fbpx
Wikipedia

Chesapeake and Ohio Canal

The Chesapeake and Ohio Canal, abbreviated as the C&O Canal and occasionally called the Grand Old Ditch,[1] operated from 1831 until 1924 along the Potomac River between Washington, D.C. and Cumberland, Maryland. It replaced the Potomac Canal, which shut down completely in 1828, and could operate during months in which the water level was too low for the former canal. The canal's principal cargo was coal from the Allegheny Mountains.

Chesapeake and Ohio Canal
The Chesapeake and Ohio Canal in Great Falls
Specifications
Length184.5 miles (296.9 km)
Maximum boat length90 ft 0 in (27.43 m)
Maximum boat beam14 ft 6 in (4.42 m)
Locks74
(Boats must pass guard locks 4 & 5 for each trip.)
StatusNational Park
History
Original ownerChesapeake and Ohio Canal Company
Principal engineerBenjamin Wright
Other engineer(s)Charles B. Fisk, William Rich Hutton
Date of act1825; 199 years ago (1825)
Construction began1828; 196 years ago (1828)
Date of first use1830; 194 years ago (1830)
Date completed1850; 174 years ago (1850)
Date closed1924; 100 years ago (1924)
Geography
Start pointGeorgetown, Washington, D.C.
(originally Little Falls Branch)
(Canal extended down to Georgetown in 1830)
End pointCumberland, Maryland
(originally Sections to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania)
Connects toAlexandria Canal (Virginia), Goose Creek, and Little River Navigation
The 1917 video "Down the Old Potomac (Part 1 of 3)" shows the canal during its operating days. Some of the information is inaccurate. For example, it says that "barges" (more correctly "boats") passed through 86 locks descending 800 feet to tidewater; in fact, there were 77 locks descending 610 feet.

Construction began in 1828 on the 184.5-mile (296.9 km) canal and ended in 1850 with the completion of a 50-mile (80 km) stretch to Cumberland, although the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad had already reached Cumberland in 1842. The canal had an elevation change of 605 feet (184 meters) which required 74 canal locks, 11 aqueducts to cross major streams, more than 240 culverts to cross smaller streams, and the 3,118 ft (950 m) Paw Paw Tunnel. A planned section to the Ohio River at Pittsburgh was never built.

The canal is now maintained as the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historical Park, with a trail that follows the old towpath.

History edit

Early river projects edit

After the American Revolutionary War, George Washington was the chief advocate of using waterways to connect the Eastern Seaboard to the Great Lakes and the Ohio River, which flows into the Mississippi River and ultimately to the Gulf of Mexico at New Orleans.[2] In 1785, Washington founded the Potowmack Company to improve the navigability of the Potomac River. His company built five skirting canals around the major falls: Little Falls (later incorporated in the C&O Canal), Great Falls in Virginia, Seneca Falls (opposite Violette's lock), Payne's Falls of the Shenandoah, and House's Falls near Harpers Ferry.[3] These canals allowed an easy downstream float; upstream journeys, propelled by pole, were harder.

Several kinds of watercraft were used on the Patowmack Canal and in the Potomac River. Gondolas were 60 by 10 ft (18 by 3 m) log rafts, usually sold at journey's end for their wood by their owners, who returned upstream on foot. Sharpers were flat-bottomed boats, 60 by 7 ft (18 by 2 m), usable only on high-water days, about 45 days per year.[4]

Construction edit

Planning edit

 
Map of planned route.

The Erie Canal, built between 1817 and 1825, threatened traders south of New York City, who began to seek their own transportation infrastructure to link the burgeoning areas west of the Appalachian Mountains to mid-Atlantic markets and ports. As early as 1820, plans were being laid for a canal to link the Ohio River and Chesapeake Bay.

In early March 1825, President James Monroe signed the bill chartering the construction of the C&O Canal as one of the last acts of his presidency.[5] The plan was to build it in two sections, the eastern section from the tidewater of Washington, D.C., to Cumberland, Maryland; and the western section over the Allegheny Mountains to the Ohio River or one of its tributaries. Free from taxation, the canal company was required to have 100 miles (160 km) in use in five years, and to complete the canal in 12 years.[6] The canal was engineered to have a 2 miles per hour (3 km/h) water current, supplying the canal and assisting mules pulling boats downstream.[7]

The eastern section was the only part to be completed.[8]

On October 23, 1826, the engineers submitted the study, presenting the proposed canal route in three sections. The eastern section comprised Georgetown to Cumberland; the middle section, Cumberland (going up Wills Creek to Hyndman then across the Sand Patch Grade crossing the Eastern Continental Divide to Garrett[9]) to the confluence of the Casselman River and the Youghiogheny River; and the western section from there to Pittsburgh.[10]

Section Distance Ascent
& Descent
# of Locks Cost
Eastern 185 Mi 1078 Yds 578 Feet 74 $8,177,081.05
Middle 70 Mi 1010 Yds 1961 Feet 246 $10,028,122.86
Western 85 Mi 348 Yds 619 Feet 78 $4,170,223.78
Total: 341 Mi 676 Yds 3158 Feet 398 $22,375,427.69
 
A boat on the canal, circa 1900-1924

The total estimated price tag, more than $22 million, dampened the enthusiasm of many supporters, who were expecting an estimate in the $4 million to $5 million range. At a convention in December 1826, they attempted to discredit the engineers' report, and offered lower estimates: Georgetown to Cumberland, $5,273,283; Georgetown to Pittsburgh, $13,768,152.[10] Geddes and Roberts were hired to make another report, which they gave in 1828: $4,479,346.93 for Georgetown to Cumberland.[11] With those numbers to encourage them, the stockholders formally organized the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company in June 1828.[12] In the end, the final construction cost to Cumberland in 1850 was $11,071,075.21. Compared to the original cost given by the engineers in 1826 of about $8 million, removing things not in the estimate such as land purchases, engineering expenses, incidental damages, salaries, and fencing provision, the cost overrun was about 19%, which can be justified by the inflation rate of the period. The cost overrun of the other proposal (Geddes and Roberts) was about 51%[13] thus showing that the original engineer's estimate was good.

In 1824, the holdings of the Patowmack Company were ceded to the Chesapeake and Ohio Company. (Rejected names for the canal included the "Potomac Canal" and "Union Canal".[14]) By 1825, the Canal Company was authorized by an act of the General Assembly of Maryland in the amount of subscriptions of $500,000; this paved the way for future investments and loans. According to historians,[15] those financial resources were expended until the State had prostrated itself on its own credit.

Groundbreaking edit

The C&O's first chief engineer was Benjamin Wright, formerly chief engineer of the Erie Canal. A groundbreaking ceremony was held on July 4, 1828, attended by U.S. president John Quincy Adams. The ceremony was held near Georgetown, at the canal's eventual 5.64 miles (9.08 km) mark near Lock 6, the upstream end of the Little Falls skirting canal, and Dam No. 1.[16][17]

 
Canal boats waiting to be unloaded in Georgetown.

At the groundbreaking, there was still argument over the eastern end of the canal. The directors thought that Little Falls (at the downstream end of the Patowmack Little Falls Skirting Canal) was sufficient since that literally fulfilled the charter's condition of reaching the tidewater, but people in Washington wanted it to end in Washington, connecting to the Tiber Creek and Anacostia river.[18] For that reason, the canal originally opened from Little Falls to Seneca, and the next year, was extended down to Georgetown.

The Little Falls skirting canal, which was part of the Patowmack Canal, was dredged to increase its depth from 4 to 6 feet (1.2 to 1.8 m), and became part of the C&O Canal.

The first president of the canal, Charles F. Mercer, insisted on perfection since this was a work of national importance. This would cost the company more money to build the canal. During his term, he forbade the use of slackwaters for navigation, the use of composite locks (see section below), or reduction of the cross section of the canal prism in difficult terrain. This reduced maintenance expenditures but increased construction costs.[19] In the end, two slackwaters (Big Slackwater above Dam No. 4, and Little Slackwater above Dam No. 5) and multiple composite locks (Locks 58–71) were built.

At first, the canal company planned to use steamboats in the slackwaters, since without mules, the canal boats had to use oars to move upstream. After much discussion of the dangers of early steamboats, the company provided a towpath so that the mules could pull the boats through the slackwaters.[20]

Section numbers and contracts edit

From Lock 5 at Little Falls to Cumberland (as mentioned above, the canal started at Little Falls, and was later extended down to Georgetown), the canal was divided into three divisions (of about 60 miles (100 km) apiece), each of which was further divided into 120 sections of about 0.5 miles (800 m). A separate construction contract was issued for each section.[21] Locks, culverts, dams, etc. were listed on the contracts by section number, not by mileage as is done today. For instance, Locks 5 and 6 are on Section No. 1,[22] all the way to Guard Lock No. 8 on section 367.[23] Sections A–H were in the Georgetown level below lock 5[22]

First part opened edit

In November 1830, the canal opened from Little Falls to Seneca.[24] The Georgetown section opened the following year.

Dispute for Point of Rocks; second part opened edit

In 1828, the C&O Canal and the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad (B&O) began fighting for sole use of the narrow strip of available land along the Potomac River from Point of Rocks to Harpers Ferry.[25] After a Maryland state court battle that involved Daniel Webster and Roger B. Taney, the companies agreed to share the right-of-way.[25]

In August 1829, the canal company began importing indentured laborers to Alexandria and Georgetown. These workers were promised meat three times a day, vegetables, and a "reasonable allowance of whiskey", $8 to $12 per day, $20 for masons. Still, many were dissatisfied with the slave-like conditions. Friction between the largest groups, from Ireland and Germany, meant they had to be kept in different crews.[26]

The width of the canal prism above Harpers Ferry was reduced to 50 feet (15 m), which saved money and was also appropriate from an engineering standpoint.[27]

In 1832, the canal company prohibited liquor in a bid to improve the speed of construction, but soon repealed its ban.

In August[28] or September 1832, an epidemic of cholera swept through the construction camps, killing many workers and leading others to throw down their tools and flee.[29]

 
Low-angle bird's-eye view of central Washington toward the west and northwest with The Capitol in foreground. The Canal is visible running along the mall.

By 1833, the canal's Georgetown end was extended 1.5 miles (2.4 km) eastward to Tiber Creek, near the western terminus of the Washington City Canal, which extended through the future National Mall to the foot of the United States Capitol.[30][31][32] A lock keeper's house at the eastern end of this Washington Branch of the C&O Canal remains at the southwest corner of Constitution Avenue and 17th Street, N.W., at the edge of the National Mall.[33][34]

 
C&O Canal in the Georgetown neighborhood of Washington, D.C.

In 1834, the section to Harper's Ferry opened and the canal reached Williamsport.[35]

In 1836, the canal was used by canal packets as a Star Route to carry mail from Georgetown to Shepherdstown. The contract was held by Albert Humrickhouse at $1,000 per annum for a daily service of 72 book miles. The canal approached Hancock, Maryland, by 1839.[36]

In March 1837, three surveys were made for a possible link to the northeast to Baltimore: via Westminster, via Monocacy-Linganore, and via Seneca, but they were all deemed impractical due to lack of water at the summit level.[37]

The Canal reached Dam No. 6 (west of Hancock) in 1839.

As the canal approached Hancock, more construction problems surfaced. Limestone sinkholes and caverns caused the canal bottom to cave in near Shepherdstown, near Two Locks above Dam No. 4, around Four Locks, Big pool, and Roundtop Hill near Dam No. 6.[38] On 6 December 1839, Chief Engineer Fisk wrote, "These breaks have all evidently been occasioned by limestone sinks which exhibit themselves by a falling down of the bottom of the Canal into limestone caverns that are lower than, and extend out under the bed of the river: — in consequence of which the water from the Canal is at first conducted down below the canal bottom perhaps twenty or thirty feet and thence out along under the bed of the river ... It has been a matter of surprise to me that our Canal thus far has suffered so little from limesinks. We may yet however have much trouble from this source near and above the breach at Lock No. 37. For about a mile, there is scarcely a hundred feet in length of the canal in which there are not several small lime sink holes...". He recommended costly but necessary repairs, which were done by 1840.[39][40]

Since it was difficult to obtain stone for the locks, engineers built composite locks, sometimes of kyanized wood.[41]

In 1843, the Potomac Aqueduct Bridge was built near the present-day Francis Scott Key Bridge to connect the canal to the Alexandria Canal, which led to Alexandria, Virginia.[42]

In April 1843, floods damaged much of the finished portion of the canal between Georgetown and Harpers Ferry, including the Shenandoah river lock. One flood suspended navigation for 103 days. The company raised the embankments around Little Falls, and made a "tumbling waste" near the 4-mile marker.[43]

Last 50 miles edit

 
Boat construction yard in Cumberland, MD

Building the last 50-mile (80 km) segment proved difficult and expensive. Allen Bowie Davis took on the role of management.[44] In Cumberland, Dam No. 8 and Guard Lock No. 8 had begun construction in 1837[45] and the final locks (70–75) to Cumberland were completed around 1840.[46] That left an 18.5-mile (29.8 km) segment in the middle, which would eventually require building the Paw Paw tunnel, digging the deep cut at Oldtown, and building 17 locks.[47]

Near Paw Paw, the engineers had no good solutions. If they followed the river, they would have to cross over to West Virginia to avoid the cliffs, and an agreement with the B&O Railroad specified that the canal would avoid the south side of the river, unless it was a place where the railroad would not need it. So they took the more expensive decision to build a tunnel through the mountain.[48] The initial cost estimate of $33,500 proved far too low.[49] The tunnel was completed for $616,478.65[50] Among the components of the project, a kiln was built to provide bricks to line the tunnel.[51]

 
Map of Terminus in Cumberland in the mid 1890s. Yellow dots indicate modern highways as well as current (2013) location of Canal basin.

Originally, the company intended to go around Cumberland, behind the town of Wills Creek, but complaints from the citizens and the city caused the board to change their plans, routing the canal through the center of town.[52]

The canal was opened for trade to Cumberland on Thursday, October 10, 1850.[53] On the first day, five canal boats, Southampton, Elizabeth, Ohio, Delaware and Freeman Rawdon loaded with a total of 491 tons of coal, came down from Cumberland. In one day, the C&O carried more coal in the first day of business than the Lehigh Canal for their full year of business in 1820.[54]

Yet in 1850, the B&O Railroad had already been operating in Cumberland for eight years, and the Canal suffered financially.[47][55] Debt-ridden, the company dropped its plan to continue construction of the next 180 miles (290 km) of the canal into the Ohio Valley.[56] The company long realized (especially with the experience at the Paw Paw tunnel) that construction over the mountains going to Pittsburgh was "wildly unrealistic".[57] Occasionally there was talk of continuing the canal, e.g. in 1874, an 8.4-mile (13.5 km) long tunnel was proposed to go through the Allegheny Mountains.[58] Nevertheless, there was a tunnel built to connect with the Pennsylvania canal.[59]

Even though the railroad beat the canal to Cumberland, the canal was not entirely obsolete. It wasn't until the mid-1870s that improved technology, specifically with larger locomotives and air brakes, allowed the railroad to set rates lower than the canal, and thus seal its fate.[60]

Sometime after the canal opened in 1850, a commemorative obelisk was erected near its Georgetown terminus.

