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Lake Champlain

Lake Champlain (/ʃæmˈpln/ sham-PLAYN; French: Lac Champlain) is a natural freshwater lake in North America. It mostly lies between the US states of New York and Vermont, but also extends north into the Canadian province of Quebec.[3]

Lake Champlain
Lake Champlain-River Richelieu watershed
Lake Champlain
LocationNew York/Vermont in the United States; and Quebec in Canada
Coordinates44°32′N 73°20′W / 44.53°N 73.33°W / 44.53; -73.33
Primary inflowsOtter Creek, Winooski River, Missisquoi River, Poultney River, Lamoille River, Ausable River, Chazy River, Boquet River, Saranac River, La Chute River
Primary outflowsRichelieu River
Catchment area8,234 sq mi (21,326 km2)
Basin countriesCanada, United States
Max. length107 mi (172 km)[1]
Max. width14 mi (23 km)
Surface area514 sq mi (1,331 km2)
Average depth64 ft (19.5 m)
Max. depth400 ft (122 m)[2]
Water volume6.2 cu mi (25.8 km3)
Residence time3.3 years
Shore length1587 mi (945 km)
Surface elevation95 to 100 ft (29 to 30 m)
Islands80 (Grand Isle, North Hero, Isle La Motte, see list)
SettlementsBurlington, Vermont; Plattsburgh, New York
1 Shore length is not a well-defined measure.

The New York portion of the Champlain Valley includes the eastern portions of Clinton County and Essex County. Most of this area is part of the Adirondack Park. There are recreational facilities in the park and along the relatively undeveloped coastline of the lake. The cities of Plattsburgh, New York, and Burlington, Vermont, are on the lake's western and eastern shores, respectively, and the town of Ticonderoga, New York, is in the southern part of the region. The Quebec portion is in the regional county municipalities of Le Haut-Richelieu and Brome-Missisquoi. There are a number of islands in the lake; the largest include Grand Isle, Isle La Motte and North Hero: all part of Grand Isle County, Vermont.

Because of Lake Champlain's connections both to the St. Lawrence Seaway via the Richelieu River, and to the Hudson River via the Champlain Canal, Lake Champlain is sometimes referred to as "The Sixth Great Lake".[4]

Geology edit

 
Sentinel-2 satellite photo

The Champlain Valley is the northernmost unit of a landform system known as the Great Appalachian Valley, which stretches between Quebec, Canada, to the north, and Alabama, US, to the south. The Champlain Valley is a physiographic section of the larger Saint Lawrence Valley, which in turn is part of the larger Appalachian physiographic division.[5]

Lake Champlain is one of numerous large lakes scattered in an arc through Labrador, in Canada, the northern United States, and the Northwest Territories of Canada.[citation needed] It is the thirteenth-largest lake by area in the US. Approximately 490 sq mi (1,269 km2) in area, the lake is 107 mi (172 km) long and 14 mi (23 km) across at its widest point,[1] and has a maximum depth of approximately 400 ft (120 m). The lake varies seasonally from about 95 to 100 ft (29 to 30 m) above mean sea level.[6]

Hydrology edit

 
Lake Champlain in Burlington Harbor during sunset on May 27, 2012

Lake Champlain is in the Lake Champlain Valley between the Green Mountains of Vermont and the Adirondack Mountains of New York, drained northward by the 106 mi-long (171 km) Richelieu River into the St. Lawrence River at Sorel-Tracy, Quebec, northeast and downstream of Montreal. The Champlain basin collects waters from the northwestern slopes of the Green Mountains and the eastern portion of the Adirondack Mountains, reaching as far south as the 32 mi-long (51 km) Lake George in New York.

Lake Champlain drains nearly half of Vermont, and approximately 250,000 people get their drinking water from the lake.[7]

The lake is fed in Vermont by the LaPlatte, Lamoille, Missisquoi, Poultney and Winooski rivers, along with Lewis Creek, Little Otter Creek and Otter Creek.[8] In New York, it is fed by the Ausable, Boquet, Great Chazy, La Chute, Little Ausable, Little Chazy, Salmon and Saranac rivers, along with Putnam Creek. In Quebec, it is fed by the Pike River.

It is connected to the Hudson River by the Champlain Canal.

Parts of the lake freeze each winter, and in some winters the entire lake surface freezes, referred to as "closing".[9] In July and August, the lake temperature reaches an average of 70 °F (21 °C).[10][11]

Chazy Reef edit

The Chazy Reef is an extensive Ordovician carbonate rock formation that extends from Tennessee to Quebec and Newfoundland. The oldest reefs are around "The Head" of the south end of Isle La Motte; slightly younger reefs are found at the Fisk Quarry, and the youngest (the famous coral reefs) are in fields to the north.[12]

History edit

 
Brooklyn Museum – Green Mountains, Lake Champlain – Winckworth Allan Gay – overall

The lake has long acted as a border between indigenous nations, much as it is today between the states of New York and Vermont. The lake is located at the frontier between Abenaki and Mohawk (Iroquois Confederacy) traditional territories. The official toponym for the lake, according to the orthography established by the Grand Council of Wanab-aki Nation, is Pitawbagok (alternative orthographies include Petonbowk[13] and Bitawbagok[14]), meaning "middle lake", "lake in between" or "double lake".

The Mohawk name in modern orthography, as standardized in 1993, is Kaniatarakwà:ronte, meaning "a bulged lake" or "lake with a bulge in it".[15][16] An alternate name is Kaniá:tare tsi kahnhokà:ronte (phonetic English spelling Caniaderi Guarunte[17]), meaning "door of the country" or "lake to the country". The lake is an important eastern gateway to Iroquois Confederacy lands.

The lake was named after the French explorer Samuel de Champlain, who encountered it in July 1609.[3] While the ports of Burlington, Vermont, Port Henry, New York, and Plattsburgh, New York, today are primarily used by small craft, ferries and lake cruise ships, they were of substantial commercial and military importance in the 18th and 19th centuries.

Colonial America and the Revolutionary War edit

 
Map of Lac Champlain, from Fort de Chambly up to Fort St-Fréderic in Nouvelle France. Cadastral map showing concessions and seigneuries on the coasts of the lake according to 1739 surveying.

New France allocated concessions all along Lake Champlain to French settlers and built forts to defend the waterways. In colonial times, Lake Champlain was used as a water (or, in winter, ice) passage between the Saint Lawrence and Hudson valleys. Travelers found it easier to journey by boats and sledges on the lake rather than go overland on unpaved and frequently mud-bound roads. The lake's northern tip at Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Quebec (known as St. John in colonial times under British rule) is just 25 miles (40 km) from Montreal, Quebec. The southern tip at Whitehall (Skenesborough in revolutionary times) is 23 miles (37 km) north of Glens Falls on the Hudson River and 70 miles (110 km) north of Albany, New York.

Forts were built at Ticonderoga and Crown Point (Fort St. Frederic) to control passage on the lake in colonial times. Important battles were fought at Ticonderoga in 1758 and 1775. During the Revolutionary War, the British and Americans conducted a frenetic shipbuilding race through the spring and summer of 1776, at opposite ends of the lake, and fought a significant naval engagement on October 11 at the Battle of Valcour Island. While it was a tactical defeat for the Americans, and the small fleet led by Benedict Arnold was almost destroyed, the Americans gained a strategic victory; the British invasion was delayed long enough so the approach of winter prevented the fall of these forts until the following year. In this period, the Continental Army gained strength and was victorious at Saratoga.

Beginning of the Revolutionary War edit

At the start of the Revolutionary War, British forces occupied the Champlain Valley.[18] However, it did not take long for rebel leaders to realize the importance of controlling Lake Champlain. Early in the war, the colonial militias attempted to expel the British from Boston; however, this undertaking could not be achieved without heavy artillery.[19] The British forts at Ticonderoga and Crown Point, on Lake Champlain, were known to have ample supplies of artillery and were weakly-manned by the British. Thus, the colonial militias devised a plan to take control of the two forts and bring the guns back to the fight in Boston.[19]

 
Charlotte Ferry, Lake Champlain

The necessity of controlling the two forts at Ticonderoga and Crown Point placed Lake Champlain as a strategic arena during the Revolutionary War. By taking control of these forts, Americans not only gained heavy artillery, but control of a vast water highway as well: Lake Champlain provided a direct invasion route to British Canada. However, had the British controlled the lake, they could have divided the colonies of New England and further depleted the Continental Army.

The Continental Army's first offensive action took place in May 1775, three weeks after the Battles of Lexington and Concord.[20] Ethan Allen, accompanied by 200 Green Mountain Boys, was ordered to capture Fort Ticonderoga and retrieve supplies for the fight in Boston. Benedict Arnold shared the command with Allen, and, in early May 1775, they captured Fort Ticonderoga, Crown Point and the southern Loyalist settlement of Skenesborough.[20] As a result of Allen's offensive attack on the Champlain Valley in 1775, the American forces controlled the Lake Champlain waterway.

Siege of Quebec: 1775–1776 edit

The Continental Army realized the strategic advantage of controlling Lake Champlain, as it leads directly to the heart of Quebec.[21] Immediately after taking Forts Ticonderoga and Crown Point, the Americans began planning an attack on British Canada. The American siege of Quebec was a two-pronged assault and occurred throughout the winter of 1775–1776.[22] Brigadier General Richard Montgomery led the first assault up the Champlain Valley into Canada, while Benedict Arnold led a second army to Quebec via the Maine wilderness.[22]

Despite the strategic advantage of controlling a direct route to Quebec by way of the Champlain Valley, the American siege of British Canada during the winter of 1775 failed. The Continental Army mistakenly assumed that it would receive support from the Canadians upon their arrival at Quebec. This was not the case, and the rebel army struggled to take Quebec with diminishing supplies, support, and harsh northern winter weather.[23]

The Continental Army was forced to camp outside Quebec's walls for the winter, with reinforcements from New York, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Connecticut allowing the soldiers to maintain their siege of the city. However, smallpox descended on both the sieging forces and their reinforcements and savaged the American force. [24] The reinforcements traveled hundreds of miles up the frozen Lake Champlain and St. Lawrence River, but were too late and too few to influence a successful siege of Quebec. In May 1776, with the arrival of a British convoy carrying 10,000 British and Hessian troops to Canada, the Continental forces retreated back down the Champlain Valley to reevaluate their strategy.[25]

 
The Champlain Valley as seen from Camel's Hump

"I know of no better method than to secure the important posts of Ticonderoga and Crown Point, and by building a number of armed vessels to command the lakes, otherwise the forces now in Canada will be brought down upon us as quick as possible, having nothing to oppose them...They will doubtless try to construct some armed vessels and then endeavor to penetrate the country toward New York." (Brigadier General John Sullivan to George Washington, June 24, 1776).[20]

Both British and American forces spent the summer of 1776 building their naval fleets, at opposite ends of Lake Champlain.[24] By the October 1776, the Continental Army had 16 operating naval vessels on Lake Champlain: a great increase to the four small ships they had at the beginning of the summer.[20] General Benedict Arnold commanded the American naval fleet on Lake Champlain, which was composed of volunteers and soldiers drafted from the Northern Army. With great contrast to the Continental navy, experienced Royal Navy officers, British seamen and Hessian artillerymen manned the British fleet on Lake Champlain.[20] By the end of the summer of 1776, the opposing armies were prepared to battle over the strategic advantage of controlling Lake Champlain.

