $1,000 to earn themselves the opportunity to rappel down the exterior of the 21-story, "flying saucer" capped building at 28 East Main Street. Proceeds will be used to support urban programs of the Boy Scouts.

Someone should really clean those windows. (photo: Copyright (c) 2010, Paul Baker. All rights reserved.)

On this fine-weather afternoon I was taking in some lunch and observing all the activity from the comfort of terra firma when I had an all too frequent thought... "Dammit, I wish had my camera." I was never a Boy Scout myself or I would've been more prepared. Luckily, I bumped into     Paul Baker    who was taking photos of his friend as she lowered herself from the top of the glass tower (shown here). He kindly agreed to let me share his photos with you all on     his flickr stream    . Thanks Paul!

The fundraiser was organized by     Over the Edge    , a Nova Scotia-based company that provided on-site professional staff and worked closely with the building's owner to ensure insurance and safety concerns are met. Although the company boasts on their web site of their strong safety record and claims they've had "zero incidents", all participants have to sign a waiver. Yah, no thank you.

Chris Gemignani

Chris Gemignani

Rochester, NY, USA