Intervening years edit

The canal deteriorated during the Civil War. In 1869, the company's annual report said, "During the last ten years little or nothing had been done toward repairing and improving lock-houses, culverts, aqueducts, locks, lock-gates and waste weirs of the Company; many of them had become entirely unfit for use and were becoming worthless, rendering it absolutely essential to the requirements of the Company to have them repaired."[61] Still, some improvements were made in the late 1860s, such as replacing Dams No. 4 and 5.[62]

The early 1870s, which Unrau calls the "Golden Years", were particularly profitable. The company repaid some of its bonds. It made many improvements to the canal, including the installation of a telephone system. Yet there were still floods and other problems. By 1872, so many vessels were unfit for navigation that the company required boats to undergo annual inspections and registration. In July 1876, the crew of the Lezan Ragan stayed afloat while loading in Cumberland only by her crew's pumping. She hit some abutments of the locks near Great Falls, and finally sank at the opening Lock 15 (at the head of Widewater).[63]

For a brief period in the 1860s and 1870s, the company attempted to prevent boating on Sundays. But boatmen broke padlocks on the lock gates and turned to violence when confronted. The company gave up trying to enforce the rule.[63]

The trip from Cumberland to Georgetown generally took about seven days.[64] The fastest known time from Georgetown to Cumberland for a light boat was 62 hours, set by Raleigh Bender from Sharpsburg. Dent Shupp made it from Cumberland to Williamsport in 35 hours with 128 tons of coal.[65]

Receivership edit

Following the disastrous flood of 1889, the canal company entered receivership with court-appointed trustees. The trustees were given the right to repair and operate the canal under continued court oversight. The trustees represented the majority owners of the C&O Canal Company bonds issued in 1844. While the B&O owned the majority of the 1878 bonds, the B&O did not own a majority of the 1844 bonds as of 1890. However, by 1903, the B&O had acquired sufficient bonds to become "a majority holder",[66] the reported reason being "to secure for the Wabash [railroad] system a foothold on the Atlantic seaboard" which had only been incorporated in February 1903.

Over the next decade, and particularly after 1902, boats on the canal shifted from independent operators to company-owned craft. Boats with colorful names (Bertha M. Young or Lezen Ragan) gave way to numbered craft ("Canal Towage Company" with a number) run by a schedule.[67]

Despite the B&O's status as a majority bondholder, the B&O can not be said to have ever owned the C&O. This did not stop the B&O from trying to sell it. In 1936, the B&O attempted to sell part of the canal from Point of Rocks to the District line. This was blocked by the courts which had continued to oversee the C&O trustees with the court saying "It is of course well known that the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company is not the owner of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal." At that time, the court also stated that the canal could not be sold in pieces but only in its entirety. [68] In 1938, new trustees were appointed by the court to handle the sale under the court's continued oversight.

Tolls and revenue edit

 
Register of waybills in the Cumberland Office, in 1858. Each canal boat had to have a waybill, even if empty, for passage through the canal. Fines were levied for lack of a waybill.

Tolls were charged for cargo on the canal. In 1851, for instance, the toll rates on the Canal were set as follows:[69]

Item Per ton per mile,
For first 20 miles
Per ton per mile
thereafter
Coal 14 cent 14 cent
Slaughtered hogs, bacon & meat 2 cents 1 cent
Whiskey and spirits, fish fresh & salted 2 cents 1 cent
Salt 1 cent 34 cent
Fire brick 1 cent 12 cent
Bricks, ice 1 cent 14 cent
Sand, gravel, clay, earth, paving stones 14 cent 14 cent

Tolls varied greatly, and frequently the board adopted new toll rates.

Some boatmen would try to ship in the boats extra cargo not listed on the waybills to avoid tolls. In 1873, for instance, one boat got from Georgetown to Harpers Ferry with 225 hidden sacks of salt before the company found out.[70]

 
5 and 10 dollar notes, from C&O Canal company

The items transported on the canal varied. In 1845, for instance, before the canal's completion, the shipments were as follows:[71]

Item sent downstream Quantity Items sent upstream Quantity
Flour 170,464 barrels Salted Fish 4,569 barrels
Wheat 299,607 bushels Salt 1,265 tons
Corn 126,799 bushels Plaster 4,721 tons
Oats 35,464 bushels Lumber 820,000 feet, board measure
Mill Offal 38,575 bushels Potatoes 2,511 bushels
Corn Meal 16,327 bushels Bricks 118,225 units
Pork 15,250 pounds Wheat 1,708 bushels
Lumber 508,083 feet, board measure Oysters 1,351 bushels
Stone 12,060 perches

Business after 1891 edit

 
Loading coal on canal boats in Cumberland.

After 1891, the canal principally transported coal, and sometimes West Virginia limestone, wood, lumber, sand, and flour. (Statistics were only kept for coal.)[72] Coal was loaded in the Cumberland basin, which consisted of dumping four carloads of coal into the boat. Some of the coal had to be shoveled by hand into the spaces beneath the cabins. During the loading process, nobody would be on the boat due to the dust, and mules were kept off, in case the boat sank from being loaded. Despite closing windows, dust usually entered the cabins. After loading, the ridge poles would be put, then the hatches over the ridge poles and openings. The crew would scrub down the boat (using water from the canal) to remove the dust, and the boat would be poled to the other side of the basin, where it would be hitched to the mules.[73]

Boatmen came down to lock 5, called "Willard's lock" or "Waybill Lock", whereupon the locktender would sign the waybill, and report it to the office. If they did not get orders at that lock, they waited near the aqueduct bridge in Georgetown, until orders came through. A tugboat on the river would pull the boats to other points, e.g. Navy Yard, Indianhead, Alexandria.[74] Some coal loads were unloaded directly in the Georgetown coal yards, using buckets. Coal was also unloaded onto ocean sailing vessels bound for Massachusetts (which brought ice, and returned with coal), a 4 masted vessel holding about 20 boatloads of coal.[75]

In the last few years, the tonnage and tolls for coal were as follows[72]

Year Coal Tonnage (tons) Tolls collected (US$)
1914 171,062 42,236.97
1915 173,997 41,271.46
1916 158,036 38,956.77
1917 151,667 40,545.74
1918 138,087 71,404.43
1919 133,529 47,346.95
1920 127,871 62,102.38
1921 66,477 42,017.33
1922 Unavailable 3,435.18
1923 56,404 31,899.32
1924 Unavailable 1,215.60

One of the more unusual loads was a circus with about 9 people with their equipment, which included a black bear. They were transported from Oldtown, Maryland to Harpers Ferry. The black bear got loose on the journey, and the boatman told them, "You tie that thing good or you're never going to get to Harpers Ferry, for I'm going to leave the boat."[76]

Other loads included furniture (often second hand), pianos, a parlor suites, watermelons, fish (such as shad and herring), as well as transporting items such as flour or molasses to sell to lockkeepers,[76] as some of the lockkeepers in remote areas needed the boats to bring their supplies.[77] Cement from the Round Top Mill above Hancock was also shipped to Georgetown. Some would pole across the river at Dam No. 2 to get wood, cross-ties, bark (used in tanning), and sometimes grain. Other loads, often carried upstream, included 600 empty barrels in a boat, taken to Shepherdstown to load cement, lumber, fertilizer, and general merchandise for stores along the canal, as well as oysters in barrels, complete materials to build a house, ear corn, and even extra mules.[78]

Fines edit

The company levied fines for infractions, such as traveling without a waybill or destruction of canal property such as lock gates or canal masonry. For instance:[79]

  • May 30, 1877, Capt. Thomas Fisher fined $10 (about US$423 in 2012) for passing through lock without waybill
  • Oct 22, 1877, R. Cropley's scow, fined $25 for knocking out gate in Lock No. 5 [Brookmont Lock]
  • Nov. 12, 1877, Capt. Joseph Little, fined $10 for running into crib at Lock No. 9 [Seven Locks]
  • July 4, 1878, Boat John Sherman, fined $62.70 for unloading and raising (note: this was on Independence Day)
  • Aug 30, 1878, Steamer Scrivenes, fined $50, Allowing the Bertha M. Young in tow to sink on Level 36 and abandoning her at night without giving notice, causing navigation to be suspended 36 hrs.
  • May 5, 1879, Capt. Jacob Hooker fined $40, Running into and breaking gate at Lock No. 40
  • Jan 14, 1880, Boat Harry & Ralph, fined $5, Running into gate at Darbey's Lock (Note: this was in winter, when the canal was usually drained for repairs.)
  • Jun 12, 1880, G.L. Booth, fined $4.40, for pumping.

Business after 1924 edit

The last known boat to carry coal was Pat Boyer's Boat #5, which returned to Cumberland on November 27, 1923. The only boats recorded to operate in 1924 were five boats that carried sand from Georgetown to Williamsport to construct a power plant.[80]

Flood of 1924 edit

The flood of 1924 caused major damage to the canal. Most of the railroad and canal bridges near Hancock were destroyed, a breach opened in Dam No. 1, and much damage to the banks and masonry of the canal occurred. Although the railroad did some maintenance, ostensibly so that the canal could quickly be restored to operation, mainly the Georgetown level (Dam No. 1 and below) was fixed to supply Georgetown's mills with water for operation.[81] The rest of the canal remained in disrepair.

The boating season lasted only three months in 1924,[80] and after the flood, navigation ceased. Unfortunately, some communities such as Glen Echo and Cumberland already used the canal to dump sewage, and G.L. Nicholson called the canal a "public nuisance" due to the sewage and being a breeding ground for mosquitoes[82]

In 1928–1929, there was some talk of restoring and reopening the canal from Cumberland to Williamsport, but with the onset of the Great Depression, the plans were never realized[83] In April 1929 after some freshet damage, the railroad repaired a break in the towpath, so that they could continue to flush out mosquitoes as demanded by the Maryland board of health.[84]

The boatmen, now unemployed, went to work for railroads, quarries, farms, and some retired. At that date, the only other canal using mules, was the Lehigh Canal, which was soon to close in 1940.[85]

Some of the lockkeepers stayed on, and there were a few canal superintendents were listed for the now disused canal.

Flood of 1936 edit

 
Floodwaters around Lock 6 in 1936

This winter flood in March 1936 caused even more damage to the abandoned canal, still recovering from the damage caused by the extreme floods just over a decade prior. This flood, caused by the thawing of earlier ice, combined with the flow of heavy rains, led to the highest water mark the Potomac River had ever had thus far, destroying lockhouses, levels, and other structures. There were some efforts at restoration, mainly to the Georgetown level so that the factories could have their water supply.[86] Due to the inattention of the B&O Railroad, the canal became a "magnificent wreck" and would need intense repairs and reconstruction throughout many areas destroyed by the floods.[87][88]

National Historical Park edit

 
The canal in Georgetown in spring 2019

In 1938, the abandoned canal was obtained from the bondholders by the United States in exchange for a loan from the federal Reconstruction Finance Corporation, and is now the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historical Park.

Locks and engineering edit

Canal prism edit

The dimensions of the canal vary quite a bit. Below Lock 5, the width is 80 feet wide and 6 feet deep.[89] Above Lock 5 to Harper's Ferry it is 60 feet wide and 6 feet deep, and above Harper's Ferry, 50 feet wide.[90]

Lift locks and guard locks edit

To build the canal, the C&O Canal Company used a total of 74 lift locks that raised the canal from sea level at Georgetown to 610 feet (190 m) at Cumberland.[56] Locks 8–27 and their accompanying lock houses were made from Seneca red sandstone, quarried from the Seneca Quarry, as was Aqueduct No. 1, better known as Seneca Aqueduct. This unique structure is the only aqueduct made from Seneca red sandstone and is doubly unique for being the only aqueduct on the C&O that is also a lock (Lock 24, Riley's Lock).[91]

Seven guard locks, often called inlet locks (numbered 1 through 8) were built to allow water and sometimes boats (particularly at Big Slackwater and Little Slackwater) to enter. Dam #7 and Guard Lock #7 were proposed (near mile 164 at the South Branch of the Potomac) but never built.[92] In 1856, there was a steam pump put at that site. Later, in 1872, a new steam pump was put near mile 174.

Three additional river locks were built, to allow boats to enter the canal at the river, as demanded by the Virginia legislature for buying canal stock. They were at Goose Creek (below Edwards Ferry, Lock 25), near the Shenendoah River just below Lock 33, and at Shepherdstown.

The Goose Creek locks were to allow boats from the Goose Creek and Little River Navigation Company to enter. Only one Goose Creek boat was documented to enter the C&O canal, and there is no documentation of a C&O boat entering Goose Creek. The lock was eventually converted into a waste weir.[93]

The Shenandoah river (about 422 feet (129 m) below Lock 33) lock let boats cross to Harpers Ferry with the mules walking on the railroad bridge, up the Shenandoah river, to the old Potomac Canal Bypass on the Shenandoah river by Virginius island. The railroad refused to let mules walk on the bridge, and from lack of business, the lock was abandoned. Stones from that lock were used for other purposes.[94]

After the 1889 flood destroyed the nearby dam in Shepherdstown, the raison d'être for the Shepherdstown lock was gone, and so it was filled in.[95]

At night, locktenders were required to remove the cranks and handles from all paddle valves to prevent unauthorized use.[96]

Composite locks edit

Despite Mercer not wanting any composite locks, due to measures to economize on the last 50 miles (80 km) of construction, and the scarcity of good building stone, Locks 58–71 were constructed as composite locks, whereby the lock masonry is built of rubble and inferior undressed stone. Since that makes a rough surface which damages the boats, the locks were originally lined with wood to protect the boats. This wood sheathing had to be replaced.[97] In time, some of the composite locks were lined with concrete, since the wood kept rotting.

Levels edit

The stretch of canal between locks is called a level. Canalers called these levels by their lengths; for instance, the longest level was the 14 mile level, which was about 14 miles long, and ran from Lock 50 (at 4 locks) to Lock 51 in Hancock. Some levels had additional nicknames (since some had similar lengths), e.g. "Four Mile Level below Dam 6", "Four Mile Level Big Slackwater", or "Four Mile Level of the Log Wall" (which is between locks 14 and 15, includes Widewater, Anglers, Carderock, Billy Goat Trails B, and C, and the downstream entrance to Trail A, all connect on that level). Levels less than a mile between locks were called short levels.[98] Waste weirs and bypass flumes at the locks helped control the height of water in the levels (see below about waste weirs).

Feeders edit

 
Great Falls feeder culvert (no longer used) indicated by yellow arrow(14.08 mi), and Lock 18 (R).