Battle of Valcour Island edit

On October 11, 1776, the British and American naval fleets met on the western side of Valcour Island, on Lake Champlain.[19] American General Benedict Arnold established the location, as it provided the Continental fleet with a natural defensive position. The British and American vessels engaged in combat for much of the day, only stopping due to impending nightfall.[20]

After a long day of combat, the American fleet was in worse shape than the experienced British Navy. Upon ceasefire, Arnold called a council of war with his fellow officers, proposing to escape the British fleet via rowboats under the cover of night. As the British burned Arnold's flagship, the Royal Savage, to the east, the Americans rowed past the British lines.[26]

The following morning, the British learned of the Americans' escape and set out after the fleeing Continental vessels. On October 13, the British fleet caught up to the struggling American ships near Split Rock Mountain.[26] With no hope of fighting off the powerful British navy, Arnold ordered his men to run their five vessels aground in Ferris Bay, Panton, Vermont. The depleted Continental army escaped on land back to Fort Ticonderoga and Mount Independence; however, they no longer controlled the Lake Champlain waterway.[26]

The approaching winter of 1776–1777 restricted British movement along the recently controlled Lake Champlain. As the British abandoned Crown Point and returned to Canada for the winter, the Americans reduced their garrisons in the Champlain Valley from 13,000 to 2,500 soldiers.[20]

General Burgoyne's Campaign edit

 
Lake Champlain, Charlotte, Vermont

In early 1777, British General John Burgoyne led 8,000 troops from Canada, down Lake Champlain and into the Champlain Valley.[25] The goal of this invasion was to divide the New England colonies, thus forcing the Continental Army into a separated fight on multiple fronts.[27] Lake Champlain provided Burgoyne with protected passage deep into the American colonies. Burgoyne's army reached Fort Ticonderoga and Mount Independence in late June, 1777. During the night of July 5, the American forces fled Ticonderoga as the British took control of the fort. However, Burgoyne's southern campaign did not go uncontested.

On October 7, 1777, American General Horatio Gates, who occupied Bemis Heights, met Burgoyne's army at the Second Battle of Freeman's Farm.[27] At Freeman's Farm, Burgoyne's army suffered its final defeat and ended its invasion south into the colonies. Ten days later, on October 17, 1777, British General Burgoyne surrendered his army at Saratoga.[27] This defeat was instrumental to the momentum of the Revolutionary War, as the defeat of the British army along the Champlain-Hudson waterway convinced France to ally with the American army.[20]

Aftermath of 1777 edit

Following the failed British campaign led by General Burgoyne, the British still maintained control over the Champlain waterway for the duration of the Revolutionary War.[20] The British used the Champlain waterway to supply raids across the Champlain Valley from 1778 to 1780, and Lake Champlain permitted direct transportation of supplies from the British posts at the northern end of the lake.

With the end of the Revolutionary War in 1783, the British naval fleet on Lake Champlain retreated up to St. John's.[20] However, British troops garrisoned at Fort Dutchman's Point (North Hero, Vermont) and Fort au Fer (Champlain, New York), on Lake Champlain, did not leave until the 1796 Jay Treaty.[28][29]

Post-Revolutionary War period edit

 
Dutton House, Shelburne Museum
 
Stagecoach Inn, Shelburne Museum
 
Sawmill, Shelburne Museum

Eager to take back control of Lake Champlain following the end of the Revolutionary War, Americans flocked to settle the Champlain Valley. Many individuals emigrated from Massachusetts and other New England colonies, such as Salmon Dutton, a settler of Cavendish, Vermont.[30] Dutton emigrated in 1782 and worked as a surveyor, town official and toll-road owner. His home had a dooryard garden, typical of mid-19th century New England village homes,[30] and his experience settling in the Champlain Valley depicts the industries and lifestyles surrounding Lake Champlain following the Revolutionary War.

Similar to the experience of Salmon Dutton, former colonial militia Major General Hezekiah Barnes settled in Charlotte, Vermont, in 1787.[31] Following the war, Barnes worked as a road surveyor; he also established an inn and trading post in Charlotte, along the main trade route from Montreal down Lake Champlain. Barnes' stagecoach inn was built in traditional Georgian style, with 10 fireplaces, a ballroom on the interior and a wraparound porch on the outside.[31] In 1800, Continental Army Captain Benjamin Harrington established a distillery business in Shelburne, Vermont, which supplied his nearby inn.[32] These individual accounts shed light on the significance of Lake Champlain during the post-Revolutionary War period.

War of 1812 edit

During the War of 1812, British and American forces faced each other in the Battle of Lake Champlain, also known as the Battle of Plattsburgh, fought on September 11, 1814. This ended the final British invasion of the northern states during the War of 1812. It was fought just prior to the signing of the Treaty of Ghent, and the American victory denied the British any leverage to demand exclusive control over the Great Lakes or territorial gains against the New England states.

Three US Naval ships have been named after this battle: USS Lake Champlain (CV-39), USS Lake Champlain (CG-57) and a cargo ship used during World War I.

Following the War of 1812, the U.S. Army began construction on "Fort Blunder": an unnamed fortification built at the northernmost end of Lake Champlain to protect against attacks from British Canada. Its nickname came from a surveying error: the initial phase of construction on the fort turned out to be taking place on a point 34 mi (1.2 km) north of the Canada–U.S. border. Once this error was spotted, construction was abandoned. Locals scavenged materials used in the abandoned fort for use in their homes and public buildings.

By the Webster–Ashburton Treaty of 1842, the Canada–U.S. border was adjusted northward to include the strategically important site of "Fort Blunder" on the US side.[33] In 1844, work was begun to replace the remains of the 1812-era fort with a massive new Third System masonry fortification, known as Fort Montgomery. Portions of this fort are still standing.

Modern history edit

 
A 1902 photograph of Fort Henry at Lake Champlain

In the early 19th century, the construction of the Champlain Canal connected Lake Champlain to the Hudson River system, allowing north–south commerce by water from New York City to Montreal and Atlantic Canada.

In 1909, 65,000 people celebrated the 300th anniversary of the French discovery of the lake. Attending dignitaries included President William Howard Taft, along with representatives from France, Canada and the United Kingdom.[34][35]

In 1929, then-New York Governor Franklin Roosevelt and Vermont Governor John Weeks dedicated the first bridge to span the lake, built from Crown Point to Chimney Point.[36] This bridge lasted until December 2009. Severe deterioration was found, and the bridge was demolished and replaced with the Lake Champlain Bridge, which opened in November 2011.

On February 19, 1932, boats were able to sail on Lake Champlain. It was the first time that the lake was known to be free of ice during the winter at that time.[37]

Lake Champlain briefly became the nation's sixth Great Lake on March 6, 1998, when President Clinton signed Senate Bill 927. This bill, which was led by U.S. Senator Patrick Leahy of Vermont and reauthorized the National Sea Grant Program, contained a line declaring Lake Champlain to be a Great Lake. This status enabled its neighboring states to apply for additional federal research and education funds allocated to these national resources. However, following a small uproar, the Great Lake status was rescinded on March 24 (although New York and Vermont universities continue to receive funds to monitor and study the lake).[38]

"Champ", Lake Champlain monster edit

In 1609, Samuel de Champlain wrote that he saw a lake monster 5 ft (1.5 m) long, as thick as a man's thigh, with silver-gray scales a dagger could not penetrate. The alleged monster had 2.5 ft (0.76 m) jaws with sharp and dangerous teeth. Native Americans claimed to have seen similar monsters 8 to 10 ft (2.4 to 3.0 m) long. This mysterious creature is likely the original Lake Champlain monster.[39]: 20  The monster has been memorialized in sports teams' names and mascots, e.g., the Vermont Lake Monsters and Champ, the mascot of the state's minor league baseball team.[40] A Vermont Historical Society publication recounts the story and offers possible explanations for accounts of the so-called monster: "floating logs, schools of large sturgeon diving in a row, or flocks of blackbirds flying close to the water".[41] In 2022, it was reported that a feature dramatic film, Lucy and the Lake Monster, was in the works about a young orphan girl and her grandfather looking for Champ.[42][43][44][45][46]

Ecology edit

A pollution prevention, control and restoration plan for Lake Champlain[47] was first endorsed in October 1996 by the governors of New York and Vermont and the regional administrators of the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). In April 2003, the plan was updated, and Quebec signed on to it. The plan is being implemented by the Lake Champlain Basin Program and its partners at the state, provincial, federal and local levels. Renowned as a model for interstate and international cooperation, its primary goals are to reduce phosphorus inputs to Lake Champlain, reduce toxic contamination, minimize the risks to humans from water-related health hazards and control the introduction, spread, and impact of non-native nuisance species to preserve the integrity of the Lake Champlain ecosystem.

Senior staff who helped organize the Environmental Protection Agency in 1970 recall that International Paper was one of the first companies to call upon the brand-new agency, because it was being pressured by both New York and Vermont with regard to a discharge of pollution into Lake Champlain.[48][49]

Agricultural and urban runoff from the watershed or drainage basin is the primary source of excess phosphorus, which exacerbates algae blooms in Lake Champlain. The most problematic blooms have been cyanobacteria, commonly called blue-green algae, in the northeastern part of the lake: primarily Missisquoi Bay.[50]

To reduce phosphorus runoff to this part of the lake, Vermont and Quebec agreed to reduce their inputs by 60% and 40%, respectively, by an agreement signed in 2002.[51] While agricultural sources (manure and fertilizers) are the primary sources of phosphorus (about 70%) in the Missisquoi basin, runoff from developed land and suburbs is estimated to contribute about 46% of the phosphorus runoff basin-wide to Lake Champlain, and agricultural lands contributed about 38%.[52]

In 2002, the cleanup plan noted that the lake had the capacity to absorb 120 short tons (110 t) of phosphorus each year. In 2009, a judge noted that 240 short tons (218 t) were still flowing in annually: more than twice what the lake could handle. Sixty municipal and industrial sewage plants discharge processed waste from the Vermont side.[53]

In 2008, the EPA expressed concerns to the State of Vermont that the lake's cleanup was not progressing fast enough to meet the original cleanup goal of 2016.[54] The state, however, cites its Clean and Clear Action Plan[55] as a model that will produce positive results for Lake Champlain.