There were three streams used as feeders: Rocky Run feeder (section #9, around 7 Locks), Great Falls feeder (section #18) and the Tuscarora feeder (section #78). There was a contemplated feeder at the Monocacy (not built).[99] Of course, the remains of the Potomac Company Little Falls skirting canal was used as a feeder also. Inlet Lock No. 2 is called the Seneca Feeder in historic documents.[100]

The remains of the Tuscarora feeder can still be seen, but it was made redundant by Dam No. 3 and was no longer used.[101]

Slackwater navigation edit

 
Boat at Big Slackwater

Despite Charles F. Mercer, two slackwaters were used for navigation: Big Slackwater at Dam No. 4, and Little Slackwater at Dam No. 5. Big Slackwater is about 3 miles (5 km) long, Little Slackwater is about 12 mile (800 m) long. The boats had to navigate despite winds, currents, and debris in the channel. In February 1837, the board of directors discussed using steam power in the slackwater for the boats, but instead decided on a permanent towpath.[102] The towpath for Big Slackwater was completed in 1838 for $31,416.36, and the towpath for Little Slackwater was completed in 1839 for $8,204.40.[103]

Little Slackwater was a tricky place to navigate. Not only did it have a lot of hairpin turns, but also just before Guard Lock No. 5, there was a strip of land in the water called "the pier" (that exists even today): loaded boats going downstream would have to go outside the pier, and unloaded boats on the inside, thus making steering difficult for the loaded boats to get into the lock. If the current was fast in the river it could go as fast as the boat, rendering the tiller useless, and thus, a boat could be almost impossible to steer.[104] One man reported that at the slackwater, they had him sit at the front of the boat with a hatchet in case they had to cut the towline [since it would pull the mules into the river], and had a couple of [wooden] hatches turned upside down, so that they could escape to shore on the hatches.[105] On 1 May 1903, the towline to Boat No. 6 broke, with Captain Keim, Mrs. Keim, their two daughters, and Harry Newkirk aboard. One daughter drowned, another suffered a broken leg, and the captain died later of injuries. The rest (including the mules aboard) survived.[106]

Boatmen reported that it was easier to navigate in the slackwaters than the aqueducts, since there was room for the water to move around the boat. Places like aqueducts, where there was little room for the water to move, were difficult for the mules to pull the boat through.[107]

Waste weirs, spillways, and informal overflows (mule drinks) edit

 
A waste weir, looking from above.
 
A spillway

To regulate the level of water in the canal prism, waste weirs, informal overflows, and spillways were used.

Waste weirs removed the surges of water from storms or excess when a lock was emptied.[108] Boards could be removed or added to adjust the amount of water in the level. If one had to empty the whole level for winter, repairs, or emergencies, waste weirs often had paddle valves (similar to those found in locks) at the bottom which could be opened to let the water out.

Waste weirs come in several styles. Originally they were made of concrete masonry with boards on top making a bridge with mules to pass over. A possible example of an old-style waste weir (abandoned) is at 39.49 miles, above Lock 26 (Wood's Lock). Most of these old waste weirs were replaced with concrete structures in 1906.[109] Another used to be at Pennyfield lock in 1909–1911.

Spillways are made of concrete, and can be on either side, but if on the towpath side, have a bridge so people (and mules) can cross without getting the feet wet. High water simply flows over the spillway and out of the canal. The longest spillway, near Chain Bridge, is 354 feet long, was made in 1830 (but has been worked on since).[110] Another spillway near Foxhall road[111] at mile 1.51, was made in 1835. The spillway and waste weir at Big Pool was built in the 1840s[112]

 
An informal overflow. The towpath dips, allowing water to flow over it. Note the boards in the background for people to walk on.

An informal overflow or mule drink was a dip in the towpath allowing water to flow over, similar to a spillway, but without the bridge or the concrete construction (hence, were more informal). The canalers called these "mule drinks".[113] There are documented informal overflows at mileage 10.76, 49.70, and 58.08.[114] These usually had a drainage ditch which was riprapped with stone to prevent erosion. Historically the towpath dropped two feet to form this overflow.[115] Due to silting, construction, etc. many of these overflows are now difficult to find. Hahn states that clues to finding these overflows include: a gully without a culvert, a sudden lowering of the towpath, or the signs of riprap on the towpath or the gully itself.[116] Many of these (e.g. the one at Pennyfield lock) were replaced by a waste weir.[117]

Paw Paw tunnel edit

 
Paw Paw Tunnel

One of the most impressive engineering features of the canal is the Paw Paw Tunnel, which runs for 3,118 feet (950 m) under a mountain.[56] Built to save six miles (10 km) of construction around the obstacle, the 34-mile (1,200 m) tunnel used over six million bricks. The tunnel took almost twelve years to build; in the end, the tunnel was only wide enough for single lane traffic.[118] One notorious incident included two captains who refused to budge for several days. The company official threw green cornstalks onto a roaring fire at the upwind portion of the tunnel, smoking the offenders out.[49]

Inclined plane edit

 
Remains of the inclined plane

Engineer William Rich Hutton was instrumental in getting the inclined plane built.[119] Starting in 1875, a canal inclined plane was built two miles (3.2 km) upriver from Georgetown, so that boats whose destination was downriver from Washington could bypass the congestion (and price gouging of independent wharf owners) in Georgetown.[120] Originally the company planned to build a river lock, but then discovered that such a lock occasionally would consume more water than the level could provide. They then planned to make an inclined plane, much like the Morris Canal.[121] The first boat went through in 1876; 1,918 boats used the inclined plane that first year.[122] Usage reports conflict: Hahn reports that was only really used for two years, and sporadically in 1889,[122] yet Skramstad reports that due to flood damage in 1880 to the Rock Creek outlet, any boat until 1889 (when another flood wrecked the canal) going further down the Potomac than Georgetown, had to use the inclined plane.[123] Although Hahn says it was the largest inclined plane in the world at that time, it was 600 feet (180 m) long,[124] which is short compared to Plane 9 West of the Morris Canal at 1,500 feet (460 m). It originally used a turbine to power it (like the Morris Canal) but was later switched to use steam power.[122]

The inclined plane was dismantled after a major flood in 1889 when ownership of the canal transferred to the B&O Railroad, which operated the canal to prevent its right of way (particularly at Point of Rocks) from falling into the hands of the Western Maryland Railway.[25]

Telephone system edit

In the late 1870s, the Company installed a telephone system, rather than a telegraph as was the railroad practice, for $15,000.[125] Completed in October 1879, it had 43 stations along the canal. It was divided into sections with three switches, placed respectively at Dam No. 4, Dam No. 6, and Wood's Lock (head of 9 Mile level, i.e. Lock 26).[126] It is unknown if there are currently any remains of this system.

Culverts edit

 
Culvert #30 lets Muddy Branch under the canal

To carry small streams under the canal, 182 culverts,[127] usually of masonry, were built. For instance, culvert #30 was built in 1835 to carry Muddy Branch under the canal.[128] Unfortunately culverts are prone to collapse due to tree roots growing into the canal prism; in addition, rubbish from floods plug culverts, causing floods and more damage.[129] Some culverts have disappeared or were abandoned, although they still appear in company records.[130]

Aqueducts edit

Eleven aqueducts carried the canal over rivers and large streams that were too large to run through a culvert.[131]

Canal repairs edit

 
Repairs at Big Pool

The canal hired level walkers to walk the level with a shovel, looking for leaks, and repairing them. Large leaks were reported to the division superintendent, who would send out a crew with a repair scow.

Boatmen said that crabs caused leaks, as did muskrats. The company gave a 25 cent bounty on each muskrat.[108]

Boats on the canal edit

 
Mules pulling loaded boat. Note the scow moored on the right (berm) side.

At first the board of directors discussed having boats similar to the dimensions on the Erie Canal: 13+12 feet (4.1 m) wide with a draft of 3 feet (0.91 m), traveling at 2+12 miles per hour (4.0 km/h). Later, Chief Engineer Benjamin Wright submitted a suggestion with the dimensions of the boats being 14+12 feet (4.4 m) wide and 90 feet (27 m) long, with a 5-foot (1.5 m) draft, to take advantage of the lock sizes and prism depth. That would permit boats with cargo up to 130 tons.[132] Wright also suggested for passenger boats, having a draft of 10 inches (not including the keel) pulled by 4 horses at 7 miles per hour.

The following classifications of boats originally defined for the canal were as follows:[133]

Rafts[96] were, from time to time, on the canal, as well as launches and canoes. By 1835 (no doubt due to complaints about drifting rafts) the company put rates unfavorably against rafts.[135] Farmers would build watercraft which were to last only one trip (to transport their wares) and then be sold in Georgetown for firewood.[135]

Classifications were to change. In 1851, after the opening of the canal to Cumberland, the company adopted new classes of boats: A, B, C, D, E, and F, depending on dimensions and tonnage as follows:[136]

Class Description # of boats
in 1851
A Decked boats of substantial build, carrying one hundred tons and upwards 9
B Boats of similar construction, carrying less than one hundred tons 49
C Boats not decked, of substantial build, carrying one hundred tons and up-wards 108
D Boats of similar construction, carrying less than one hundred tons 41
E Long boats and scows, decked or not decked, of substantial build 10
F Gondolas and other floats designed for temporary use 6
Packets Boats used chiefly for the transportation of passengers 1

Later years of Canal trade showed a predominance of coal carrying boats. In 1875, the register lists 283 boats owned by coal companies, and of the 108 other boats, 8 were listed as grain carrying, 1 brick, and 1 limestone carrying boat, with the other 91 being general.

During the declining years, freight boats were generally made in Cumberland.[137] Freight boats in those years had two hulls, with 4 inches between them. There were holes (covered, when not in use) that one could put a pump in to pump out the bilge.[138]

Double boats edit

In 1875, the Canal Company announced its intention to double the lengths of the locks to allow double boats to pass through the canal, i.e. two boats, one behind the other, which could be towed, reducing freight costs by 50%. The Maryland Coal Company experimented with such boats, but the floods in the late 1870s destroyed these dreams.[139] The first lock to be extended to allow double boats was Edwards Ferry (Lock 25). Locks 25–32 were extended as such, as well as others, for a total of 14 extended locks on the canal.[140]

Traffic regulations edit

Boats were to keep to the right. Certain craft had preference over others: "boats had the right of way over rafts, descending boats over ascending craft, packets over freight boats at all times, and packets carrying the mail over all others",[141] and later, repair boats actively involved in repair had preference over everybody else.[142] The boat which did not have preference would slow down the mule team, the rope would sink to the bottom of the canal, and the other boat would float over it, and the mules would walk over also. The towline of the one boat would be unhitched so the lines would not tangle, but sometimes they did. There is one report of a towline snagging on the other boat, and the boatman running the boat into the towpath so as not to drag the other mules into the canal.[143]

It was forbidden to moor boats, rafts, or anything on the towpath side of the canal (which would, of course, impede any traffic at night).[144] For that reason, boats would tie up on the berm side for the night.

Due to problems, on April 1, 1851, the company printed a 47-page booklet with new traffic regulations on the canal, detailing every aspect of operation, as well as fines for violations, and were printed in great numbers and distributed to boatmen and company officials.[145]

The typical boating season ran from April until late November or December when the canal froze over.[146] There were some occasions, for instance, during the Civil War, where the company tried to keep the canal open all year round.[147]

Boat repairs edit

 
Drydock for repairing boats at Lock 47 (Four Locks).
 
Abandoned drydock at Lock 35 (today). Note the concrete beams that the boat would rest upon.

Boats carried oakum and chisels to patch leaks.[148] There were also boat repair areas, for instance, beside Lock 35 and at Lock 47 (Four Locks), to repair boats. The boat would settle on raised beams (at lock 35, they were made of concrete), as the drydock was drained, and the men could make the necessary repairs,[149] using tin and tar.[150] Originally, the canal plans did not have provisions for drydocks or repairs of boats, but by 1838 there were frequent complaints about drifting rafts and wrecks obstructing navigation. The company made provisions for drydocks to help the situation.[135] In the mid-1800s the Canal Company authorized at least 6 drydocks, documented at the following locations: Locks 45–46, Lock 47 (Four Locks), Lock 44 (Shepherdstown), above Lock 14 (near Carderock), Edwards Ferry (Lock 25), and in the rear of Lock 10 (Seven Locks).[151]

Icebreakers edit

Icebreakers were used on the canal, for instance, at the end of the boating season when winter froze the canal, so that the last group of boats could go home. The icebreaker was typically a company scow filled with pig iron. Mules would pull the boat onto the ice, and the weight would break the ice.[152] During the Civil war, the canal company attempted to keep the canal open during the winters of 1861–1862, despite the fact that winters were usually for repairs. Icebreaker boats were used to keep the channel free of ice, so that the military could move supplies.[147]

Mules edit

 
Mules being fed.

Most boats were drawn by mules. Mules lasted about 15 years. Mules were often changed at locks, over gangplanks. Some boatmen would change teams by making the mules swim to the shore to change teams, leading to mules drowning as a result. Mules were bought, at 2+12 years, often from Kentucky, and were broken in by having them drag logs.[153] The command to stop mules was not "whoa" but "ye–yip–ye".[154]

Getting a fully loaded boat moving was not easy for the mules, and overdriving them, especially at the basin in Cumberland where there was no water current to help them move the boat, was common, resulting in many spavined mules.[7] To get a loaded boat going, the mules would have to walk until the line was taut, then put their weight into it, and step once the boat had moved, and repeat this process. Within 25 feet, the boat would be moving.[155]

Mules were shod every other trip in Cumberland, although sometimes they had to be shod every trip.[156] Mules were harnessed, one behind the other, slantwise, which (for some reason) pulled the boat straighter, than if they were abreast.[157]

"Drivers" were the people (often children) who drove the mules on the towpaths: on the C&O they were not called "muleskinners" nor "hoggees" (the latter term was used on the Erie Canal)[158]

Dogs were useful to a boat captain on the canal to drive mules[159] and also to swim to take the towline to hitch the mules.[160] Joe Sandblower had a dog which would hunt muskrats along the canal, and he would sell the pelts and collect the bounty on muskrats.[159] There is a documented cat on the canal boat, as well as a raccoon.[159]

Horses edit

Horses were occasionally used to pull boats, but they did not last as long as mules.[155] In the 1900s, a large white horse was used in Cumberland basin like a switching engine, to pull coal cars so that the coal could be loaded into the canal boats.[161]

Steamboats on the canal edit

 
A steamboat on the C&O Canal. Note the steering wheel and the smokestack on this boat

There were occasionally steam boats, one being authorized in 1824.[162] In 1850, the N S Denny company operated some steam driven tugboats on the Canal.[163] The board of directors discussed having steamboats for Big Slackwater, but that was abandoned in favor of a towpath along the side. Records indicate that in the 1879, a single steamboat could go 3+14 miles per hour (5.2 km/h) loaded downstream, 4+12 miles per hour (7.2 km/h) unloaded going upstream, and took 5 to 7 minutes to lock through whether going upstream or downstream (respectively) and used about a ton of coal per day for operation.[164]

Boatmen and boat families edit

The boatmen (usually with their families) were a rough independent lot, forming a class within themselves, and intermarrying within their own group. They frequently fought amongst each other for any reason, be it racial slurs (real or perceived), precedence at a lock, or for exercise. They fought with lockkeepers over company rules, or even with the company for changes in toll rates. During winter when the boats were tied up, they often lived in their own communities away from others.[165] One boat captain observed that on the canal, women and children were as good as the men, and if it weren't for the children, the canal wouldn't run one day.[166]

On April 2, 1831, Daniel Van Slyke reported:

it is with great difficulty we have been able to preserve order among the boatmen, who in striving to push forward for a preference in passing the several locks are sometimes dis-posed to injure each other's boats as a means of carrying their point. An unfortunate in-stance of this kind happened on Wednesday last at the locks on the 9th section. A strongly constructed boat ran her bow against a gondola loaded with flour, and so much injured her as to render it necessary to transship the load. But no damage was done to the cargo.[165]

One notorious incident occurred in May 1874 when George Reed of the Mayfield and Heison was fined $20 for mooring his boat illegally in the Cumberland Basin. He refused to pay the fine. At Lock 74, he forced his way past the lockkeepers who tried to prevent him from continuing, and he was given an additional fine of $50. He continued (without paying), forced his way through the locks at Harpers Ferry and Lock 5, until Georgetown, where he was served notice for $120 in fees plus $4.08 for the waybill. When he got back to Cumberland, his boat was confiscated until he paid the whole $124.08.[167]

Recklessness among the boatmen was common. Many accidents were due to excessive speed. Aqueduct #3 (Catoctin) had a sharp bend at the upstream end, had been the site of a number of collisions from boatmen going too fast. In July 1855, a freight boat collided with a packet boat which sank. One of the most frequent problems was careless boatmen in their rush to lock through, hitting lock gates.[65]

Many of the men, particularly boat captains, said they knew nothing else [except boating]. One woman said, "The children are brought up on the boat and don't know nothin' else, and that is the only reason they take up 'boating'. Boys work for their fathers until they are big enough to get a boat of their own, and it's always easy to get a boat."[168]

Hours and wages edit

Fifteen hours a day was the minimum, 18 hours were the most frequently reported, according to the U.S. Department of Labor. Boatman said, "It never rains, snows, or blows for a boatman, and a boatman never has no Sundays." and, "We don't know it's Sunday, till we see some folks along the way, dressed up and a-gin' to Sunday School."[169]

Captains were paid per trip, receiving $70 to $80 per trip in the 1920s, and receiving less than $1,250 per year. Deck hands were paid $12 to $20 per trip, sometimes receiving clothes in lieu of wages or for part of their wages.[170]

The boating season ran from approximately March until December, with the canal drained during winter months to prevent damage from ice[171] and also for repairs.