In 2007, Vermont banned phosphates for dishwasher use starting in 2010. This will prevent an estimated 2–3 short tons (1.8–2.7 t) from flowing into the lake. While this represents 0.6% of the phosphate pollution, it took US$1.9 million to remove the pollutant from treated wastewater: an EPA requirement.[56]

Despite concerns about pollution, Lake Champlain is safe for swimming, fishing and boating. It is considered a world-class fishery for salmonid species (lake trout and Atlantic salmon) and bass. About 81 fish species live in the lake, and more than 300 bird species rely on it for habitat and as a resource during migrations.[57]

By 2008, at least seven institutions were monitoring lake water health:

  1. Conservation Law Foundation, which in 2002 appointed a "lakekeeper" who reviews the state's pollution controls
  2. Friends of Missisquoi Bay, formed in 2003
  3. Lake Champlain Committee
  4. Vermont Water Resources Board, which hired a water quality expert in 2008 to write water quality standards and create wetland protection rules
  5. Vermont Agency of Natural Resources, which in 2007 appointed a "lake czar" to oversee pollution control
  6. Clean and Clear, an agency of the Vermont state government, established in 2004
  7. The Nature Conservancy, a non-profit group which focuses on biodiversity and ecosystem health.[58]

In 2001, scientists estimated that farming contributed 38% of the phosphorus runoff. By 2010, results of environmentally-conscious farming practices, enforced by law, had made a positive contribution to lake cleanliness. A federally-funded study was started to analyze this problem and to arrive at a solution.[59]

Biologists have been trying to control lampreys in the lake since 1985 or earlier. Lampreys are native to the area, but have expanded in population to such an extent that they wounded nearly all lake trout in 2006, and 70–80% of salmon. The use of pesticides against the lamprey has reduced their damage to other fish to 35% of salmon and 31% of lake trout. The goal was 15% of salmon and 25% of lake trout.[60]

The federal and state governments originally budgeted US$18 million for lake programs for 2010. This was later supplemented by an additional US$6.5 million from the federal government.[61]

Natural history edit

In 2010, the estimate of cormorant population, now classified as a nuisance species because they take so much of the lake fish, ranged from 14,000 to 16,000. A Fish and Wildlife commissioner said that the ideal population would be about 3,300, amounting to 7.8/sq mi (3/km2). Cormorants had disappeared from the lake (and all northern lakes) due to the use of DDT in the 1940s and 1950s, which made their eggs more fragile and reduced breeding populations.[62]

Ring-billed gulls are also considered a nuisance, and measures have been taken to reduce their population. Authorities are trying to encourage the return of black-crowned night herons, cattle egrets and great blue herons, which disappeared during the time DDT was being widely used.[62]

In 1989, UNESCO designated the area around Lake Champlain as the Champlain-Adirondack Biosphere Reserve.[63][64]

Infrastructure edit

Lake crossings edit

The Alburgh Peninsula (also known as the Alburgh Tongue), extending south from the Quebec shore of the lake into Vermont, and Province Point, the southernmost tip of a small promontory approximately 2 acres (1 ha) in size[65] a few miles to the northeast of the community of East Alburgh, Vermont, are connected by land to the rest of the state only via Canada. This is a distinction shared with the state of Alaska, Point Roberts, Washington, and the Northwest Angle in Minnesota. All of these are practical exclaves of the United States contiguous with Canada. Unlike the other cases, highway bridges across the lake provide direct access to the Alburgh peninsula from within the United States (from three directions), but Province Point is still accessible by land only through Canada.

 
The former Champlain Bridge between New York and Vermont, demolished in December 2009

Road edit

Three roadways cross the lake, two connecting New York and Vermont and one connecting two towns in New York:

In 2009, the bridge had been used by 3,400 drivers per day,[67] and driving around the southern end of the lake added two hours to the trip. Ferry service was re-established to take some of the traffic burden. On December 28, 2009, the bridge was destroyed by a controlled demolition. A new bridge was rapidly constructed by a joint state commitment, opening on November 7, 2011.[68]
  • To the north, US 2 runs from Rouses Point, New York, to Grand Isle County, Vermont, in the town of Alburgh, before continuing south along a chain of islands toward Burlington. To the east, Vermont Route 78 runs from an intersection with US 2 in Alburgh through East Alburgh to Swanton. The US 2-VT 78 route technically runs from the New York mainland to an extension of the mainland between two arms of the lake and then to the Vermont mainland, but it provides a direct route across the two main arms of the lake's northern part.

Ferry edit

 
The LCTC ferry slip at Grand Isle, Vermont

North of Ticonderoga, New York, the lake widens appreciably; ferry service is operated by the Lake Champlain Transportation Company at:

While the old bridge was being demolished and the new one constructed, Lake Champlain Transportation Company operated a free, 24-hour ferry from just south of the bridge to Chimney Point, Vermont, at the expense of the states of New York and Vermont, at a cost to the states of about $10 per car.[69][70]

The most southerly crossing is the Fort Ticonderoga Ferry, connecting Ticonderoga, New York, with Shoreham, Vermont, just north of the historic fort.

Railroad edit

Four significant railroad crossings were built over the lake. As of 2021, only one remains.

  • The "floating" rail trestle from Larabees Point, Vermont, to Ticonderoga, New York, was operated by the Addison Branch of the Rutland Railroad. It was abandoned in 1918, due to a number of accidents which resulted in locomotives and rail cars falling into the lake.[39]: 257 
  • The Island Line Causeway, a marble tailings and granite rock landfill causeway that stretched from Colchester (on the mainland) three mi (4.8 km) north and west to South Hero, Vermont. Two breaks in the causeway were spanned by a fixed iron trestle and a swing bridge that could be opened to allow boats to pass. The Rutland Railroad (later Rutland Railway) operated trains over this causeway from 1901 to 1961, with the last passenger train operating in 1953. The railroad was officially abandoned in 1963, with tracks and trestles removed over the course of the ten years that followed. The marble tailings and granite rock causeway still remains, as does the fixed iron trestle that bridges the lesser of the two gaps. The swing bridge over the navigation channel was removed in the early 1970s.[71][citation needed]
 
The Swanton-Alburgh trestle spans Lake Champlain between the two Vermont towns: a distance of about 0.8 mi (1.3 km).
Now called Colchester Park, the main 3-mile (5 km) causeway has been adapted and preserved as a recreation area for cyclists, runners and anglers. Two smaller marble tailings and granite rock landfill causeways were also erected as part of this line that connected Grand Isle to North Hero, and spanned from North Hero to Alburgh.[39]: 257 [72]
  • The Alburgh, VermontRouses Point, New York, rail trestle. From sometime in the late 19th century until 1964, this wooden trestle carried two railroads (the Rutland Railroad and the Central Vermont Railroad) over the lake just south of the US 2 vehicular bridge. The iron swing bridge at the center (over the navigation channel) has been removed. Most of the wooden pilings remain, greatly deteriorated, and can be seen looking south from the US 2 bridge. Part of the trestle on the Rouses Point side has been converted for use as an access pier associated with the local marina.[citation needed]
  • The SwantonAlburgh, Vermont rail trestle. Built in the same manner as at Rouses Point, it crosses the lake just south of Missisquoi Bay and the Canada–U.S. border, within yards south of the Vermont Route 78 bridge. It is still in use by the New England Central Railroad.[73]

Waterways edit

Lake Champlain has been connected to the Erie Canal via the Champlain Canal since the canal's official opening on September 9, 1823, the same day as the opening of the Erie Canal from Rochester on Lake Ontario to Albany. It connects to the St. Lawrence River via the Richelieu River, with the Chambly Canal bypassing rapids on the river since 1843. Together with these waterways, the lake is part of the Lakes to Locks Passage. The Lake Champlain Seaway, a project to use the lake to bring ocean-going ships from New York City to Montreal, was proposed in the late 19th century and considered as late as the 1960s, but rejected for various reasons. The lake is also part of the 740-mile (1,190 km) Northern Forest Canoe Trail, which begins in Old Forge, New York, and ends in Fort Kent, Maine.

Surroundings edit

Major cities edit

Burlington, Vermont (pop. 44,743, 2020 census) is the largest city on the lake. The second and third most-populated cities/towns are Plattsburgh, New York, and South Burlington, Vermont, respectively. The fourth-largest community is the town of Colchester.

Islands edit

 
At sunset, looking west from Grand Isle to Plattsburgh and Crab Island

Lake Champlain contains roughly 80 islands, three of which comprise four entire Vermont towns (most of Grand Isle County). The largest islands:

Lighthouses edit

 
The lighthouse in Lake Champlain at dusk, as seen from Burlington
  • Bluff Point Lighthouse, on Valcour Island near the New York shore, was built in 1871; it was manned by a full-time lightkeeper until 1930, making it one of the last lighthouses to be manned on the Lake
  • Cumberland Head Light, which operated until 1934, is an historic stone lighthouse located on Cumberland Head which is privately owned
  • Isle La Motte Light, on the northern end of the island, was originally red, but faded to pink over time; it is privately owned[78]
  • Juniper Island Light is a cast-iron lighthouse that dates from 1846; in 1954, it was deactivated and replaced by a steel tower; it is privately owned
  • On Point Au Roche, part of Beekmantown, New York, there is a privately owned, historic lighthouse
  • Split Rock Lighthouse is located south of Essex, New York, near a natural boundary of the territory between the Mohawk and Algonquin tribes[79]

Aids to navigation edit

 
USCG, Burlington, Vermont – main installation

All active navigational aids on the American portion of the lake are maintained by Coast Guard Station Burlington, along with those on international Lake Memphremagog to the east.[80] Aids to navigation on the Canadian portion of the lake are maintained by the Canadian Coast Guard.[81]

Parks edit

There are a number of parks in the Lake Champlain region, in both New York and Vermont.

Those on the New York side of the lake include Point Au Roche State Park, which park grounds have hiking and cross country skiing trails and a public beach; and Ausable Point Campground within the Adirondack Park. Cumberland Bay State Park is located on Cumberland Head, with a campground, city beach and sports fields.

There are various parks along the lake on the Vermont side, including Sand Bar State Park in Milton, featuring a 2,000 ft (610 m) natural sand beach, swimming, canoe and kayak rentals, food concession, picnic grounds and a play area. At 226 acres (91 ha), Grand Isle State Park contains camping facilities, a sand volleyball court, a nature walk trail, a horseshoe pit and a play area. Button Bay State Park in Ferrisburgh features campsites, picnic areas, a nature center and a swimming pool. Burlington's Waterfront Park is a revitalized industrial area.

Public safety edit

 
Vermont Department of Fish and Wildlife boat docked near ECHO Aquarium

Coast Guard Station Burlington provides "Search and Rescue, Law Enforcement and Ice Rescue services 24 hours a day, 365 days a year".[80] Services are also provided by local, state and federal governments bordering on the lake, including the U.S. Border Patrol, Royal Canadian Mounted Police, Vermont State Police,[82] New York State Police Marine Detail,[83] and Vermont Fish and Wildlife wardens.[84]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Lake Champlain – lake, Canada-United States". www.britannica.com. from the original on July 11, 2015. Retrieved March 25, 2018.
  2. ^ "Lake Champlain Facts". Lake Champlain Land Trust. from the original on July 28, 2013. Retrieved January 10, 2020.
  3. ^ a b Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Champlain" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 5 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 830–831.
  4. ^ "Lake Look – The Sixth Great Lake". Lake Champlain Committee. March 2, 2017. Retrieved December 28, 2022.
  5. ^ "Physiographic divisions of the conterminous U. S." U.S. Geological Survey. from the original on December 5, 2007. Retrieved December 6, 2007.
  6. ^ "Lake Champlain Lake Level – King St. Ferry Dock (1977–2006)". NOAA.gov. May 3, 2012. from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved May 3, 2012.
  7. ^ Curran, John (August 11, 2010). "State seeks dismissal of phosphorus lawsuit". Burlington Free Press. Burlington, Vermont. p. 1B.[permanent dead link]
  8. ^ . Lake Champlain Basin Program. 2015. Archived from the original on September 10, 2016. Retrieved August 28, 2016.
  9. ^ Sutkoski, Matt (January 22, 2012). (PDF). Burlington Free Press. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 3, 2016. Retrieved October 2, 2016.
  10. ^ "National Water Information System". U.S. Geological Survey (USGS 04294500). Lake Champlain at Burlington, VT. from the original on September 22, 2020. Retrieved October 2, 2016.
  11. ^ "National Water Information System: Surface-Water Monthly Statistics for the Nation". U.S. Geological Survey (USGS 04294500). Lake Champlain at Burlington, VT. from the original on November 17, 2017. Retrieved October 2, 2016.
  12. ^ Mehrtens, Charlotte, Professor of Geology. "Chazy Reef". University of Vermont. from the original on June 4, 2021. Retrieved January 20, 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  13. ^ Hyde, Bruce; Huden, John Charles (1962). Indian Place Names of New England. Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation.
  14. ^ "Abenaki". Abenakination.org. Archived from the original on February 10, 2010. Retrieved March 2, 2011.
  15. ^ "Haudenosaunee Country in Mohawk". The Decolonial Atlas. February 4, 2015. from the original on January 19, 2021. Retrieved February 8, 2019.
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  17. ^ Hyde, Bruce & Pownall, Thomas (1976). A Topographical Description of the Dominions of the United States of America. Ayer Publishing. ISBN 9780405077067. from the original on August 4, 2020. Retrieved November 17, 2015.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  18. ^ Countryman, Edward (2003). The American Revolution. Macmillan. p. 4.
  19. ^ a b c Countryman (2003), p. 103
  20. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "History of Lake Champlain: Revolutionary War". www.lcmm.org. from the original on January 25, 2018. Retrieved April 28, 2016.
  21. ^ Graymont, Barbara (1975). The Iroquois in the American Revolution. Syracuse University Press. p. 66.
  22. ^ a b Weigley, Russell (1977). The American Way of War: A History of United States Military Strategy and Policy. Indiana University Press. p. 47.
  23. ^ Graymont, Barbara (1975). The Iroquois in the American Revolution. Syracuse University Press. p. 74.
  24. ^ a b Hatch, Robert (1979). Thrust for Canada: The American Attempt on Quebec in 1775–1776. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
  25. ^ a b Weigley, Russell (1977). The American Way of War: A History of United States Military Strategy and Policy. Indiana University Press. p. 23.
  26. ^ a b c Nelson, James (2006). Benedict Arnold's Navy: The Ragtag Fleet that Lost the Battle of Lake Champlain But Won the American Revolution. McGraw Hill Professional.
  27. ^ a b c Ketchum, Richard (1997). Saratoga: Turning Point of America's Revolutionary War. Macmillan.
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  29. ^ "Fort au Fer". Saratoga Springs, New York: New York State Military Museum. from the original on August 3, 2020. Retrieved July 24, 2017.
  30. ^ a b Shelburne Museum's Dutton House (Shelburne, Vermont)
  31. ^ a b Shelburne Museum's Stagecoach Inn
  32. ^ Shelburne Museum's Hat and Fragrance Textile Gallery
  33. ^ DZIUBAN, STANLEY W. (1968). "FORT BLUNDER: A Vignette of American History". The Military Engineer. 60 (393): 46–48. ISSN 0026-3982. JSTOR 44557158.
  34. ^ Hyde, Bruce (January 3, 2008). My Turn: Get ready to celebrate the 400th. The Burlington Free Press.
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  40. ^ "Home Page". Vermont Lake Monsters, The Official Site of Minor League Baseball. 2011. from the original on January 25, 2018. Retrieved October 11, 2011.
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  42. ^ O'Brien, Kelly (April 16, 2022). "Champ to star in new book and film series". WCAX-TV. CBS. from the original on April 28, 2022. Retrieved April 23, 2022.
  43. ^ "Champ to get top billing in 'Lucy and the Lake Monster' film". Adirondack Almanack. March 7, 2022. from the original on April 21, 2022. Retrieved March 24, 2022.
  44. ^ McKinstry, Lohr (November 14, 2021). "Lead sought for "Lucy and the Lake Monster"". No. Front Page. Press Republican. from the original on May 15, 2022. Retrieved March 24, 2022.
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  46. ^ Hartwig, Melissa (April 15, 2022). "Search for Champ with 'Lucy & the Lake Monster'". AIPT Comics. from the original on April 23, 2022. Retrieved April 23, 2022.
  47. ^ . Lake Champlain Management Plan. Archived from the original on September 6, 2015. Retrieved July 1, 2015.
  48. ^ "EPA Administrator William Ruckelshaus and some of his closest aides recall the opening months of the new agency in 1970". EPA Alumni Association (Video ed.). from the original on October 11, 2016. Retrieved October 11, 2016.
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  50. ^ Watzin, M.C. (2007). Monitoring and Evaluation of Cyanobacteria in Lake Champlain: Summer 2006. Lake Champlain Basin Program. [1] Abstract online January 23, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
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  53. ^ Page, Candace (July 9, 2009). "Sewage: Judge sides with CLF, throws out Montpelier permit". Burlington Free Press. Burlington, Vermont. p. 4A.
  54. ^ Page, Candace (June 3, 2008). EPA scolds state on efforts to clean up Lake Champlain. The Burlington Free Press.
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  58. ^ Page, Candace (December 14, 2008). Lake Champlain gets another watchdog. Burlington Free Press.
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  60. ^ Page, Candace (January 22, 2009). "Lamprey wounds decrease". Burlington Free Press.
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  62. ^ a b Page, Candace (July 11, 2010). "Cutting the cormorant population". Burlington Free Press. Burlington, Vermont. pp. 1C, 8C.
  63. ^ "MAB Biosphere Reserves Directory". www.unesco.org. from the original on November 5, 2016. Retrieved May 10, 2017.
  64. ^ Bendavid, Ike (May 25, 2021). "Wildlife Watch: Long-term effort underway to restore Champlain Valley floodplains". WCAX. from the original on May 26, 2021. Retrieved May 26, 2021.
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External links edit

  • (PBS film series)
  • Champlain: The Lake Between Documentary produced by Vermont Public Television
  • ECHO, Leahy Center for Lake Champlain
  • Ethan Allen Homestead Museum
  • Lake Champlain Community Sailing Center
  • Lake Champlain Basin Atlas
  • Lake Champlain Basin Program
  • Lake Champlain Maritime Museum
  • Lake Champlain Quadricentennial 2009-07-03 at the Wayback Machine
  • International flood study
  • Shelburne Museum
  • Lake Champlain United
  • Lake Champlain International