Women edit

Women attended to household chores, steered boats, and gave birth on the boats, although if possible, a midwife would be secured if they were near a town. After birth, the journey would resume, with the man handling the chores including cooking. Often if the husband died, the widow would continue managing and operating the boat.[172] Women often served as locktenders also.[173] One mother had 14 children, all born on boats, and never had a physician attending.[174]

Children edit

 
Children tethered to canal boat. This photo was probably taken in one of the Cumberland basins.

The U.S. Department of Labor stated that only the limitations of physical strength prevented the children from performing all operations connected with handling boats.[169] Otho Swain reported he saw a ten-year-old girl put a boat through a lock (i.e. snubbing the boat so it would stop), but that would have been a child who grew up on the canal.[175]

Children generally did the mule driving, except perhaps at night when the captain might do so. In wet weather, the towpath was muddy and slippery and shoes wore out quickly. One man thought himself to be a good father because he provided his boys with rubber boots.[169]

One boatman said, "A boat is a poor place for little children, for all they can do is go in and out of the cabin." His son attended school 94 days out of a possible 178, and the father regretted it, but needed the family to help boat as he could not afford otherwise.[176]

Medical care edit

For boat families, there was very little medical care. One father stated, "We never need a doctor. We just stay sick until we get well." It was practically impossible to get a doctor in the mountains at the upper end of the canal or on the long levels.[174]

Food edit

Canned food was sometimes brought. Bean soup, made with beans, ham hocks, and an onion, was common. Other items included corn bread, eggs and bacon, ham, potatoes, and other vegetables. A reported canal custom was the first few rows of corn from farms along the canal could be used by the boatmen. Berries along the towpath were also picked. Molasses also was common. Bread and many groceries could be bought along the canal. Muskrats were sometimes eaten, as well as chickens and ducks either bought or even stolen along the way. Rabbits were snared. Crew members sometimes had a shotgun to shoot rabbits, groundhogs, or other game. Turtles were eaten as well as eels that the locktenders caught in eel pots in the rivers or the bypass flumes. Fish included sunfish, catfish, bigmouth bass, and black bass.[177]

Living quarters edit

 
Model interior of a C&O Canal freight boat

Cabins were 10 feet by 12 feet, and housed two bunks, each 36 inches wide, supposedly for one person, but often occupied by two. While most cabin floors were bare, in one survey, 14 had linoleum covering. The cabins were divided between sleeping quarters and the "stateroom" by a diagonal wall. The feed box, 4 feet by 4 feet, in the center boat, often doubled as sleeping quarters with a blanket thrown over the feed. Occasionally the deck was used for sleeping[178]

Cooking was done on a stove, burning corncobs (from the mule feed) or sometimes coal. Washing clothes and children was typically done at night by moonlight, after tying up the boat, along the side of the canal.[172] Food and provisions for the trip (e.g. flour, sugar, coffee, salt pork, smoked meat, etc.) were bought in Cumberland on Wineow street, from stores such as Coulehan's, Dennis Murphy's, or John McGrinnis's.[166] Some boatmen carried chickens or pigs on the boats. Fish caught in the canal also served as food, as well as turtles. Additional supplies could be bought along the way from lockkeepers and at towns.[172]

Legends and ghosts edit

Many legends have been documented along the canal during its operating days:

 
Recent view of the 9 mile level (between 33 and 34 miles) where the ghosts were reported to haunt.
  • On the 9 mile level around the 33–34 mile mark, some boats were used to transport soldiers to the Battle of Ball's Bluff during the American Civil War. One of the boats sank, and it was said that departed ghosts of the soldiers haunted the area. Canallers would avoid tying up at night in that area.[179] It was also said that the mules would sense it, and would hurry through the area (it was also called "Haunted House Bend"), and also that there were tales of a ghost dog there.[180]
  • There was reported the ghost of an Indian chief on the 14 mile level around Big Pool.[180]
  • A lady ghost was reported on the 2 mile level at Catoctin (between locks 28 and 29) which would walk over the waste weir, down the towpath and to the river.[180]
  • A headless man was reported to haunt the Paw Paw Tunnel.[181]
  • A Romeo and Juliet like-story was documented near Lock 69 (Twigg's lock). (See Locks on the C&O Canal#Lock names for more info).
 
Monocacy Aqueduct in 2023, where the ghost of a robber could allegedly be seen on moonless nights
  • A report of "buried treasure" somewhere between Nolands Ferry and the Monocacy river, that could be found if one followed a ghost of a robber, allegedly seen from time to time on moonless nights crossing the Monocacy Aqueduct carrying a lantern.[182]

Points of interest edit

Here is a list of items on the canal, as a canaller traveling by boat from Georgetown to Cumberland would see. (Note: some present day items are on this list also.) A typical canaller would know the canal by the names of the levels and the locks.[183] Most list of points of the canal's points of interest do not contain a list of the levels with their names like we have here. Also note that most lists of locks do not include Guard Locks 4 and 5, which a boat would have to pass through, if navigating the entire canal (It was generally possible for boats to pass through the other guard locks also, but that is if they were going to other destinations, usually on the Virginia/West Virginia side of the river). Also note sometimes there are often slight discrepancies in mileages, for instance NPS and Hahn[184] reports Lock 75 at 175.60 miles, Davies lists "175.35 (175.50)",[185] and Hahn also reports the NPS mile markers are in the wrong place from Milepost 117 to Lock 51,[186] further adding to the confusion. Also note that Some streets in Georgetown were renamed, mostly as numbered streets, pursuant to an 1895 law. See Georgetown street renaming.

Citations edit

  1. ^ "The Grand Old Ditch: the C&O In American Transportation History " May 20, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Hahn, Pathway, 1.
  3. ^ Kytle p. 10
  4. ^ Kytle, p. 12
  5. ^ Ward, George W. (1899). Early Development of Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Project. [Johns Hopkins Press]. Retrieved 2013-12-20. George Washington Ward. p.63
  6. ^ Kytle p. 20
  7. ^ a b Kytle p. 25
  8. ^ Bearss, Edwin C, The Composite Locks, NPS, 1968, p. 57
  9. ^ According to the Army Engineers report in 1874–75, the B&O Railroad mainline from Cumberland to Pittsburgh follows the route originally surveyed for the canal. See Hahn, Pathway. 258–259
  10. ^ a b Unrau p. 55
  11. ^ Unrau p. 56
  12. ^ Unrau, Harland D. Historic Structure Report the Culverts, Historical Data. National Park Service, Denver Colorado, January 1976. p. 6-7
  13. ^ Unrau p. 105
  14. ^ Hahn, Towpath Guidep. 7
  15. ^ J. Thomas Scharf, "History of Baltimore City and County", published 1881, reprinted 1971
  16. ^ Hahn, Towpath Guide p. 27
  17. ^ On the same day, the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad set its "First Stone" with the aging, sole surviving Signer of the Declaration of Independence, Charles Carroll of Carrollton.
  18. ^ Kytle p. 27
  19. ^ Unrau p. 25
  20. ^ Unrau, Harland D. "Historical Structure Report, The Canal Prism, Including Towpath with Canal Berm and River Revetments Historical Data" (PDF). [US Department of the Interior, National Park Service]. (PDF) from the original on 2017-02-25. Retrieved 2013-08-02. p. 45
  21. ^ Hahn Towpath p. 60-61
  22. ^ a b Unrau p. 227
  23. ^ Unrau p. 239
  24. ^ Kytle, p. 84
  25. ^ a b c Lynch, John A. "Justice Douglas, the Chesapeake & Ohio Canal, and Maryland Legal History". University of Baltimore Law Forum. 35 (Spring 2005): 104–125.
  26. ^ Kytle p. 33-34
  27. ^ Unrau, Canal Prism, p. 43
  28. ^ Kytle p. 43
  29. ^ Unrau, Canal Prism, p. 42
  30. ^ ""The Canal Connection" marker". The Historical Marker Database. from the original on 2011-07-26. Retrieved 2011-03-02.
  31. ^ "Washington City Canal: Plaque beside the Lockkeeper's House marking the former location of in Washington, D.C." Memorials, monuments, statues & other outdoor art in the Washington D.C. area & beyond, by M. Solberg. from the original on 2010-02-23. Retrieved 2011-03-02.
  32. ^ ""The Washington City Canal" marker". The Historical Marker Database. from the original on 2011-07-26. Retrieved 2011-03-02.
  33. ^ ""Lock Keeper's House" marker". HMdb.org: The Historical Marker Database. from the original on 2018-12-17. Retrieved 2011-03-02.
  34. ^ Coordinates of lock keeper's house: 38°53′31″N 77°02′23″W / 38.8919305°N 77.0397498°W / 38.8919305; -77.0397498 (Lockkeeper's house from Washington branch of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal)
  35. ^ Kytle p. 84
  36. ^ Hahn, Pathway, 6.
  37. ^ Unrau p. 41
  38. ^ Unrau, Canal Prism, p. 49
  39. ^ Unrau, Canal Prism, p. 50-51
  40. ^ Unrau, Canal Prism, p 52
  41. ^ Bearss p. 33
  42. ^ Coordinates of abutment and canal bed of Potomac Aqueduct Bridge: 38°54′16″N 77°04′13″W / 38.904328°N 77.070407°W / 38.904328; -77.070407 (Abutment and Canal Bed of Potomac Aqueduct Bridge)
  43. ^ Unrau, Canal Prism, p. 56
  44. ^ George Washington Howard. The Monumental City: Its Past History and Present Resources. p. 648.
  45. ^ Unrau pp. 239, 242
  46. ^ Unrau p. 237
  47. ^ a b Edwin C. Bearss. "The Composite Locks" (PDF). [US Department of the Interior, National Park Service]. (PDF) from the original on 2013-07-13. Retrieved 2013-05-24. p.20
  48. ^ Kytle p. 53-54
  49. ^ a b "Archived copy" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2012-10-25. Retrieved 2013-05-15.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  50. ^ Unrau p. 251
  51. ^ Unrau p. 174 ff
  52. ^ Unrau p.207, 208
  53. ^ Bearss p. 57
  54. ^ Kytle p. 64
  55. ^ Mackintosh, 1.
  56. ^ a b c Hahn, Pathway, 7.
  57. ^ Kytle p. 61, note #10
  58. ^ Hahn, Pathway. 257
  59. ^ Davies p. ix. Davies does not indicate if this tunnel was ever used, nor its location.
  60. ^ Davies p. ix
  61. ^ 41st annual report of the C&O Canal Company (1869), p. 4-5
  62. ^ Unrau p. 476
  63. ^ a b Unrau p. 813
  64. ^ "Frequently Asked Questions - Chesapeake & Ohio Canal National Historical Park (U.S. National Park Service)". Nps.gov. 2016-03-16. from the original on 2021-03-24. Retrieved 2016-08-11.
  65. ^ a b Unrau p. 811
  66. ^ "Local Financial News". Evening Star, Washington, D.C. No. 15716. July 9, 1903. p. 2. Retrieved 30 July 2021.
  67. ^ Unrau p. 814-815
  68. ^ RE: THE TITLE TO C&O CANAL FROM THE DISTRICT TO POINT OF ROCKS On The Question Of Whether The United States Can Acquire By Purchase A Valid Title To The Portion Of The Chesapeake And Ohio Canal Extending From Washington To Point Of Rocks, Md., Mr. Assistant Attorney General Blair (November 14, 1936).
  69. ^ Unrau p. 457.
  70. ^ Unrau p. 814
  71. ^ Unrau, p.446-447
  72. ^ a b Unrau p. 498
  73. ^ Hahn, Boatmen, p. 15-17
  74. ^ Kytle, p. 154-155
  75. ^ Hahn, Boatmen p. 42
  76. ^ a b Hahn, Boatmen p. 49
  77. ^ Hahn, Boatmen p. 48
  78. ^ Hahn, Boatmen p. 47
  79. ^ Unrau p. 848
  80. ^ a b Hahn, Boatmen p. 79
  81. ^ Unrau p. 318
  82. ^ Donald R. Shaffer. "We are Again in the Midst of Trouble: Flooding on the Potomac River and the Struggle for the Sustainability of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal, 1828-1996" (PDF). [US Department of the Interior, National Park Service]. (PDF) from the original on 2012-11-13. Retrieved 2013-05-23. p. 64
  83. ^ Unrau p. 499
  84. ^ Shaffer, p. 62
  85. ^ Hahn, Boatmen p. 79.
  86. ^ Unrau p. 321
  87. ^ Shaffer p. 65
  88. ^ "Floods on Potomac" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 31 March 2014. Retrieved 28 March 2014.
  89. ^ Hahn, Towpath Guide p. 25
  90. ^ Hahn, Towpath Guide p. 62
  91. ^ Peck, Garrett (2012). The Potomac River: A History and Guide. Charleston, SC: The History Press. pp. 62–63. ISBN 978-1-60949-600-5.
  92. ^ Unrau p. 208 footnote, 470
  93. ^ Hahn, Towpath Guide p. 62-63
  94. ^ Hahn, Towpath Guide p. 99-100
  95. ^ Unrau p. 167, 238
  96. ^ a b Unrau p. 336
  97. ^ Kytle p. 71-72.
  98. ^ Hahn, Boatmen p. 55
  99. ^ Unrau p. 185
  100. ^ Hahn Towpath, p. 51
  101. ^ Hahn, Towpath Guide p. 82.
  102. ^ Unrau p. 343
  103. ^ Unrau p. 251-252
  104. ^ Kytle p. 145-146
  105. ^ Hahn, Boatmen p. 70
  106. ^ Hahn, Boatmen p. 69
  107. ^ Kytle, p.66
  108. ^ a b Kytle p.67
  109. ^ Hahn, Towpath Guide p. 75
  110. ^ . Hscl.cr.nps.gov. Archived from the original on 2016-12-13. Retrieved 2016-08-11.
  111. ^ . Hscl.cr.nps.gov. 1979-08-09. Archived from the original on 2016-12-13. Retrieved 2016-08-11.
  112. ^ "List of Classified Structures". Hscl.cr.nps.gov. 1979-08-09. Archived from the original on 2013-06-15. Retrieved 2016-08-11.
  113. ^ Kytle p. 271
  114. ^ Hahn, Towpath Guide p. 36, 86, 96
  115. ^ a b Hahn, Towpath Guide p. 96
  116. ^ Hahn, Towpath Guide p. 86
  117. ^ p. 93 2013-06-18 at the Wayback Machine
  118. ^ National Park Service, "The Paw Paw Tunnel is 3118 feet (950 m) long and is lined with over six million bricks. The 34 mile (1,200 m) long tunnel saved the canal builders almost six miles (10 km) of construction along the Paw Paw bends of the Potomac River. It took twelve years to build and was only wide enough for single lane traffic."
  119. ^ Unrau p. 22
  120. ^ Coordinates of inclined plane: 38°54′28″N 77°05′29″W / 38.907882°N 77.091272°W / 38.907882; -77.091272 (Inclined Plane)
  121. ^ Unrau p. 480
  122. ^ a b c Hahn Towpath Guide p. 20
  123. ^ Skramstad, Harold. "The Georgetown Canal Incline" Technology and Culture, Vol. 10, No. 4 (Oct. 1969), p. 555
  124. ^ Hahn Towpath Guide p. 19
  125. ^ Unrau p. 578
  126. ^ Unrau p. 594
  127. ^ davies p. xiv
  128. ^ . Hscl.cr.nps.gov. 1979-08-09. Archived from the original on 2015-09-24. Retrieved 2016-08-11.
  129. ^ Shaffer p. 83
  130. ^ Hahn, Towpath Guide p. 97, for instance
  131. ^ Unrau p. 239-241
  132. ^ Unrau p. 331
  133. ^ Unrau p. 338
  134. ^ Unrau p. 761
  135. ^ a b c Unrau p. 337
  136. ^ Unrau p. 349-350
  137. ^ Unrau p. 357
  138. ^ Hahn, Boatmen, p. 29
  139. ^ Unrau p. 360.
  140. ^ Hahn, p. 64
  141. ^ Unrau p. 365
  142. ^ Unrau p. 367
  143. ^ Hahn, boatmen p. 40
  144. ^ Unrau p. 383
  145. ^ Unrau p. 808
  146. ^ Hahn, Boatmen p. 76
  147. ^ a b Unrau p. 724
  148. ^ Kytle p. 221
  149. ^ . Whilbr. Archived from the original on 2016-09-18. Retrieved 2016-08-11.
  150. ^ Hahn, Towpath Guide p. 112
  151. ^ Unrau p. 360-361
  152. ^ Unrau p. 820
  153. ^ Unrau p. 219-220
  154. ^ Hahn Pathway p. 40
  155. ^ a b Kytle p. 173
  156. ^ Hahn, Boatmen p. 14
  157. ^ Kytle p. 155
  158. ^ Kytle p. 171 Footnote
  159. ^ a b c Hahn, Boatmen p. 64
  160. ^ Unrau p. 220
  161. ^ Hahn, Boatmen p. 15
  162. ^ Unrau p. 344
  163. ^ Unrau p. 345
  164. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2016-03-05. Retrieved 2014-11-27.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  165. ^ a b Unrau p. 806
  166. ^ a b Unrau p. 818
  167. ^ Unrau p. 810
  168. ^ Springer, Ethel M. Canal Boat Children. U.S. Department of Labor, 1923. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-06-05. Retrieved 2013-07-25.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) p.5
  169. ^ a b c Springer p. 6
  170. ^ Springer p. 8
  171. ^ Springer p. 4
  172. ^ a b c Unrau p. 819
  173. ^ Unrau p. 765
  174. ^ a b Springer p. 11
  175. ^ Kytle p. 133
  176. ^ Springer p. 7
  177. ^ Hahn, Boatmen p. 21-22
  178. ^ Unrau p. 817
  179. ^ Hahn, Towpath Guide p. 68-69
  180. ^ a b c Hahn, Boatmen p. 66
  181. ^ Hahn, Towpath Guide p. 198
  182. ^ Hahn, Towpath Guide p. 82. Note: digging on park property is illegal without permission!
  183. ^ Hahn, Boatmen p. 54
  184. ^ Hahn Towpath p. 217
  185. ^ Davies p. 581
  186. ^ Hahn Towpath p. 166
  187. ^ Davies, p. 55
  188. ^ Hahn, Towpath Guide P. 36
  189. ^ Hahn, Towpath Guide p. 46
  190. ^ Davies p. 96-97
  191. ^ Davies p. 117
  192. ^ Hahn, Towpath Guide P. 89
  193. ^ Hahn, Towpath Guide p. 117
  194. ^ Davies p. 243
  195. ^ Davies p. 253. He calls it an "overfall"
  196. ^ Hahn, Towpath Guide p. 158
  197. ^ Hahn, Towpath Guide P. 169
  198. ^ Davies p. 386
  199. ^ Davies, p. 403
  200. ^ Hahn, Towpath Guide p. 179
  201. ^ Hahn, Towpath Guide p. 180
  202. ^ Hahn, Towpath Guide p. 189
  203. ^ Davies p. 539
  204. ^ See Unrau p. 470. First installed in 1856 at south branch, but later moved upstream to here in 1872. According to Hahn (Hahn, Towpath Guide 215) the pump's capacity was 24 cu. ft per sec. Note that a lock (about 11400 cu ft) can consume 50 cu ft/sec (355 gal/sec) when filling.