lake, champlain, this, article, about, lake, canadian, steamer, naval, vessels, with, this, name, other, uses, champlain, disambiguation, confused, with, champlain, trail, lakes, sham, playn, french, champlain, natural, freshwater, lake, north, america, mostly. This article is about the lake For the Canadian steamer see SS Lake Champlain For US Naval vessels with this name see USS Lake Champlain For other uses see Champlain disambiguation Not to be confused with Champlain Trail Lakes Lake Champlain ʃ ae m ˈ p l eɪ n sham PLAYN French Lac Champlain is a natural freshwater lake in North America It mostly lies between the US states of New York and Vermont but also extends north into the Canadian province of Quebec 3 Lake ChamplainFrench Lac ChamplainAbenaki PitawbagwMohawk Kaniatarakwa ronteLake Champlain River Richelieu watershedLake ChamplainLocationNew York Vermont in the United States and Quebec in CanadaCoordinates44 32 N 73 20 W 44 53 N 73 33 W 44 53 73 33Primary inflowsOtter Creek Winooski River Missisquoi River Poultney River Lamoille River Ausable River Chazy River Boquet River Saranac River La Chute RiverPrimary outflowsRichelieu RiverCatchment area8 234 sq mi 21 326 km2 Basin countriesCanada United StatesMax length107 mi 172 km 1 Max width14 mi 23 km Surface area514 sq mi 1 331 km2 Average depth64 ft 19 5 m Max depth400 ft 122 m 2 Water volume6 2 cu mi 25 8 km3 Residence time3 3 yearsShore length1587 mi 945 km Surface elevation95 to 100 ft 29 to 30 m Islands80 Grand Isle North Hero Isle La Motte see list SettlementsBurlington Vermont Plattsburgh New York1 Shore length is not a well defined measure The New York portion of the Champlain Valley includes the eastern portions of Clinton County and Essex County Most of this area is part of the Adirondack Park There are recreational facilities in the park and along the relatively undeveloped coastline of the lake The cities of Plattsburgh New York and Burlington Vermont are on the lake s western and eastern shores respectively and the town of Ticonderoga New York is in the southern part of the region The Quebec portion is in the regional county municipalities of Le Haut Richelieu and Brome Missisquoi There are a number of islands in the lake the largest include Grand Isle Isle La Motte and North Hero all part of Grand Isle County Vermont Because of Lake Champlain s connections both to the St Lawrence Seaway via the Richelieu River and to the Hudson River via the Champlain Canal Lake Champlain is sometimes referred to as The Sixth Great Lake 4 Contents 1 Geology 1 1 Hydrology 1 2 Chazy Reef 2 History 2 1 Colonial America and the Revolutionary War 2 1 1 Beginning of the Revolutionary War 2 1 2 Siege of Quebec 1775 1776 2 1 3 Battle of Valcour Island 2 1 4 General Burgoyne s Campaign 2 1 5 Aftermath of 1777 2 1 6 Post Revolutionary War period 2 2 War of 1812 2 3 Modern history 2 4 Champ Lake Champlain monster 2 5 Ecology 3 Natural history 4 Infrastructure 4 1 Lake crossings 4 1 1 Road 4 1 2 Ferry 4 1 3 Railroad 4 2 Waterways 5 Surroundings 5 1 Major cities 5 2 Islands 5 3 Lighthouses 5 4 Aids to navigation 5 5 Parks 6 Public safety 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksGeology edit nbsp Sentinel 2 satellite photo The Champlain Valley is the northernmost unit of a landform system known as the Great Appalachian Valley which stretches between Quebec Canada to the north and Alabama US to the south The Champlain Valley is a physiographic section of the larger Saint Lawrence Valley which in turn is part of the larger Appalachian physiographic division 5 Lake Champlain is one of numerous large lakes scattered in an arc through Labrador in Canada the northern United States and the Northwest Territories of Canada citation needed It is the thirteenth largest lake by area in the US Approximately 490 sq mi 1 269 km2 in area the lake is 107 mi 172 km long and 14 mi 23 km across at its widest point 1 and has a maximum depth of approximately 400 ft 120 m The lake varies seasonally from about 95 to 100 ft 29 to 30 m above mean sea level 6 Hydrology edit nbsp Lake Champlain in Burlington Harbor during sunset on May 27 2012 Lake Champlain is in the Lake Champlain Valley between the Green Mountains of Vermont and the Adirondack Mountains of New York drained northward by the 106 mi long 171 km Richelieu River into the St Lawrence River at Sorel Tracy Quebec northeast and downstream of Montreal The Champlain basin collects waters from the northwestern slopes of the Green Mountains and the eastern portion of the Adirondack Mountains reaching as far south as the 32 mi long 51 km Lake George in New York Lake Champlain drains nearly half of Vermont and approximately 250 000 people get their drinking water from the lake 7 The lake is fed in Vermont by the LaPlatte Lamoille Missisquoi Poultney and Winooski rivers along with Lewis Creek Little Otter Creek and Otter Creek 8 In New York it is fed by the Ausable Boquet Great Chazy La Chute Little Ausable Little Chazy Salmon and Saranac rivers along with Putnam Creek In Quebec it is fed by the Pike River It is connected to the Hudson River by the Champlain Canal Parts of the lake freeze each winter and in some winters the entire lake surface freezes referred to as closing 9 In July and August the lake temperature reaches an average of 70 F 21 C 10 11 Chazy Reef edit The Chazy Reef is an extensive Ordovician carbonate rock formation that extends from Tennessee to Quebec and Newfoundland The oldest reefs are around The Head of the south end of Isle La Motte slightly younger reefs are found at the Fisk Quarry and the youngest the famous coral reefs are in fields to the north 12 History edit nbsp Brooklyn Museum Green Mountains Lake Champlain Winckworth Allan Gay overall The lake has long acted as a border between indigenous nations much as it is today between the states of New York and Vermont The lake is located at the frontier between Abenaki and Mohawk Iroquois Confederacy traditional territories The official toponym for the lake according to the orthography established by the Grand Council of Wanab aki Nation is Pitawbagok alternative orthographies include Petonbowk 13 and Bitawbagok 14 meaning middle lake lake in between or double lake The Mohawk name in modern orthography as standardized in 1993 is Kaniatarakwa ronte meaning a bulged lake or lake with a bulge in it 15 16 An alternate name is Kania tare tsi kahnhoka ronte phonetic English spelling Caniaderi Guarunte 17 meaning door of the country or lake to the country The lake is an important eastern gateway to Iroquois Confederacy lands The lake was named after the French explorer Samuel de Champlain who encountered it in July 1609 3 While the ports of Burlington Vermont Port Henry New York and Plattsburgh New York today are primarily used by small craft ferries and lake cruise ships they were of substantial commercial and military importance in the 18th and 19th centuries Colonial America and the Revolutionary War edit nbsp Map of Lac Champlain from Fort de Chambly up to Fort St Frederic in Nouvelle France Cadastral map showing concessions and seigneuries on the coasts of the lake according to 1739 surveying This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message New France allocated concessions all along Lake Champlain to French settlers and built forts to defend the waterways In colonial times Lake Champlain was used as a water or in winter ice passage between the Saint Lawrence and Hudson valleys Travelers found it easier to journey by boats and sledges on the lake rather than go overland on unpaved and frequently mud bound roads The lake s northern tip at Saint Jean sur Richelieu Quebec known as St John in colonial times under British rule is just 25 miles 40 km from Montreal Quebec The southern tip at Whitehall Skenesborough in revolutionary times is 23 miles 37 km north of Glens Falls on the Hudson River and 70 miles 110 km north of Albany New York Forts were built at Ticonderoga and Crown Point Fort St Frederic to control passage on the lake in colonial times Important battles were fought at Ticonderoga in 1758 and 1775 During the Revolutionary War the British and Americans conducted a frenetic shipbuilding race through the spring and summer of 1776 at opposite ends of the lake and fought a significant naval engagement on October 11 at the Battle of Valcour Island While it was a tactical defeat for the Americans and the small fleet led by Benedict Arnold was almost destroyed the Americans gained a strategic victory the British invasion was delayed long enough so the approach of winter prevented the fall of these forts until the following year In this period the Continental Army gained strength and was victorious at Saratoga Beginning of the Revolutionary War edit At the start of the Revolutionary War British forces occupied the Champlain Valley 18 However it did not take long for rebel leaders to realize the importance of controlling Lake Champlain Early in the war the colonial militias attempted to expel the British from Boston however this undertaking could not be achieved without heavy artillery 19 The British forts at Ticonderoga and Crown Point on Lake Champlain were known to have ample supplies of artillery and were weakly manned by the British Thus the colonial militias devised a plan to take control of the two forts and bring the guns back to the fight in Boston 19 nbsp Charlotte Ferry Lake Champlain The necessity of controlling the two forts at Ticonderoga and Crown Point placed Lake Champlain as a strategic arena during the Revolutionary War By taking control of these forts Americans not only gained heavy artillery but control of a vast water highway as well Lake Champlain provided a direct invasion route to British Canada However had the British controlled the lake they could have divided the colonies of New England and further depleted the Continental Army The Continental Army s first offensive action took place in May 1775 three weeks after the Battles of Lexington and Concord 20 Ethan Allen accompanied by 200 Green Mountain Boys was ordered to capture Fort Ticonderoga and retrieve supplies for the fight in Boston Benedict Arnold shared the command with Allen and in early May 1775 they captured Fort Ticonderoga Crown Point and the southern Loyalist settlement of Skenesborough 20 As a result of Allen s offensive attack on the Champlain Valley in 1775 the American forces controlled the Lake Champlain waterway Siege of Quebec 1775 1776 edit The Continental Army realized the strategic advantage of controlling Lake Champlain as it leads directly to the heart of Quebec 21 Immediately after taking Forts Ticonderoga and Crown Point the Americans began planning an attack on British Canada The American siege of Quebec was a two pronged assault and occurred throughout the winter of 1775 1776 22 Brigadier General Richard Montgomery led the first assault up the Champlain Valley into Canada while Benedict Arnold led a second army to Quebec via the Maine wilderness 22 Despite the strategic advantage of controlling a direct route to Quebec by way of the Champlain Valley the American siege of British Canada during the winter of 1775 failed The Continental Army mistakenly assumed that it would receive support from the Canadians upon their arrival at Quebec This was not the case and the rebel army struggled to take Quebec with diminishing supplies support and harsh northern winter weather 23 The Continental Army was forced to camp outside Quebec s walls for the winter with reinforcements from New York Pennsylvania Massachusetts New Hampshire and Connecticut allowing the soldiers to maintain their siege of the city However smallpox descended on both the sieging forces and their reinforcements and savaged the American force 24 The reinforcements traveled hundreds of miles up the frozen Lake Champlain and St Lawrence River but were too late and too few to influence a successful siege of Quebec In May 1776 with the arrival of a British convoy carrying 10 000 British and Hessian troops to Canada the Continental forces retreated back down the Champlain Valley to reevaluate their strategy 25 nbsp The Champlain Valley as seen from Camel s Hump I know of no better method than to secure the important posts of Ticonderoga and Crown Point and by building a number of armed vessels to command the lakes otherwise the forces now in Canada will be brought down upon us as quick as possible having nothing to oppose them They will doubtless try to construct some armed vessels and then endeavor to penetrate the country toward New York Brigadier General John Sullivan to George Washington June 24 1776 20 Both British and American forces spent the summer of 1776 building their naval fleets at opposite ends of Lake Champlain 24 By the October 1776 the Continental Army had 16 operating naval vessels on Lake Champlain a great increase to the four small ships they had at the beginning of the summer 20 General Benedict Arnold commanded the American naval fleet on Lake Champlain which was composed of volunteers and soldiers drafted from the Northern Army With great contrast to the Continental navy experienced Royal Navy officers British seamen and Hessian artillerymen manned the British fleet on Lake Champlain 20 By the end of the summer of 1776 the opposing armies were prepared to battle over the strategic advantage of controlling Lake Champlain Battle of Valcour Island edit On October 11 1776 the British and American naval fleets met on the western side of Valcour Island on Lake Champlain 19 American General Benedict Arnold established the location as it provided the Continental fleet with a natural defensive position The British and American vessels engaged in combat for much of the day only stopping due to impending nightfall 20 After a long day of combat the American fleet was in worse shape than the experienced British Navy Upon ceasefire Arnold called a council of war with his fellow officers proposing to escape the British fleet via rowboats under the cover of night As the British burned Arnold s flagship the Royal Savage to the east the Americans rowed past the British lines 26 The following morning the British learned of the Americans escape and set out after the fleeing Continental vessels On October 13 the British fleet caught up to the struggling American ships near Split Rock Mountain 26 With no hope of fighting off the powerful British navy Arnold ordered his men to run their five vessels aground in Ferris Bay Panton Vermont The depleted Continental army escaped on land back to Fort Ticonderoga and Mount Independence however they no longer controlled the Lake Champlain waterway 26 The approaching winter of 1776 1777 restricted British movement along the recently controlled Lake Champlain As the British abandoned Crown Point and returned to Canada for the winter the Americans reduced their garrisons in the Champlain Valley from 13 000 to 2 500 soldiers 20 General Burgoyne s Campaign edit nbsp Lake Champlain Charlotte Vermont In early 1777 British General John Burgoyne led 8 000 troops from Canada down Lake Champlain and into the Champlain Valley 25 The goal of this invasion was to divide the New England colonies thus forcing the Continental Army into a separated fight on multiple fronts 27 Lake Champlain provided Burgoyne with protected passage deep into the American colonies Burgoyne s army reached Fort Ticonderoga and Mount Independence in late June 1777 During the night of July 5 the American forces fled Ticonderoga as the British took control of the fort However Burgoyne s southern campaign did not go uncontested On October 7 1777 American General Horatio Gates who occupied Bemis Heights met Burgoyne s army at the Second Battle of Freeman s Farm 27 At Freeman s Farm Burgoyne s army suffered its final defeat and ended its invasion south into the colonies Ten days later on October 17 1777 British General Burgoyne surrendered his army at Saratoga 27 This defeat was instrumental to the momentum of the Revolutionary War as the defeat of the British army along the Champlain Hudson waterway convinced France to ally with the American army 20 Aftermath of 1777 edit Following the failed British campaign led by General Burgoyne the British still maintained control over the Champlain waterway for the duration of the Revolutionary War 20 The British used the Champlain waterway to supply raids across the Champlain Valley from 1778 to 1780 and Lake Champlain permitted direct transportation of supplies from the British posts at the northern end of the lake With the end of the Revolutionary War in 1783 the British naval fleet on Lake Champlain retreated up to St John s 20 However British troops garrisoned at Fort Dutchman s Point North Hero Vermont and Fort au Fer Champlain New York on Lake Champlain did not leave until the 1796 Jay Treaty 28 29 Post Revolutionary War period edit nbsp Dutton House Shelburne Museum nbsp Stagecoach Inn Shelburne Museum nbsp Sawmill Shelburne Museum Eager to take back control of Lake Champlain following the end of the Revolutionary War Americans flocked to settle the Champlain Valley Many individuals emigrated from Massachusetts and other New England colonies such as Salmon Dutton a settler of Cavendish Vermont 30 Dutton emigrated in 1782 and worked as a surveyor town official and toll road owner His home had a dooryard garden typical of mid 19th century New England village homes 30 and his experience settling in the Champlain Valley depicts the industries and lifestyles surrounding Lake Champlain following the Revolutionary War Similar to the experience of Salmon Dutton former colonial militia Major General Hezekiah Barnes settled in Charlotte Vermont in 1787 31 Following the war Barnes worked as a road surveyor he also established an inn and trading post in Charlotte along the main trade route from Montreal down Lake Champlain Barnes stagecoach inn was built in traditional Georgian style with 10 fireplaces a ballroom on the interior and a wraparound porch on the outside 31 In 1800 Continental Army Captain Benjamin Harrington established a distillery business in Shelburne Vermont which supplied his nearby inn 32 These individual accounts shed light on the significance of Lake Champlain during the post Revolutionary War period War of 1812 edit During the War of 1812 British and American forces faced each other in the Battle of Lake Champlain also known as the Battle of Plattsburgh fought on September 11 1814 This ended the final British invasion of the northern states during the War of 1812 It was fought just prior to the signing of the Treaty of Ghent and the American victory denied the British any leverage to demand exclusive control over the Great Lakes or territorial gains against the New England states Three US Naval ships have been named after this battle USS Lake Champlain CV 39 USS Lake Champlain CG 57 and a cargo ship used during World War I Following the War of 1812 the U S Army began construction on Fort Blunder an unnamed fortification built at the northernmost end of Lake Champlain to protect against attacks from British Canada Its nickname came from a surveying error the initial phase of construction on the fort turned out to be taking place on a point 3 4 mi 1 2 km north of the Canada U S border Once this error was spotted construction was abandoned Locals scavenged materials used in the abandoned fort for use in their homes and public buildings By the Webster Ashburton Treaty of 1842 the Canada U S border was adjusted northward to include the strategically important site of Fort Blunder on the US side 33 In 1844 work was begun to replace the remains of the 1812 era fort with a massive new Third System masonry fortification known as Fort Montgomery Portions of this fort are still standing Modern history edit nbsp A 1902 photograph of Fort Henry at Lake Champlain In the early 19th century the construction of the Champlain Canal connected Lake Champlain to the Hudson River system allowing north south commerce by water from New York City to Montreal and Atlantic Canada In 1909 65 000 people celebrated the 300th anniversary of the French discovery of the lake Attending dignitaries included President William Howard Taft along with representatives from France Canada and the United Kingdom 34 35 In 1929 then New York Governor Franklin Roosevelt and Vermont Governor John Weeks dedicated the first bridge to span the lake built from Crown Point to Chimney Point 36 This bridge lasted until December 2009 Severe deterioration was found and the bridge was demolished and replaced with the Lake Champlain Bridge which opened in November 2011 On February 19 1932 boats were able to sail on Lake Champlain It was the first time that the lake was known to be free of ice during the winter at that time 37 Lake Champlain briefly became the nation s sixth Great Lake on March 6 1998 when President Clinton signed Senate Bill 927 This bill which was led by U S Senator Patrick Leahy of Vermont and reauthorized the National Sea Grant Program contained a line declaring Lake Champlain to be a Great Lake This status enabled its neighboring states to apply for additional federal research and education funds allocated to these national resources However following a small uproar the Great Lake status was rescinded on March 24 although New York and Vermont universities continue to receive funds to monitor and study the lake 38 Champ Lake Champlain monster edit In 1609 Samuel de Champlain wrote that he saw a lake monster 5 ft 1 5 m long as thick as a man s thigh with silver gray scales a dagger could not penetrate The alleged monster had 2 5 ft 0 76 m jaws with sharp and dangerous teeth Native Americans claimed to have seen similar monsters 8 to 10 ft 2 4 to 3 0 m long This mysterious creature is likely the original Lake Champlain monster 39 20 The monster has been memorialized in sports teams names and mascots e g the Vermont Lake Monsters and Champ the mascot of the state s minor league baseball team 40 A Vermont Historical Society publication recounts the story and offers possible explanations for accounts of the so called monster floating logs schools of large sturgeon diving in a row or flocks of blackbirds flying close to the water 41 In 2022 it was reported that a feature dramatic film Lucy and the Lake Monster was in the works about a young orphan girl and her grandfather looking for Champ 42 43 44 45 46 Ecology edit A pollution prevention control and restoration plan for Lake Champlain 47 was first endorsed in October 1996 by the governors of New York and Vermont and the regional administrators of the United States Environmental Protection Agency EPA In April 2003 the plan was updated and Quebec signed on to it The plan is being implemented by the Lake Champlain Basin Program and its partners at the state provincial federal and local levels Renowned as a model for interstate and international cooperation its primary goals are to reduce phosphorus inputs to Lake Champlain reduce toxic contamination minimize the risks to humans from water related health hazards and control the introduction spread and impact of non native nuisance species to preserve the integrity of the Lake Champlain ecosystem Senior staff who helped organize the Environmental Protection Agency in 1970 recall that International Paper was one of the first companies to call upon the brand new agency because it was being pressured by both New York and Vermont with regard to a discharge of pollution into Lake Champlain 48 49 Agricultural and urban runoff from the watershed or drainage basin is the primary source of excess phosphorus which exacerbates algae blooms in Lake Champlain The most problematic blooms have been cyanobacteria commonly called blue green algae in the northeastern part of the lake primarily Missisquoi Bay 50 To reduce phosphorus runoff to this part of the lake Vermont and Quebec agreed to reduce their inputs by 60 and 40 respectively by an agreement signed in 2002 51 While agricultural sources manure and fertilizers are the primary sources of phosphorus about 70 in the Missisquoi basin runoff from developed land and suburbs is estimated to contribute about 46 of the phosphorus runoff basin wide to Lake Champlain and agricultural lands contributed about 38 52 In 2002 the cleanup plan noted that the lake had the capacity to absorb 120 short tons 110 t of phosphorus each year In 2009 a judge noted that 240 short tons 218 t were still flowing in annually more than twice what the lake could handle Sixty municipal and industrial sewage plants discharge processed waste from the Vermont side 53 In 2008 the EPA expressed concerns to the State of Vermont that the lake s cleanup was not progressing fast enough to meet the original cleanup goal of 2016 54 The state however cites its Clean and Clear Action Plan 55 as a model that will produce positive results for Lake Champlain In 2007 Vermont banned phosphates for dishwasher use starting in 2010 This will prevent an estimated 2 3 short tons 1 8 2 7 t from flowing into the lake While this represents 0 6 of the phosphate