General and cited references edit

  • Camagna, Dorothy (2006). The C&O Canal: From Great National Project to National Historical Park. Gaithersburg, Maryland: Belshore Publications. ISBN 0-9770449-0-4.
  • Davies, William E. (1999). The Geology and Engineering Structures of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal: An Engineering Geologist's Descriptions and Drawings (PDF). Glen Echo, Md.: C&O Canal Association. (PDF) from the original on 2014-07-25. Retrieved 2014-07-21.
  • Hahn, Thomas F. Swiftwater (1984). The Chesapeake & Ohio Canal: Pathway to the Nation's Capital. Metuchen, New Jersey: The Scarecrow Press, Inc. ISBN 0-8108-1732-2.
  • Hahn, Thomas F. Swiftwater (1993). Towpath Guide to the C&O Canal: Georgetown Tidelock to Cumberland, Revised Combined Edition. Shepherdstown, WV: American Canal and Transportation Center. ISBN 0-933788-66-5.
  • Hahn, Thomas F. Swiftwater (1980). The C & O Canal Boatmen, 1892–1924. Shepherdstown, WV: American Canal and Transportation Center.
  • Kytle, Elizabeth (1983). Home on the Canal. Cabin John, MD: Seven Locks Press. ISBN 978-080185328-9.
  • Mackintosh, Barry (1991). C&O Canal: The Making of A Park. Washington, D.C.: National Park Service, Department of the Interior.
  • National Park Service (2006-08-08). "C&O Canal Educational Programs: Lessons Page". United States Department of the Interior. from the original on 2008-10-12. Retrieved 2008-06-02.
  • Unrau, Harland D. "Historical Resource Study: Chesapeake & Ohio Canal" (PDF). [US Department of the Interior, National Park Service]. (PDF) from the original on 2015-07-14. Retrieved 2013-05-02. This resource survey has a lot of information unavailable elsewhere on the construction and operation of the canal.
  • Butcher, Russell D. (1997). Exploring Our National Historic Parks and Sites. Roberts Rinehart Publishers
  • National Park Service. Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historical Park. Retrieved 2010-05-11.

Further reading edit

  • Life on the Chesapeake & Ohio Canal, 1859 [York, Pa.: American Canal and Transportation Center, 1975]
  • Achenbach, Joel. The Grand Idea: George Washington's Potomac and the Race to the West, Simon and Schuster, 2004.
  • Blackford, John, 1771–1839. Ferry Hill Plantation journal: life on the Potomac River and the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal, 4 January 1838-15 January 1839 2d ed. Shepherdstown, W. Va. : [American Canal and Transportation Center], 1975.
  • Cotton, Robert. The Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Through the Lens of Sir Robert Cotton
  • Fradin, Morris. Hey-ey-ey, lock! Cabin John, Md., See-and-Know Press, 1974
  • Gutheim, Frederick. The Potomac. New York: Rinehart and Co., 1949.
  • Guzy, Dan. Navigation on the Upper Potomac and Its Tributaries. Western Maryland Regional Library 2011-08-20 at the Wayback Machine, 2011
  • Hahn, Thomas F. The Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Lock-Houses and Lock-Keepers.
  • High, Mike. The C&O Canal Companion, Johns Hopkins University Press, 2001.
  • Kapsch, Robert and Kapsch, Elizabeth Perry. Monocacy Aqueduct on the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal. Medley Press, 2005.
  • Kapsch, Robert. The Potomac Canal, George Washington and the Waterway West.Morgantown, WV: West Virginia University Press, 2007.
  • Martin, Edwin. A Beginner's Guide to Wildflowers of the C and O Towpath, 1984.
  • Mulligan, Kate. Canal Parks, Museums and Characters of the Mid-Atlantic, Wakefield Press, Washington, DC, 1999.
  • Mulligan, Kate. Towns along the Towpath, 1997. (Available from C &O Association) Here is Chapter 3 about Seneca.
  • National Park Service, Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historical Park Washington, DC: NPS Division of Publications, 1991.
  • Rada, James Jr. Canawlers, Legacy Press, 2001.
  • Southworth, Scott, et al. Geology of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historical Park and Potomac River Corridor, District of Columbia, Maryland, West Virginia, and Virginia: U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1691 2011-06-29 at the Wayback Machine, 2008.

External links edit

  • Official National Park Service Site
  • Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company records at the University of Maryland libraries
  • Jack Rottier photographs and papers of the C and O Canal Online Collection, Special Collections Research Center, Estelle and Melvin Gelman Library, The George Washington University.
  • C&O Canal Trust
  • C&O Canal Association
  • Preliminary Guide to the Thomas Hahn Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Collection, 1939-1993, Special Collections Research Center, Estelle and Melvin Gelman Library, The George Washington University
  • The Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Documentary produced by WETA-TV
  • C&O Canal is part of the
  • The Building of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal - A National Park Service Teaching with Historic Places (TwHP) lesson plan
  • Historic American Engineering Record (HAER) No. MD-23, "Potomac Edison Company, Chesapeake & Ohio Canal Bridge, Spanning C & O Canal South of U.S. 11, Williamsport, Washington County, MD", 13 photos, 10 measured drawings, 19 data pages, 3 photo caption pages
  • HAER No. MD-24, "Salisbury Street Bridge, Spanning C&O Canal (Milepost 99.65) & WM Railroad, Williamsport, Washington County, MD", 1 photo, 2 measured drawings, 2 data pages, 1 photo caption page
  • HAER No. MD-26, "Chesapeake & Ohio Canal, Lockhouse 75, State Route 51 & Patterson Creek, Cumberland, Allegany County, MD", 1 measured drawing
  • HAER No. MD-27-C, "Chesapeake & Ohio Canal, Salty Dog Tavern, Lock 33 vicinity, Sharpsburg, Washington County, MD", 1 measured drawing
  • HAER No. MD-28, "Chesapeake & Ohio Canal, Mule Barn, Four Lock Road, Clear Spring, Washington County, MD", 3 measured drawings
  • HAER No. MD-69, "Chesapeake & Ohio Canal, White's Ferry Iron Bridge, Mile 35.49 of C & O Canal National Park, Martinsburg, Montgomery County, MD", 4 photos, 5 data pages, 1 photo caption page
  • HAER No. MD-70, "Chesapeake & Ohio Canal, Iron Bridge at Lock No. 68, Mile 164.82 of C & O Canal National Park, Oldtown, Allegany County, MD", 5 photos, 1 color transparency, 6 data pages, 2 photo caption pages
  • HAER No. MD-71, "Chesapeake & Ohio Canal, McCoy's Ferry Road Culvert, Mile 110.42 of C & O Canal National Park, Big Spring, Washington County, MD", 2 photos, 8 data pages, 1 photo caption page
  • HAER No. MD-72, "Chesapeake & Ohio Canal, Prather's Neck Road Culvert, Mile 108.74 of C & O Canal National Park, Big Spring, Washington County, MD", 3 photos, 8 data pages, 1 photo caption page