pollution it took US 1 9 million to remove the pollutant from treated wastewater an EPA requirement 56 Despite concerns about pollution Lake Champlain is safe for swimming fishing and boating It is considered a world class fishery for salmonid species lake trout and Atlantic salmon and bass About 81 fish species live in the lake and more than 300 bird species rely on it for habitat and as a resource during migrations 57 By 2008 at least seven institutions were monitoring lake water health Conservation Law Foundation which in 2002 appointed a lakekeeper who reviews the state s pollution controls Friends of Missisquoi Bay formed in 2003 Lake Champlain Committee Vermont Water Resources Board which hired a water quality expert in 2008 to write water quality standards and create wetland protection rules Vermont Agency of Natural Resources which in 2007 appointed a lake czar to oversee pollution control Clean and Clear an agency of the Vermont state government established in 2004 The Nature Conservancy a non profit group which focuses on biodiversity and ecosystem health 58 In 2001 scientists estimated that farming contributed 38 of the phosphorus runoff By 2010 results of environmentally conscious farming practices enforced by law had made a positive contribution to lake cleanliness A federally funded study was started to analyze this problem and to arrive at a solution 59 Biologists have been trying to control lampreys in the lake since 1985 or earlier Lampreys are native to the area but have expanded in population to such an extent that they wounded nearly all lake trout in 2006 and 70 80 of salmon The use of pesticides against the lamprey has reduced their damage to other fish to 35 of salmon and 31 of lake trout The goal was 15 of salmon and 25 of lake trout 60 The federal and state governments originally budgeted US 18 million for lake programs for 2010 This was later supplemented by an additional US 6 5 million from the federal government 61 Natural history editIn 2010 the estimate of cormorant population now classified as a nuisance species because they take so much of the lake fish ranged from 14 000 to 16 000 A Fish and Wildlife commissioner said that the ideal population would be about 3 300 amounting to 7 8 sq mi 3 km2 Cormorants had disappeared from the lake and all northern lakes due to the use of DDT in the 1940s and 1950s which made their eggs more fragile and reduced breeding populations 62 Ring billed gulls are also considered a nuisance and measures have been taken to reduce their population Authorities are trying to encourage the return of black crowned night herons cattle egrets and great blue herons which disappeared during the time DDT was being widely used 62 In 1989 UNESCO designated the area around Lake Champlain as the Champlain Adirondack Biosphere Reserve 63 64 Infrastructure editLake crossings edit The Alburgh Peninsula also known as the Alburgh Tongue extending south from the Quebec shore of the lake into Vermont and Province Point the southernmost tip of a small promontory approximately 2 acres 1 ha in size 65 a few miles to the northeast of the community of East Alburgh Vermont are connected by land to the rest of the state only via Canada This is a distinction shared with the state of Alaska Point Roberts Washington and the Northwest Angle in Minnesota All of these are practical exclaves of the United States contiguous with Canada Unlike the other cases highway bridges across the lake provide direct access to the Alburgh peninsula from within the United States from three directions but Province Point is still accessible by land only through Canada nbsp The former Champlain Bridge between New York and Vermont demolished in December 2009 Road edit Three roadways cross the lake two connecting New York and Vermont and one connecting two towns in New York Since November 2011 the Lake Champlain Bridge has crossed the lake s southern part connecting Chimney Point in Vermont with Crown Point New York It replaced the Champlain Bridge which was closed in 2009 because of severe structural problems that could have resulted in a collapse 66 In 2009 the bridge had been used by 3 400 drivers per day 67 and driving around the southern end of the lake added two hours to the trip Ferry service was re established to take some of the traffic burden On December 28 2009 the bridge was destroyed by a controlled demolition A new bridge was rapidly constructed by a joint state commitment opening on November 7 2011 68 To the north US 2 runs from Rouses Point New York to Grand Isle County Vermont in the town of Alburgh before continuing south along a chain of islands toward Burlington To the east Vermont Route 78 runs from an intersection with US 2 in Alburgh through East Alburgh to Swanton The US 2 VT 78 route technically runs from the New York mainland to an extension of the mainland between two arms of the lake and then to the Vermont mainland but it provides a direct route across the two main arms of the lake s northern part In the southern section of the lake New York State Route 22 crosses the South Bay connecting Whitehall NY and Dresden Washington County New York Ferry edit nbsp The LCTC ferry slip at Grand Isle Vermont North of Ticonderoga New York the lake widens appreciably ferry service is operated by the Lake Champlain Transportation Company at Charlotte Vermont to Essex New York may not travel when the lake is frozen Grand Isle Vermont to Cumberland Head part of Plattsburgh New York year round icebreaking service While the old bridge was being demolished and the new one constructed Lake Champlain Transportation Company operated a free 24 hour ferry from just south of the bridge to Chimney Point Vermont at the expense of the states of New York and Vermont at a cost to the states of about 10 per car 69 70 The most southerly crossing is the Fort Ticonderoga Ferry connecting Ticonderoga New York with Shoreham Vermont just north of the historic fort Railroad edit Four significant railroad crossings were built over the lake As of 2021 only one remains The floating rail trestle from Larabees Point Vermont to Ticonderoga New York was operated by the Addison Branch of the Rutland Railroad It was abandoned in 1918 due to a number of accidents which resulted in locomotives and rail cars falling into the lake 39 257 The Island Line Causeway a marble tailings and granite rock landfill causeway that stretched from Colchester on the mainland three mi 4 8 km north and west to South Hero Vermont Two breaks in the causeway were spanned by a fixed iron trestle and a swing bridge that could be opened to allow boats to pass The Rutland Railroad later Rutland Railway operated trains over this causeway from 1901 to 1961 with the last passenger train operating in 1953 The railroad was officially abandoned in 1963 with tracks and trestles removed over the course of the ten years that followed The marble tailings and granite rock causeway still remains as does the fixed iron trestle that bridges the lesser of the two gaps The swing bridge over the navigation channel was removed in the early 1970s 71 citation needed nbsp The Swanton Alburgh trestle spans Lake Champlain between the two Vermont towns a distance of about 0 8 mi 1 3 km Now called Colchester Park the main 3 mile 5 km causeway has been adapted and preserved as a recreation area for cyclists runners and anglers Two smaller marble tailings and granite rock landfill causeways were also erected as part of this line that connected Grand Isle to North Hero and spanned from North Hero to Alburgh 39 257 72 The Alburgh Vermont Rouses Point New York rail trestle From sometime in the late 19th century until 1964 this wooden trestle carried two railroads the Rutland Railroad and the Central Vermont Railroad over the lake just south of the US 2 vehicular bridge The iron swing bridge at the center over the navigation channel has been removed Most of the wooden pilings remain greatly deteriorated and can be seen looking south from the US 2 bridge Part of the trestle on the Rouses Point side has been converted for use as an access pier associated with the local marina citation needed The Swanton Alburgh Vermont rail trestle Built in the same manner as at Rouses Point it crosses the lake just south of Missisquoi Bay and the Canada U S border within yards south of the Vermont Route 78 bridge It is still in use by the New England Central Railroad 73 Waterways edit Lake Champlain has been connected to the Erie Canal via the Champlain Canal since the canal s official opening on September 9 1823 the same day as the opening of the Erie Canal from Rochester on Lake Ontario to Albany It connects to the St Lawrence River via the Richelieu River with the Chambly Canal bypassing rapids on the river since 1843 Together with these waterways the lake is part of the Lakes to Locks Passage The Lake Champlain Seaway a project to use the lake to bring ocean going ships from New York City to Montreal was proposed in the late 19th century and considered as late as the 1960s but rejected for various reasons The lake is also part of the 740 mile 1 190 km Northern Forest Canoe Trail which begins in Old Forge New York and ends in Fort Kent Maine Surroundings editMajor cities edit Burlington Vermont pop 44 743 2020 census is the largest city on the lake The second and third most populated cities towns are Plattsburgh New York and South Burlington Vermont respectively The fourth largest community is the town of Colchester Islands edit nbsp At sunset looking west from Grand Isle to Plattsburgh and Crab Island Lake Champlain contains roughly 80 islands three of which comprise four entire Vermont towns most of Grand Isle County The largest islands South Hero Island the largest containing the towns of Grand Isle and South Hero Vermont North Hero Island containing the town of North Hero Vermont Isle La Motte containing the town of Isle La Motte Vermont Valcour Island New York Juniper Island Three Sisters Four Brothers 74 Savage Island Burton Island State Park Cloak Island Garden Island Gunboat Island Crab Island Dameas Island Hen Island Butler s Island Carleton s Prize Young Island 75 Providence Island 76 Stave Island 77 Sunset Island Lighthouses edit nbsp The lighthouse in Lake Champlain at dusk as seen from Burlington Bluff Point Lighthouse on Valcour Island near the New York shore was built in 1871 it was manned by a full time lightkeeper until 1930 making it one of the last lighthouses to be manned on the Lake Cumberland Head Light which operated until 1934 is an historic stone lighthouse located on Cumberland Head which is privately owned Isle La Motte Light on the northern end of the island was originally red but faded to pink over time it is privately owned 78 Juniper Island Light is a cast iron lighthouse that dates from 1846 in 1954 it was deactivated and replaced by a steel tower it is privately owned On Point Au Roche part of Beekmantown New York there is a privately owned historic lighthouse Split Rock Lighthouse is located south of Essex New York near a natural boundary of the territory between the Mohawk and Algonquin tribes 79 Aids to navigation edit nbsp USCG Burlington Vermont main installation All active navigational aids on the American portion of the lake are maintained by Coast Guard Station Burlington along with those on international Lake Memphremagog to the east 80 Aids to navigation on the Canadian portion of the lake are maintained by the Canadian Coast Guard 81 Parks edit There are a number of parks in the Lake Champlain region in both New York and Vermont Those on the New York side of the lake include Point Au Roche State Park which park grounds have hiking and cross country skiing trails and a public beach and Ausable Point Campground within the Adirondack Park Cumberland Bay State Park is located on Cumberland Head with a campground city beach and sports fields There are various parks along the lake on the Vermont side including Sand Bar State Park in Milton featuring a 2 000 ft 610 m natural sand beach swimming canoe and kayak rentals food concession picnic grounds and a play area At 226 acres 91 ha Grand Isle State Park contains camping facilities a sand volleyball court a nature walk trail a horseshoe pit and a play area Button Bay State Park in Ferrisburgh features campsites picnic areas a nature center and a swimming pool Burlington s Waterfront Park is a revitalized industrial area Public safety edit nbsp Vermont Department of Fish and Wildlife boat docked near ECHO Aquarium Coast Guard Station Burlington provides Search and Rescue Law Enforcement and Ice Rescue services 24 hours a day 365 days a year 80 Services are also provided by local state and federal governments bordering on the lake including the U S Border Patrol Royal Canadian Mounted Police Vermont State Police 82 New York State Police Marine Detail 83 and Vermont Fish and Wildlife wardens 84 See also editMap all coordinates using OpenStreetMap Download coordinates as KML GPX all coordinates GPX primary coordinates GPX secondary coordinates Champlain Sea post glacial predecessor to Lake Champlain Ile aux Noix List of lakes of Vermont List of New York rivers List of rivers of Quebec List of rivers of Vermont OdziozoReferences edit a b Lake Champlain lake Canada United States www britannica com Archived from the original on July 11 2015 Retrieved March 25 2018 Lake Champlain Facts Lake Champlain Land Trust Archived from the original on July 28 2013 Retrieved January 10 2020 a b Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Champlain Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 5 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 830 831 Lake Look The Sixth Great Lake Lake Champlain Committee March 2 2017 Retrieved December 28 2022 Physiographic divisions of the conterminous U S U S Geological Survey Archived from the original on December 5 2007 Retrieved December 6 2007 Lake Champlain Lake Level King St Ferry Dock 1977 2006 NOAA gov May 3 2012 Archived from the original on September 24 2015 Retrieved May 3 2012 Curran John August 11 2010 State seeks dismissal of phosphorus lawsuit Burlington Free Press Burlington Vermont p 1B permanent dead link 2015 State of the Lake Figure 5 Lake Champlain Basin Program 2015 Archived from the original on September 10 2016 Retrieved August 28 2016 Sutkoski Matt January 22 2012 Lack of ice cover might be affecting the ecology of Lake Champlain PDF Burlington Free Press Archived from the original PDF on October 3 2016 Retrieved October 2 2016 National Water Information System U S Geological Survey USGS 04294500 Lake Champlain at Burlington VT Archived from the original on September 22 2020 Retrieved October 2 2016 National Water Information System Surface Water Monthly Statistics for the Nation U S Geological Survey USGS 04294500 Lake Champlain at Burlington VT Archived from the original on November 17 2017 Retrieved October 2 2016 Mehrtens Charlotte Professor of Geology Chazy Reef University of Vermont Archived from the original on June 4 2021 Retrieved January 20 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Hyde Bruce Huden John Charles 1962 Indian Place Names of New England Museum of the American Indian Heye Foundation Abenaki Abenakination org Archived from the original on February 10 2010 Retrieved March 2 2011 Haudenosaunee Country in Mohawk The Decolonial Atlas February 4 2015 Archived from the original on January 19 2021 Retrieved February 8 2019 Lake Champlain Lake Champlain Basin Atlas Archived from the original on October 20 2020 Retrieved February 8 2019 Hyde Bruce amp Pownall Thomas 1976 A Topographical Description of the Dominions of the United States of America Ayer Publishing ISBN 9780405077067 Archived from the original on August 4 2020 Retrieved November 17 2015 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Countryman Edward 2003 The American Revolution Macmillan p 4 a b c Countryman 2003 p 103 a b c d e f g h i j History of Lake Champlain Revolutionary War www lcmm org Archived from the original on January 25 2018 Retrieved April 28 2016 Graymont Barbara 1975 The Iroquois in the American Revolution Syracuse University Press p 66 a b Weigley Russell 1977 The American Way of War A History of United States Military Strategy and Policy Indiana University Press p 47 Graymont Barbara 1975 The Iroquois in the American Revolution Syracuse University Press p 74 a b Hatch Robert 1979 Thrust for Canada The American Attempt on Quebec in 1775 1776 Boston Houghton Mifflin a b Weigley Russell 1977 The American Way of War A History of United States Military Strategy and Policy Indiana University Press p 23 a b c Nelson James 2006 Benedict Arnold s Navy The Ragtag Fleet that Lost the Battle of Lake Champlain But Won the American Revolution McGraw Hill Professional a b c Ketchum Richard 1997 Saratoga Turning Point of America s Revolutionary War Macmillan Lake Champlain Historic Military Sites lakechamplainlife com Alburgh Vermont Lake Champlain Life Archived from the original on July 2 2017 Retrieved July 24 2017 Fort au Fer Saratoga Springs New York New York State Military Museum Archived from the original on August 3 2020 Retrieved July 24 2017 a b Shelburne Museum s Dutton House Shelburne Vermont a b Shelburne Museum s Stagecoach Inn Shelburne Museum s Hat and Fragrance Textile Gallery DZIUBAN STANLEY W 1968 FORT BLUNDER A Vignette of American History The Military Engineer 60 393 46 48 ISSN 0026 3982 JSTOR 44557158 Hyde Bruce January 3 2008 My Turn Get ready to celebrate the 400th The Burlington Free Press 1909 Champlain Tercentenary Celebration of the Discovery of Lake Champlain Hrmm org Archived from the original on April 3 2009 Retrieved March 2 2011 Vermont History Timeline historicvermont org August 26 2010 Archived from the original on September 11 2011 A surprise on every page Barton Chronicle Archived from the original on May 10 2009 Retrieved August 21 2009 Geography Lake Champlain The Sixth Great Lake About com March 2 1998 Archived from the original on April 23 2013 Retrieved July 12 2013 a b c Hill Ralph Nading 1976 Lake Champlain Key to Liberty Woodstock Vermont Countryman Press Home Page Vermont Lake Monsters The Official Site of Minor League Baseball 2011 Archived from the original on January 25 2018 Retrieved October 11 2011 Vermont s Very Own Monster PDF Vermont Historical Society Archived from the original PDF on April 20 2012 Retrieved October 11 2011 O Brien Kelly April 16 2022 Champ to star in new book and film series WCAX TV CBS Archived from the original on April 28 2022 Retrieved April 23 2022 Champ to get top billing in Lucy and the Lake Monster film Adirondack Almanack March 7 2022 Archived from the original on April 21 2022 Retrieved March 24 2022 McKinstry Lohr November 14 2021 Lead sought for Lucy and the Lake Monster No Front Page Press Republican Archived from the original on May 15 2022 Retrieved March 24 2022 Indiegogo campaign starts for Champ movie Lucy and the Lake Monster No Front Page Sun Community News February 25 2022 Archived from the original on May 15 2022 Retrieved March 24 2022 Hartwig Melissa April 15 2022 Search for Champ with Lucy amp the Lake Monster AIPT Comics Archived from the original on April 23 2022 Retrieved April 23 2022 About Us Lake Champlain Management Plan Archived from the original on September 6 2015 Retrieved July 1 2015 EPA Administrator William Ruckelshaus and some of his closest aides recall the opening months of the new agency in 1970 EPA Alumni Association Video ed Archived from the original on October 11 2016 Retrieved October 11 2016 EPA Administrator William Ruckelshaus and some of his closest aides recall the opening months of the new agency in 1970 PDF EPA Alumni Association Transcript ed p 3 Archived PDF from the original on October 11 2016 Retrieved October 11 2016 Watzin M C 2007 Monitoring and Evaluation of Cyanobacteria in Lake Champlain Summer 2006 Lake Champlain Basin Program 1 Abstract online Archived January 23 2009 at the Wayback Machine Missisquoi Bay Phosphorus Reduction Agreement August 2002 PDF Lake Champlain Management Plan Archived from the original PDF on February 26 2012 Troy A Wang D Capen D 2007 Updating the Lake Champlain Basin Land Use Data to Improve Prediction of Phosphorus Loading Lake Champlain Basin Program Archived from the original on March 13 2009 Page Candace July 9 2009 Sewage Judge sides with CLF throws out Montpelier permit Burlington Free Press Burlington Vermont p 4A Page Candace June 3 2008 EPA scolds state on efforts to clean up Lake Champlain The Burlington Free Press Vermont Clean and Clear Action Plan anr state vt us Archived from the original on June 14 2012 Baird Joel Banner June 26 2010 Detergents must soon be phosphate free Burlington Free Press Burlington Vermont p 1A Lake Champlain Basin Atlas Plants and Animals 2004 Lake Champlain Management Plan Archived from the original on September 26 2010 Retrieved March 2 2011 Page Candace December 14 2008 Lake Champlain gets another watchdog Burlington Free Press Page Candace July 6 2010 Lake Champlain cleanup effort focuses on Rock Rive6 Burlington Free Press Burlington Vermont p 1B Page Candace January 22 2009 Lamprey wounds decrease Burlington Free Press Page Candace July 24 2010 Lake scores 6 5 million Burlington Free Press Burlington Vermont p 1A permanent dead link a b Page Candace July 11 2010 Cutting the cormorant population Burlington Free Press Burlington Vermont pp 1C 8C MAB Biosphere Reserves Directory www unesco org Archived from the original on November 5 2016 Retrieved May 10 2017 Bendavid Ike May 25 2021 Wildlife Watch Long term effort underway to restore Champlain Valley floodplains WCAX Archived from the original on May 26 2021 Retrieved May 26 2021 Wikimapia Let s describe the whole world Archived from the original on August 26 2011 Retrieved January 26 2011 McKinstry Lohr October 17 2009 Vital bridge at Crown Point closed The Press Republican Retrieved October 31 2009 NYT article of December 12 2009 page A12 Controlled explosions bring down Lake Champlain Bridge unsafe NY VT span was closed in Oct LA Times Associated Press December 28 2009 Archived from the original on December 31 2009 Retrieved January 4 2010 Reisman Nick May 18 2010 Bridge is costly but ferry is more Poststar com Archived from the original on August 11 2018 Retrieved November 17 2010 Ferry At Champlain Bridge Set To Start Running WPTZ January 31 2010 Archived from the original on July 19 2011 Island Line Rail Trail History TrailLink Rails to Trails Conservancy Archived from the original on March 3 2021 Retrieved November 2 2020 Lake Champlain New York Vermont Cumberland Head to Four Brothers Island Map 23rd ed 1 40 000 Washington D C National Ocean and Atmospheric Administration 1992 State Rail amp Policy Plan 2006 PDF Vermont Agency of Transportation 2006 p 20 Archived PDF from the original on March 3 2016 Retrieved July 15 2013 Meyers Jeff August 10 2008 Four Brothers Islands a haven for a variety of birds Local News Press Republican Archived from the original on January 22 2009 Retrieved March 2 2011 Cormorants on Lake Champlain Nasw org July 3 1996 Archived from the original on March 13 2017 Retrieved March 2 2011 Decisions PDF nrb state vt us 1998 Archived from the original on June 19 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Millard Jim December 5 2010 A Tour of the Historic Lake Champlain Islands Historiclakes org Archived from the original on December 31 2010 Retrieved March 2 2011 Isle La Motte VT Lighthousefriends com Archived from the original on April 5 2016 Retrieved May 25 2011 Watchtowers on the Water NYS Dept of Environmental Conservation March 19 2003 Archived from the original on July 28 2011 Retrieved March 2 2011 a b USCG Station Burlington Vermont United States Coast Guard March 5 2009 Archived from the original on December 12 2012 Canadian Coast Guard December 9 2009 BalisageAutomne Canadian Coast Guard Marinfo Archived from the original on May 13 2011 Marine and Snowmobile Vermont State Police Archived from the original on October 16 2015 Retrieved August 27 2015 Marine Detail New York State Division of State Police Archived from the original on June 21 2011 Retrieved December 11 2009 Vermont Fish and Wildlife anr state vt us Archived from the original on December 15 2005 Retrieved January 4 2010 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lake Champlain Bloom the Plight of Lake Champlain PBS film series Champlain The Lake Between Documentary produced by Vermont Public Television ECHO Leahy Center for Lake Champlain Ethan Allen Homestead Museum Lake Champlain Community Sailing Center Lake Champlain Basin Atlas Lake Champlain Basin Program Lake Champlain Maritime Museum Lake Champlain Quadricentennial Archived 2009 07 03 at the Wayback Machine International flood study Shelburne Museum Lake Champlain United Lake Champlain International Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lake Champlain amp oldid 1216820797, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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