chesapeake, ohio, canal, abbreviated, canal, occasionally, called, grand, ditch, operated, from, 1831, until, 1924, along, potomac, river, between, washington, cumberland, maryland, replaced, potomac, canal, which, shut, down, completely, 1828, could, operate,. The Chesapeake and Ohio Canal abbreviated as the C amp O Canal and occasionally called the Grand Old Ditch 1 operated from 1831 until 1924 along the Potomac River between Washington D C and Cumberland Maryland It replaced the Potomac Canal which shut down completely in 1828 and could operate during months in which the water level was too low for the former canal The canal s principal cargo was coal from the Allegheny Mountains Chesapeake and Ohio CanalThe Chesapeake and Ohio Canal in Great FallsSpecificationsLength184 5 miles 296 9 km Maximum boat length90 ft 0 in 27 43 m Maximum boat beam14 ft 6 in 4 42 m Locks74 Boats must pass guard locks 4 amp 5 for each trip StatusNational ParkHistoryOriginal ownerChesapeake and Ohio Canal CompanyPrincipal engineerBenjamin WrightOther engineer s Charles B Fisk William Rich HuttonDate of act1825 199 years ago 1825 Construction began1828 196 years ago 1828 Date of first use1830 194 years ago 1830 Date completed1850 174 years ago 1850 Date closed1924 100 years ago 1924 GeographyStart pointGeorgetown Washington D C originally Little Falls Branch Canal extended down to Georgetown in 1830 End pointCumberland Maryland originally Sections to Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Connects toAlexandria Canal Virginia Goose Creek and Little River Navigation source source source source The 1917 video Down the Old Potomac Part 1 of 3 shows the canal during its operating days Some of the information is inaccurate For example it says that barges more correctly boats passed through 86 locks descending 800 feet to tidewater in fact there were 77 locks descending 610 feet Construction began in 1828 on the 184 5 mile 296 9 km canal and ended in 1850 with the completion of a 50 mile 80 km stretch to Cumberland although the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad had already reached Cumberland in 1842 The canal had an elevation change of 605 feet 184 meters which required 74 canal locks 11 aqueducts to cross major streams more than 240 culverts to cross smaller streams and the 3 118 ft 950 m Paw Paw Tunnel A planned section to the Ohio River at Pittsburgh was never built The canal is now maintained as the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historical Park with a trail that follows the old towpath Contents 1 History 1 1 Early river projects 1 2 Construction 1 2 1 Planning 1 2 2 Groundbreaking 1 2 3 Section numbers and contracts 1 2 4 First part opened 1 2 5 Dispute for Point of Rocks second part opened 1 2 6 Last 50 miles 1 3 Intervening years 1 4 Receivership 2 Tolls and revenue 2 1 Business after 1891 2 2 Fines 2 3 Business after 1924 2 3 1 Flood of 1924 2 3 2 Flood of 1936 2 4 National Historical Park 3 Locks and engineering 3 1 Canal prism 3 2 Lift locks and guard locks 3 2 1 Composite locks 3 3 Levels 3 4 Feeders 3 5 Slackwater navigation 3 6 Waste weirs spillways and informal overflows mule drinks 3 7 Paw Paw tunnel 3 8 Inclined plane 3 9 Telephone system 3 10 Culverts 3 11 Aqueducts 3 12 Canal repairs 4 Boats on the canal 4 1 Double boats 4 2 Traffic regulations 4 3 Boat repairs 4 4 Icebreakers 4 5 Mules 4 6 Horses 4 7 Steamboats on the canal 4 8 Boatmen and boat families 4 8 1 Hours and wages 4 8 2 Women 4 8 3 Children 4 8 4 Medical care 4 8 5 Food 4 8 6 Living quarters 5 Legends and ghosts 6 Points of interest 7 Citations 8 General and cited references 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory editEarly river projects edit After the American Revolutionary War George Washington was the chief advocate of using waterways to connect the Eastern Seaboard to the Great Lakes and the Ohio River which flows into the Mississippi River and ultimately to the Gulf of Mexico at New Orleans 2 In 1785 Washington founded the Potowmack Company to improve the navigability of the Potomac River His company built five skirting canals around the major falls Little Falls later incorporated in the C amp O Canal Great Falls in Virginia Seneca Falls opposite Violette s lock Payne s Falls of the Shenandoah and House s Falls near Harpers Ferry 3 These canals allowed an easy downstream float upstream journeys propelled by pole were harder Several kinds of watercraft were used on the Patowmack Canal and in the Potomac River Gondolas were 60 by 10 ft 18 by 3 m log rafts usually sold at journey s end for their wood by their owners who returned upstream on foot Sharpers were flat bottomed boats 60 by 7 ft 18 by 2 m usable only on high water days about 45 days per year 4 Construction edit Planning edit nbsp Map of planned route The Erie Canal built between 1817 and 1825 threatened traders south of New York City who began to seek their own transportation infrastructure to link the burgeoning areas west of the Appalachian Mountains to mid Atlantic markets and ports As early as 1820 plans were being laid for a canal to link the Ohio River and Chesapeake Bay In early March 1825 President James Monroe signed the bill chartering the construction of the C amp O Canal as one of the last acts of his presidency 5 The plan was to build it in two sections the eastern section from the tidewater of Washington D C to Cumberland Maryland and the western section over the Allegheny Mountains to the Ohio River or one of its tributaries Free from taxation the canal company was required to have 100 miles 160 km in use in five years and to complete the canal in 12 years 6 The canal was engineered to have a 2 miles per hour 3 km h water current supplying the canal and assisting mules pulling boats downstream 7 The eastern section was the only part to be completed 8 On October 23 1826 the engineers submitted the study presenting the proposed canal route in three sections The eastern section comprised Georgetown to Cumberland the middle section Cumberland going up Wills Creek to Hyndman then across the Sand Patch Grade crossing the Eastern Continental Divide to Garrett 9 to the confluence of the Casselman River and the Youghiogheny River and the western section from there to Pittsburgh 10 Section Distance Ascent amp Descent of Locks CostEastern 185 Mi 1078 Yds 578 Feet 74 8 177 081 05Middle 70 Mi 1010 Yds 1961 Feet 246 10 028 122 86Western 85 Mi 348 Yds 619 Feet 78 4 170 223 78Total 341 Mi 676 Yds 3158 Feet 398 22 375 427 69 nbsp A boat on the canal circa 1900 1924The total estimated price tag more than 22 million dampened the enthusiasm of many supporters who were expecting an estimate in the 4 million to 5 million range At a convention in December 1826 they attempted to discredit the engineers report and offered lower estimates Georgetown to Cumberland 5 273 283 Georgetown to Pittsburgh 13 768 152 10 Geddes and Roberts were hired to make another report which they gave in 1828 4 479 346 93 for Georgetown to Cumberland 11 With those numbers to encourage them the stockholders formally organized the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company in June 1828 12 In the end the final construction cost to Cumberland in 1850 was 11 071 075 21 Compared to the original cost given by the engineers in 1826 of about 8 million removing things not in the estimate such as land purchases engineering expenses incidental damages salaries and fencing provision the cost overrun was about 19 which can be justified by the inflation rate of the period The cost overrun of the other proposal Geddes and Roberts was about 51 13 thus showing that the original engineer s estimate was good In 1824 the holdings of the Patowmack Company were ceded to the Chesapeake and Ohio Company Rejected names for the canal included the Potomac Canal and Union Canal 14 By 1825 the Canal Company was authorized by an act of the General Assembly of Maryland in the amount of subscriptions of 500 000 this paved the way for future investments and loans According to historians 15 those financial resources were expended until the State had prostrated itself on its own credit Groundbreaking edit The C amp O s first chief engineer was Benjamin Wright formerly chief engineer of the Erie Canal A groundbreaking ceremony was held on July 4 1828 attended by U S president John Quincy Adams The ceremony was held near Georgetown at the canal s eventual 5 64 miles 9 08 km mark near Lock 6 the upstream end of the Little Falls skirting canal and Dam No 1 16 17 nbsp Canal boats waiting to be unloaded in Georgetown At the groundbreaking there was still argument over the eastern end of the canal The directors thought that Little Falls at the downstream end of the Patowmack Little Falls Skirting Canal was sufficient since that literally fulfilled the charter s condition of reaching the tidewater but people in Washington wanted it to end in Washington connecting to the Tiber Creek and Anacostia river 18 For that reason the canal originally opened from Little Falls to Seneca and the next year was extended down to Georgetown The Little Falls skirting canal which was part of the Patowmack Canal was dredged to increase its depth from 4 to 6 feet 1 2 to 1 8 m and became part of the C amp O Canal The first president of the canal Charles F Mercer insisted on perfection since this was a work of national importance This would cost the company more money to build the canal During his term he forbade the use of slackwaters for navigation the use of composite locks see section below or reduction of the cross section of the canal prism in difficult terrain This reduced maintenance expenditures but increased construction costs 19 In the end two slackwaters Big Slackwater above Dam No 4 and Little Slackwater above Dam No 5 and multiple composite locks Locks 58 71 were built At first the canal company planned to use steamboats in the slackwaters since without mules the canal boats had to use oars to move upstream After much discussion of the dangers of early steamboats the company provided a towpath so that the mules could pull the boats through the slackwaters 20 Section numbers and contracts edit From Lock 5 at Little Falls to Cumberland as mentioned above the canal started at Little Falls and was later extended down to Georgetown the canal was divided into three divisions of about 60 miles 100 km apiece each of which was further divided into 120 sections of about 0 5 miles 800 m A separate construction contract was issued for each section 21 Locks culverts dams etc were listed on the contracts by section number not by mileage as is done today For instance Locks 5 and 6 are on Section No 1 22 all the way to Guard Lock No 8 on section 367 23 Sections A H were in the Georgetown level below lock 5 22 First part opened edit In November 1830 the canal opened from Little Falls to Seneca 24 The Georgetown section opened the following year Dispute for Point of Rocks second part opened edit In 1828 the C amp O Canal and the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad B amp O began fighting for sole use of the narrow strip of available land along the Potomac River from Point of Rocks to Harpers Ferry 25 After a Maryland state court battle that involved Daniel Webster and Roger B Taney the companies agreed to share the right of way 25 In August 1829 the canal company began importing indentured laborers to Alexandria and Georgetown These workers were promised meat three times a day vegetables and a reasonable allowance of whiskey 8 to 12 per day 20 for masons Still many were dissatisfied with the slave like conditions Friction between the largest groups from Ireland and Germany meant they had to be kept in different crews 26 The width of the canal prism above Harpers Ferry was reduced to 50 feet 15 m which saved money and was also appropriate from an engineering standpoint 27 In 1832 the canal company prohibited liquor in a bid to improve the speed of construction but soon repealed its ban In August 28 or September 1832 an epidemic of cholera swept through the construction camps killing many workers and leading others to throw down their tools and flee 29 nbsp Low angle bird s eye view of central Washington toward the west and northwest with The Capitol in foreground The Canal is visible running along the mall By 1833 the canal s Georgetown end was extended 1 5 miles 2 4 km eastward to Tiber Creek near the western terminus of the Washington City Canal which extended through the future National Mall to the foot of the United States Capitol 30 31 32 A lock keeper s house at the eastern end of this Washington Branch of the C amp O Canal remains at the southwest corner of Constitution Avenue and 17th Street N W at the edge of the National Mall 33 34 nbsp C amp O Canal in the Georgetown neighborhood of Washington D C In 1834 the section to Harper s Ferry opened and the canal reached Williamsport 35 In 1836 the canal was used by canal packets as a Star Route to carry mail from Georgetown to Shepherdstown The contract was held by Albert Humrickhouse at 1 000 per annum for a daily service of 72 book miles The canal approached Hancock Maryland by 1839 36 In March 1837 three surveys were made for a possible link to the northeast to Baltimore via Westminster via Monocacy Linganore and via Seneca but they were all deemed impractical due to lack of water at the summit level 37 The Canal reached Dam No 6 west of Hancock in 1839 As the canal approached Hancock more construction problems surfaced Limestone sinkholes and caverns caused the canal bottom to cave in near Shepherdstown near Two Locks above Dam No 4 around Four Locks Big pool and Roundtop Hill near Dam No 6 38 On 6 December 1839 Chief Engineer Fisk wrote These breaks have all evidently been occasioned by limestone sinks which exhibit themselves by a falling down of the bottom of the Canal into limestone caverns that are lower than and extend out under the bed of the river in consequence of which the water from the Canal is at first conducted down below the canal bottom perhaps twenty or thirty feet and thence out along under the bed of the river It has been a matter of surprise to me that our Canal thus far has suffered so little from limesinks We may yet however have much trouble from this source near and above the breach at Lock No 37 For about a mile there is scarcely a hundred feet in length of the canal in which there are not several small lime sink holes He recommended costly but necessary repairs which were done by 1840 39 40 Since it was difficult to obtain stone for the locks engineers built composite locks sometimes of kyanized wood 41 In 1843 the Potomac Aqueduct Bridge was built near the present day Francis Scott Key Bridge to connect the canal to the Alexandria Canal which led to Alexandria Virginia 42 In April 1843 floods damaged much of the finished portion of the canal between Georgetown and Harpers Ferry including the Shenandoah river lock One flood suspended navigation for 103 days The company raised the embankments around Little Falls and made a tumbling waste near the 4 mile marker 43 Last 50 miles edit nbsp Boat construction yard in Cumberland MDBuilding the last 50 mile 80 km segment proved difficult and expensive Allen Bowie Davis took on the role of management 44 In Cumberland Dam No 8 and Guard Lock No 8 had begun construction in 1837 45 and the final locks 70 75 to Cumberland were completed around 1840 46 That left an 18 5 mile 29 8 km segment in the middle which would eventually require building the Paw Paw tunnel digging the deep cut at Oldtown and building 17 locks 47 Near Paw Paw the engineers had no good solutions If they followed the river they would have to cross over to West Virginia to avoid the cliffs and an agreement with the B amp O Railroad specified that the canal would avoid the south side of the river unless it was a place where the railroad would not need it So they took the more expensive decision to build a tunnel through the mountain 48 The initial cost estimate of 33 500 proved far too low 49 The tunnel was completed for 616 478 65 50 Among the components of the project a kiln was built to provide bricks to line the tunnel 51 nbsp Map of Terminus in Cumberland in the mid 1890s Yellow dots indicate modern highways as well as current 2013 location of Canal basin Originally the company intended to go around Cumberland behind the town of Wills Creek but complaints from the citizens and the city caused the board to change their plans routing the canal through the center of town 52 The canal was opened for trade to Cumberland on Thursday October 10 1850 53 On the first day five canal boats Southampton Elizabeth Ohio Delaware and Freeman Rawdon loaded with a total of 491 tons of coal came down from Cumberland In one day the C amp O carried more coal in the first day of business than the Lehigh Canal for their full year of business in 1820 54 Yet in 1850 the B amp O Railroad had already been operating in Cumberland for eight years and the Canal suffered financially 47 55 Debt ridden the company dropped its plan to continue construction of the next 180 miles 290 km of the canal into the Ohio Valley 56 The company long realized especially with the experience at the Paw Paw tunnel that construction over the mountains going to Pittsburgh was wildly unrealistic 57 Occasionally there was talk of continuing the canal e g in 1874 an 8 4 mile 13 5 km long tunnel was proposed to go through the Allegheny Mountains 58 Nevertheless there was a tunnel built to connect with the Pennsylvania canal 59 Even though the railroad beat the canal to Cumberland the canal was not entirely obsolete It wasn t until the mid 1870s that improved technology specifically with larger locomotives and air brakes allowed the railroad to set rates lower than the canal and thus seal its fate 60 Sometime after the canal opened in 1850 a commemorative obelisk was erected near its Georgetown terminus Intervening years edit The canal deteriorated during the Civil War In 1869 the company s annual report said During the last ten years little or nothing had been done toward repairing and improving lock houses culverts aqueducts locks lock gates and waste weirs of the Company many of them had become entirely unfit for use and were becoming worthless rendering it absolutely essential to the requirements of the Company to have them repaired 61 Still some improvements were made in the late 1860s such as replacing Dams No 4 and 5 62 The early 1870s which Unrau calls the Golden Years were particularly profitable The company repaid some of its bonds It made many improvements to the canal including the installation of a telephone system Yet there were still floods and other problems By 1872 so many vessels were unfit for navigation that the company required boats to undergo annual inspections and registration In July 1876 the crew of the Lezan Ragan stayed afloat while loading in Cumberland only by her crew s pumping She hit some abutments of the locks near Great Falls and finally sank at the opening Lock 15 at the head of Widewater 63 For a brief period in the 1860s and 1870s the company attempted to prevent boating on Sundays But boatmen broke padlocks on the lock gates and turned to violence when confronted The company gave up trying to enforce the rule 63 The trip from Cumberland to Georgetown generally took about seven days 64 The fastest known time from Georgetown to Cumberland for a light boat was 62 hours set by Raleigh Bender from Sharpsburg Dent Shupp made it from Cumberland to Williamsport in 35 hours with 128 tons of coal 65 Receivership edit Following the disastrous flood of 1889 the canal company entered receivership with court appointed trustees The trustees were given the right to repair and operate the canal under continued court oversight The trustees represented the majority owners of the C amp O Canal Company bonds issued in 1844 While the B amp O owned the majority of the 1878 bonds the B amp O did not own a majority of the 1844 bonds as of 1890 However by 1903 the B amp O had acquired sufficient bonds to become a majority holder 66 the reported reason being to secure for the Wabash railroad system a foothold on the Atlantic seaboard which had only been incorporated in February 1903 Over the next decade and particularly after 1902 boats on the canal shifted from independent operators to company owned craft Boats with colorful names Bertha M Young or Lezen Ragan gave way to numbered craft Canal Towage Company with a number run by a schedule 67 Despite the B amp O s status as a majority bondholder the B amp O can not be said to have ever owned the C amp O This did not stop the B amp O from trying to sell it In 1936 the B amp O attempted to sell part of the canal from Point of Rocks to the District line This was blocked by the courts which had continued to oversee the C amp O trustees with the court saying It is of course well known that the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company is not the owner of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal At that time the court also stated that the canal could not be sold in pieces but only in its entirety 68 In 1938 new trustees were appointed by the court to handle the sale under the court s continued oversight Tolls and revenue edit nbsp Register of waybills in the Cumberland Office in 1858 Each canal boat had to have a waybill even if empty for passage through the canal Fines were levied for lack of a waybill Tolls were charged for cargo on the canal In 1851 for instance the toll rates on the Canal were set as follows 69 Item Per ton per mile For first 20 miles Per ton per mile thereafterCoal 1 4 cent 1 4 centSlaughtered hogs bacon amp meat 2 cents 1 centWhiskey and spirits fish fresh amp salted 2 cents 1 centSalt 1 cent 3 4 centFire brick 1 cent 1 2 centBricks ice 1 cent 1 4 centSand gravel clay earth paving stones 1 4 cent 1 4 centTolls varied greatly and frequently the board adopted new toll rates Some boatmen would try to ship in the boats extra cargo not listed on the waybills to avoid tolls In 1873 for instance one boat got from Georgetown to Harpers Ferry with 225 hidden sacks of salt before the company found out 70 nbsp 5 and 10 dollar notes from C amp O Canal companyThe items transported on the canal varied In 1845 for instance before the canal s completion the shipments were as follows 71 Item sent downstream Quantity Items sent upstream QuantityFlour 170 464 barrels Salted Fish 4 569 barrelsWheat 299 607 bushels Salt 1 265 tonsCorn 126 799 bushels Plaster 4 721 tonsOats 35 464 bushels Lumber 820 000 feet board measureMill Offal 38 575 bushels Potatoes 2 511 bushelsCorn Meal 16 327 bushels Bricks 118 225 unitsPork 15 250 pounds Wheat 1 708 bushelsLumber 508 083 feet board measure Oysters 1 351 bushelsStone 12 060 perchesBusiness after 1891 edit nbsp Loading coal on canal boats in Cumberland After 1891 the canal principally transported coal and sometimes West Virginia limestone wood lumber sand and flour Statistics were only kept for coal 72 Coal was loaded in the Cumberland basin which consisted of dumping four carloads of coal into the boat Some of the coal had to be shoveled by hand into the spaces beneath the cabins During the loading process nobody would be on the boat due to the dust and mules were kept off in case the boat sank from being loaded Despite closing windows dust usually entered the cabins After loading the ridge poles would be put then the hatches over the ridge poles and openings The crew would scrub down the boat using water from the canal to remove the dust and the boat would be poled to the other side of the basin where it would be hitched to the mules 73 Boatmen came down to lock 5 called Willard s lock or Waybill Lock whereupon the locktender would sign the waybill and report it to the office If they did not get orders at that lock they waited near the aqueduct bridge in Georgetown until orders came through A tugboat on the river would pull the boats to other points e g Navy Yard Indianhead Alexandria 74 Some coal loads were unloaded directly in the Georgetown coal yards using buckets Coal was also unloaded onto ocean sailing vessels bound for Massachusetts which brought ice and returned with coal a 4 masted vessel holding about 20 boatloads of coal 75 In the last few years the tonnage and tolls for coal were as follows 72 Year Coal Tonnage tons Tolls collected US 1914 171 062 42 236 971915 173 997 41 271 461916 158 036 38 956 771917 151 667 40 545 741918 138 087 71 404 431919 133 529 47 346 951920 127 871 62 102 381921 66 477 42 017 331922 Unavailable 3 435 181923 56 404 31 899 321924 Unavailable 1 215 60One of the more unusual loads was a circus with about 9 people with their equipment which included a black bear They were transported from Oldtown Maryland to Harpers Ferry The black bear got loose on the journey and the boatman told them You tie that thing good or you re never going to get to Harpers Ferry for I m going to leave the boat 76 Other loads included furniture often second hand pianos a parlor suites watermelons fish such as shad and herring as well as transporting items such as flour or molasses to sell to lockkeepers 76 as some of the lockkeepers in remote areas needed the boats to bring their supplies 77 Cement from the Round Top Mill above Hancock was also shipped to Georgetown Some would pole across the river at Dam No 2 to get wood cross ties bark used in tanning and sometimes grain Other loads often carried upstream included 600 empty barrels in a boat taken to Shepherdstown to load cement lumber fertilizer and general merchandise for stores along the canal as well as oysters in barrels complete materials to build a house ear corn and even extra mules 78 Fines edit The company levied fines for infractions such as traveling without a waybill or destruction of canal property such as lock gates or canal masonry For instance 79 May 30 1877 Capt Thomas Fisher fined 10 about US 423 in 2012 for passing through lock without waybill Oct 22 1877 R Cropley s scow fined 25 for knocking out gate in Lock No 5 Brookmont Lock Nov 12 1877 Capt Joseph Little fined 10 for running into crib at Lock No 9 Seven Locks July 4 1878 Boat John Sherman fined 62 70 for unloading and raising note this was on Independence Day Aug 30 1878 Steamer Scrivenes fined 50 Allowing the Bertha M Young in tow to sink on Level 36 and abandoning her at night without giving notice causing navigation to be suspended 36 hrs May 5 1879 Capt Jacob Hooker fined 40 Running into and breaking gate at Lock No 40 Jan 14 1880 Boat Harry amp Ralph fined 5 Running into gate at Darbey s Lock Note this was in winter when the canal was usually drained for repairs Jun 12 1880 G L Booth fined 4 40 for pumping Business after 1924 edit The last known boat to carry coal was Pat Boyer s Boat 5 which returned to Cumberland on November 27 1923 The only boats recorded to operate in 1924 were five boats that carried sand from Georgetown to Williamsport to construct a power plant 80 Flood of 1924 edit The flood of 1924 caused major damage to the canal Most of the railroad and canal bridges near Hancock were destroyed a breach opened in Dam No 1 and much damage to the banks and masonry of the canal occurred Although the railroad did some maintenance ostensibly so that the canal could quickly be restored to operation mainly the Georgetown level Dam No 1 and below was fixed to supply Georgetown s mills with water for operation 81 The rest of the canal remained in disrepair The boating season lasted only three months in 1924 80 and after the flood navigation ceased Unfortunately some communities such as Glen Echo and Cumberland already used the canal to dump sewage and G L Nicholson called the canal a public nuisance due to the sewage and being a breeding ground for mosquitoes 82 In 1928 1929 there was some talk of restoring and reopening the canal from Cumberland to Williamsport but with the onset of the Great Depression the plans were never realized 83 In April 1929 after some freshet damage the railroad repaired a break in the towpath so that they could continue to flush out mosquitoes as demanded by the Maryland board of health 84 The boatmen now unemployed went to work for railroads quarries farms and some retired At that date the only other canal using mules was the Lehigh Canal which was soon to close in 1940 85 Some of the lockkeepers stayed on and there were a few canal superintendents were listed for the now disused canal Flood of 1936 edit nbsp Floodwaters around Lock 6 in 1936This winter flood in March 1936 caused even more damage to the abandoned canal still recovering from the damage caused by the extreme floods just over a decade prior This flood caused by the thawing of earlier ice combined with the flow of heavy rains led to the highest water mark the Potomac River had ever had thus far destroying lockhouses levels and other structures There were some efforts at restoration mainly to the Georgetown level so that the factories could have their water supply 86 Due to the inattention of the B amp O Railroad the canal became a magnificent wreck and would need intense repairs and reconstruction throughout many areas destroyed by the floods 87 88 National Historical Park edit Main article Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historical Park nbsp The canal in Georgetown in spring 2019In 1938 the abandoned canal was obtained from the bondholders by the United States in exchange for a loan from the federal Reconstruction Finance Corporation and is now the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historical Park Locks and engineering editCanal prism edit The dimensions of the canal vary quite a bit Below Lock 5 the width is 80 feet wide and 6 feet deep 89 Above Lock 5 to Harper s Ferry it is 60 feet wide and 6 feet deep and above Harper s Ferry 50 feet wide 90 Lift locks and guard locks edit Main article Locks on the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal To build the canal the C amp O Canal Company used a total of 74 lift locks that raised the canal from sea level at Georgetown to 610 feet 190 m at Cumberland 56 Locks 8 27 and their accompanying lock houses were made from Seneca red sandstone quarried from the Seneca Quarry as was Aqueduct No 1 better known as Seneca Aqueduct This unique structure is the only aqueduct made from Seneca red sandstone and is doubly unique for being the only aqueduct on the C amp O that is also a lock Lock 24 Riley s Lock 91 Seven guard locks often called inlet locks numbered 1 through 8 were built to allow water and sometimes boats particularly at Big Slackwater and Little Slackwater to enter Dam 7 and Guard Lock 7 were proposed near mile 164 at the South Branch of the Potomac but never built 92 In 1856 there was a steam pump put at that site Later in 1872 a new steam pump was put near mile 174 Three additional river locks were built to allow boats to enter the canal at the river as demanded by the Virginia legislature for buying canal stock They were at Goose Creek below Edwards Ferry Lock 25 near the Shenendoah River just below Lock 33 and at Shepherdstown The Goose Creek locks were to allow boats from the Goose Creek and Little River Navigation Company to enter Only one Goose Creek boat was documented to enter the C amp O canal and there is no documentation of a C amp O boat entering Goose Creek The lock was eventually converted into a waste weir 93 The Shenandoah river about 422 feet 129 m below Lock 33 lock let boats cross to Harpers Ferry with the mules walking on the railroad bridge up the Shenandoah river to the old Potomac Canal Bypass on the Shenandoah river by Virginius island The railroad refused to let mules walk on the bridge and from lack of business the lock was abandoned Stones from that lock were used for other purposes 94 After the 1889 flood destroyed the nearby dam in Shepherdstown the raison d etre for the Shepherdstown lock was gone and so it was filled in 95 At night locktenders were required to remove the cranks and handles from all paddle valves to prevent unauthorized use 96 Composite locks edit Despite Mercer not wanting any composite locks due to measures to economize on the last 50 miles 80 km of construction and the scarcity of good building stone Locks 58 71 were constructed as composite locks whereby the lock masonry is built of rubble and inferior undressed stone Since that makes a rough surface which damages the boats the locks were originally lined with wood to protect the boats This wood sheathing had to be replaced 97 In time some of the composite locks were lined with concrete since the wood kept rotting Levels edit The stretch of canal between locks is called a level Canalers called these levels by their lengths for instance the longest level was the 14 mile level which was about 14 miles long and ran from Lock 50 at 4 locks to Lock 51 in Hancock Some levels had additional nicknames since some had similar lengths e g Four Mile Level below Dam 6 Four Mile Level Big Slackwater or Four Mile Level of the Log Wall which is between locks 14 and 15 includes Widewater Anglers Carderock Billy Goat Trails B and C and the downstream entrance to Trail A all connect on that level Levels less than a mile between locks were called short levels 98 Waste weirs and bypass flumes at the locks helped control the height of water in the levels see below about waste weirs Feeders edit nbsp Great Falls feeder culvert no longer used indicated by yellow arrow 14 08 mi and Lock 18 R There were three streams used as feeders Rocky Run feeder section 9 around 7 Locks Great Falls feeder section 18 and the Tuscarora feeder section 78 There was a contemplated feeder at the Monocacy not built 99 Of course the remains of the Potomac Company Little Falls skirting canal was used as a feeder also Inlet Lock No 2 is called the Seneca Feeder in historic documents 100 The remains of the Tuscarora feeder can still be seen but it was made redundant by Dam No 3 and was no longer used 101 Slackwater navigation edit nbsp Boat at Big SlackwaterDespite Charles F Mercer two slackwaters were used for navigation Big Slackwater at Dam No 4 and Little Slackwater at Dam No 5 Big Slackwater is about 3 miles 5 km long Little Slackwater is about 1 2 mile 800 m long The boats had to navigate despite winds currents and debris in the channel In February 1837 the board of directors discussed using steam power in the slackwater for the boats but instead decided on a permanent towpath 102 The towpath for Big Slackwater was completed in 1838 for 31 416 36 and the towpath for Little Slackwater was completed in 1839 for 8 204 40 103 Little Slackwater was a tricky place to navigate Not only did it have a lot of hairpin turns but also just before Guard Lock No 5 there was a strip of land in the water called the pier that exists even today loaded boats going downstream would have to go outside the pier and unloaded boats on the inside thus making steering difficult for the loaded boats to get into the lock If the current was fast in the river it could go as fast as the boat rendering the tiller useless and thus a boat could be almost impossible to steer 104 One man reported that at the slackwater they had him sit at the front of the boat with a hatchet in case they had to cut the towline since it would pull the mules into the river and had a couple of wooden hatches turned upside down so that they could escape to shore on the hatches 105 On 1 May 1903 the towline to Boat No 6 broke with Captain Keim Mrs Keim their two daughters and Harry Newkirk aboard One daughter drowned another suffered a broken leg and the captain died later of injuries The rest including the mules aboard survived 106 Boatmen reported that it was easier to navigate in the slackwaters than the aqueducts since there was room for the water to move around the boat Places like aqueducts where there was little room for the water to move were difficult for the mules to pull the boat through 107 Waste weirs spillways and informal overflows mule drinks edit nbsp A waste weir looking from above nbsp A spillway To regulate the level of water in the canal prism waste weirs informal overflows and spillways were used Waste weirs removed the surges of water from storms or excess when a lock was emptied 108 Boards could be removed or added to adjust the amount of water in the level If one had to empty the whole level for winter repairs or emergencies waste weirs often had paddle valves similar to those found in locks at the bottom which could be opened to let the water out Waste weirs come in several styles Originally they were made of concrete masonry with boards on top making a bridge with mules to pass over A possible example of an old style waste weir abandoned is at 39 49 miles above Lock 26 Wood s Lock Most of these old waste weirs were replaced with concrete structures in 1906 109 Another used to be at Pennyfield lock in 1909 1911 Spillways are made of concrete and can be on either side but if on the towpath side have a bridge so people and mules can cross without getting the feet wet High water simply flows over the spillway and out of the canal The longest spillway near Chain Bridge is 354 feet long was made in 1830 but has been worked on since 110 Another spillway near Foxhall road 111 at mile 1 51 was made in 1835 The spillway and waste weir at Big Pool was built in the 1840s 112 nbsp An informal overflow The towpath dips allowing water to flow over it Note the boards in the background for people to walk on An informal overflow or mule drink was a dip in the towpath allowing water to flow over similar to a spillway but without the bridge or the concrete construction hence were more informal The canalers called these mule drinks 113 There are documented informal overflows at mileage 10 76 49 70 and 58 08 114 These usually had a drainage ditch which was riprapped with stone to prevent erosion Historically the towpath dropped two feet to form this overflow 115 Due to silting construction etc many of these overflows are now difficult to find Hahn states that clues to finding these overflows include a gully without a culvert a sudden lowering of the towpath or the signs of riprap on the towpath or the gully itself 116 Many of these e g the one at Pennyfield lock were replaced by a waste weir 117 Paw Paw tunnel edit Main article Paw Paw Tunnel nbsp Paw Paw TunnelOne of the most impressive engineering features of the canal is the Paw Paw Tunnel which runs for 3 118 feet 950 m under a mountain 56 Built to save six miles 10 km of construction around the obstacle the 3 4 mile 1 200 m tunnel used over six million bricks The tunnel took almost twelve years to build in the end the tunnel was only wide enough for single lane traffic 118 One notorious incident included two captains who refused to budge for several days The company official threw green cornstalks onto a roaring fire at the upwind portion of the tunnel smoking the offenders out 49 Inclined plane edit nbsp Remains of the inclined planeEngineer William Rich Hutton was instrumental in getting the inclined plane built 119 Starting in 1875 a canal inclined plane was built two miles 3 2 km upriver from Georgetown so that boats whose destination was downriver from Washington could bypass the congestion and price gouging of independent wharf owners in Georgetown 120 Originally the company planned to build a river lock but then discovered that such a lock occasionally would consume more water than the level could provide They then planned to make an inclined plane much like the Morris Canal 121 The first boat went through in 1876 1 918 boats used the inclined plane that first year 122 Usage reports conflict Hahn reports that was only really used for two years and sporadically in 1889 122 yet Skramstad reports that due to flood damage in 1880 to the Rock Creek outlet any boat until 1889 when another flood wrecked the canal going further down the Potomac than Georgetown had to use the inclined plane 123 Although Hahn says it was the largest inclined plane in the world at that time it was 600 feet 180 m long 124 which is short compared to Plane 9 West of the Morris Canal at 1 500 feet 460 m It originally used a turbine to power it like the Morris Canal but was later switched to use steam power 122 The inclined plane was dismantled after a major flood in 1889 when ownership of the canal transferred to the B amp O Railroad which operated the canal to prevent its right of way particularly at Point of Rocks from falling into the hands of the Western Maryland Railway 25 Telephone system edit In the late 1870s the Company installed a telephone system rather than a telegraph as was the railroad practice for 15 000 125 Completed in October 1879 it had 43 stations along the canal It was divided into sections with three switches placed respectively at Dam No 4 Dam No 6 and Wood s Lock head of 9 Mile level i e Lock 26 126 It is unknown if there are currently any remains of this system Culverts edit nbsp Culvert 30 lets Muddy Branch under the canalTo carry small streams under the canal 182 culverts 127 usually of masonry were built For instance culvert 30 was built in 1835 to carry Muddy Branch under the canal 128 Unfortunately culverts are prone to collapse due to tree roots growing into the canal prism in addition rubbish from floods plug culverts causing floods and more damage 129 Some culverts have disappeared or were abandoned although they still appear in company records 130 Aqueducts edit Main article Aqueducts on the C amp O Canal Eleven aqueducts carried the canal over rivers and large streams that were too large to run through a culvert 131 Canal repairs edit nbsp Repairs at Big PoolThe canal hired level walkers to walk the level with a shovel looking for leaks and repairing them Large leaks were reported to the division superintendent who would send out a crew with a repair scow Boatmen said that crabs caused leaks as did muskrats The company gave a 25 cent bounty on each muskrat 108 Boats on the canal edit nbsp Mules pulling loaded boat Note the scow moored on the right berm side At first the board of directors discussed having boats similar to the dimensions on the Erie Canal 13 1 2 feet 4 1 m wide with a draft of 3 feet 0 91 m traveling at 2 1 2 miles per hour 4 0 km h Later Chief Engineer Benjamin Wright submitted a suggestion with the dimensions of the boats being 14 1 2 feet 4 4 m wide and 90 feet 27 m long with a 5 foot 1 5 m draft to take advantage of the lock sizes and prism depth That would permit boats with cargo up to 130 tons 132 Wright also suggested for passenger boats having a draft of 10 inches not including the keel pulled by 4 horses at 7 miles per hour The following classifications of boats originally defined for the canal were as follows 133 Packet Boats for passengers Freight boats Scows especially work scows for construction and maintenance as well as ice breaking 134 GondolasRafts 96 were from time to time on the canal as well as launches and canoes By 1835 no doubt due to complaints about drifting rafts the company put rates unfavorably against rafts 135 Farmers would build watercraft which were to last only one trip to transport their wares and then be sold in Georgetown for firewood 135 Classifications were to change In 1851 after the opening of the canal to Cumberland the company adopted new classes of boats A B C D E and F depending on dimensions and tonnage as follows 136 Class Description of boats in 1851A Decked boats of substantial build carrying one hundred tons and upwards 9B Boats of similar construction carrying less than one hundred tons 49C Boats not decked of substantial build carrying one hundred tons and up wards 108D Boats of similar construction carrying less than one hundred tons 41E Long boats and scows decked or not decked of substantial build 10F Gondolas and other floats designed for temporary use 6Packets Boats used chiefly for the transportation of passengers 1Later years of Canal trade showed a predominance of coal carrying boats In 1875 the register lists 283 boats owned by coal companies and of the 108 other boats 8 were listed as grain carrying 1 brick and 1 limestone carrying boat with the other 91 being general During the declining years freight boats were generally made in Cumberland 137 Freight boats in those years had two hulls with 4 inches between them There were holes covered when not in use that one could put a pump in to pump out the bilge 138 Double boats edit In 1875 the Canal Company announced its intention to double the lengths of the locks to allow double boats to pass through the canal i e two boats one behind the other which could be towed reducing freight costs by 50 The Maryland Coal Company experimented with such boats but the floods in the late 1870s destroyed these dreams 139 The first lock to be extended to allow double boats was Edwards Ferry Lock 25 Locks 25 32 were extended as such as well as others for a total of 14 extended locks on the canal 140 Traffic regulations edit Boats were to keep to the right Certain craft had preference over others boats had the right of way over rafts descending boats over ascending craft packets over freight boats at all times and packets carrying the mail over all others 141 and later repair boats actively involved in repair had preference over everybody else 142 The boat which did not have preference would slow down the mule team the rope would sink to the bottom of the canal and the other boat would float over it and the mules would walk over also The towline of the one boat would be unhitched so the lines would not tangle but sometimes they did There is one report of a towline snagging on the other boat and the boatman running the boat into the towpath so as not to drag the other mules into the canal 143 It was forbidden to moor boats rafts or anything on the towpath side of the canal which would of course impede any traffic at night 144 For that reason boats would tie up on the berm side for the night Due to problems on April 1 1851 the company printed a 47 page booklet with new traffic regulations on the canal detailing every aspect of operation as well as fines for violations and were printed in great numbers and distributed to boatmen and company officials 145 The typical boating season ran from April until late November or December when the canal froze over 146 There were some occasions for instance during the Civil War where the company tried to keep the canal open all year round 147 Boat repairs edit nbsp Drydock for repairing boats at Lock 47 Four Locks nbsp Abandoned drydock at Lock 35 today Note the concrete beams that the boat would rest upon Boats carried oakum and chisels to patch leaks 148 There were also boat repair areas for instance beside Lock 35 and at Lock 47 Four Locks to repair boats The boat would settle on raised beams at lock 35 they were made of concrete as the drydock was drained and the men could make the necessary repairs 149 using tin and tar 150 Originally the canal plans did not have provisions for drydocks or repairs of boats but by 1838 there were frequent complaints about drifting rafts and wrecks obstructing navigation The company made provisions for drydocks to help the situation 135 In the mid 1800s the Canal Company authorized at least 6 drydocks documented at the following locations Locks 45 46 Lock 47 Four Locks Lock 44 Shepherdstown above Lock 14 near Carderock Edwards Ferry Lock 25 and in the rear of Lock 10 Seven Locks 151 Icebreakers edit Icebreakers were used on the canal for instance at the end of the boating season when winter froze the canal so that the last group of boats could go home The icebreaker was typically a company scow filled with pig iron Mules would pull the boat onto the ice and the weight would break the ice 152 During the Civil war the canal company attempted to keep the canal open during the winters of 1861 1862 despite the fact that winters were usually for repairs Icebreaker boats were used to keep the channel free of ice so that the military could move supplies 147 Mules edit nbsp Mules being fed Most boats were drawn by mules Mules lasted about 15 years Mules were often changed at locks over gangplanks Some boatmen would change teams by making the mules swim to the shore to change teams leading to mules drowning as a result Mules were bought at 2 1 2 years often from Kentucky and were broken in by having them drag logs 153 The command to stop mules was not whoa but ye yip ye 154 Getting a fully loaded boat moving was not easy for the mules and overdriving them especially at the basin in Cumberland where there was no water current to help them move the boat was common resulting in many spavined mules 7 To get a loaded boat going the mules would have to walk until the line was taut then put their weight into it and step once the boat had moved and repeat this process Within 25 feet the boat would be moving 155 Mules were shod every other trip in Cumberland although sometimes they had to be shod every trip 156 Mules were harnessed one behind the other slantwise which for some reason pulled the boat straighter than if they were abreast 157 Drivers were the people often children who drove the mules on the towpaths on the C amp O they were not called muleskinners nor hoggees the latter term was used on the Erie Canal 158 Dogs were useful to a boat captain on the canal to drive mules 159 and also to swim to take the towline to hitch the mules 160 Joe Sandblower had a dog which would hunt muskrats along the canal and he would sell the pelts and collect the bounty on muskrats 159 There is a documented cat on the canal boat as well as a raccoon 159 Horses edit Horses were occasionally used to pull boats but they did not last as long as mules 155 In the 1900s a large white horse was used in Cumberland basin like a switching engine to pull coal cars so that the coal could be loaded into the canal boats 161 Steamboats on the canal edit nbsp A steamboat on the C amp O Canal Note the steering wheel and the smokestack on this boatThere were occasionally steam boats one being authorized in 1824 162 In 1850 the N S Denny company operated some steam driven tugboats on the Canal 163 The board of directors discussed having steamboats for Big Slackwater but that was abandoned in favor of a towpath along the side Records indicate that in the 1879 a single steamboat could go 3 1 4 miles per hour 5 2 km h loaded downstream 4 1 2 miles per hour 7 2 km h unloaded going upstream and took 5 to 7 minutes to lock through whether going upstream or downstream respectively and used about a ton of coal per day for operation 164 Boatmen and boat families edit The boatmen usually with their families were a rough independent lot forming a class within themselves and intermarrying within their own group They frequently fought amongst each other for any reason be it racial slurs real or perceived precedence at a lock or for exercise They fought with lockkeepers over company rules or even with the company for changes in toll rates During winter when the boats were tied up they often lived in their own communities away from others 165 One boat captain observed that on the canal women and children were as good as the men and if it weren t for the children the canal wouldn t run one day 166 On April 2 1831 Daniel Van Slyke reported it is with great difficulty we have been able to preserve order among the boatmen who in striving to push forward for a preference in passing the several locks are sometimes dis posed to injure each other s boats as a means of carrying their point An unfortunate in stance of this kind happened on Wednesday last at the locks on the 9th section A strongly constructed boat ran her bow against a gondola loaded with flour and so much injured her as to render it necessary to transship the load But no damage was done to the cargo 165 One notorious incident occurred in May 1874 when George Reed of the Mayfield and Heison was fined 20 for mooring his boat illegally in the Cumberland Basin He refused to pay the fine At Lock 74 he forced his way past the lockkeepers who tried to prevent him from continuing and he was given an additional fine of 50 He continued without paying forced his way through the locks at Harpers Ferry and Lock 5 until Georgetown where he was served notice for 120 in fees plus 4 08 for the waybill When he got back to Cumberland his boat was confiscated until he paid the whole 124 08 167 Recklessness among the boatmen was common Many accidents were due to excessive speed Aqueduct 3 Catoctin had a sharp bend at the upstream end had been the site of a number of collisions from boatmen going too fast In July 1855 a freight boat collided with a packet boat which sank One of the most frequent problems was careless boatmen in their rush to lock through hitting lock gates 65 Many of the men particularly boat captains said they knew nothing else except boating One woman said The children are brought up on the boat and don t know nothin else and that is the only reason they take up boating Boys work for their fathers until they are big enough to get a boat of their own and it s always easy to get a boat 168 Hours and wages edit Fifteen hours a day was the minimum 18 hours were the most frequently reported according to the U S Department of Labor Boatman said It never rains snows or blows for a boatman and a boatman never has no Sundays and We don t know it s Sunday till we see some folks along the way dressed up and a gin to Sunday School 169 Captains were paid per trip receiving 70 to 80 per trip in the 1920s and receiving less than 1 250 per year Deck hands were paid 12 to 20 per trip sometimes receiving clothes in lieu of wages or for part of their wages 170 The boating season ran from approximately March until December with the canal drained during winter months to prevent damage from ice 171 and also for repairs Women edit Women attended to household chores steered boats and gave birth on the boats although if possible a midwife would be secured if they were near a town After birth the journey would resume with the man handling the chores including cooking Often if the husband died the widow would continue managing and operating the boat 172 Women often served as locktenders also 173 One mother had 14 children all born on boats and never had a physician attending 174 Children edit nbsp Children tethered to canal boat This photo was probably taken in one of the Cumberland basins The U S Department of Labor stated that only the limitations of physical strength prevented the children from performing all operations connected with handling boats 169 Otho Swain reported he saw a ten year old girl put a boat through a lock i e snubbing the boat so it would stop but that would have been a child who grew up on the canal 175 Children generally did the mule driving except perhaps at night when the captain might do so In wet weather the towpath was muddy and slippery and shoes wore out quickly One man thought himself to be a good father because he provided his boys with rubber boots 169 One boatman said A boat is a poor place for little children for all they can do is go in and out of the cabin His son attended school 94 days out of a possible 178 and the father regretted it but needed the family to help boat as he could not afford otherwise 176 Medical care edit For boat families there was very little medical care One father stated We never need a doctor We just stay sick until we get well It was practically impossible to get a doctor in the mountains at the upper end of the canal or on the long levels 174 Food edit Canned food was sometimes brought Bean soup made with beans ham hocks and an onion was common Other items included corn bread eggs and bacon ham potatoes and other vegetables A reported canal custom was the first few rows of corn from farms along the canal could be used by the boatmen Berries along the towpath were also picked Molasses also was common Bread and many groceries could be bought along the canal Muskrats were sometimes eaten as well as chickens and ducks either bought or even stolen along the way Rabbits were snared Crew members sometimes had a shotgun to shoot rabbits groundhogs or other game Turtles were eaten as well as eels that the locktenders caught in eel pots in the rivers or the bypass flumes Fish included sunfish catfish bigmouth bass and black bass 177 Living quarters edit nbsp Model interior of a C amp O Canal freight boatCabins were 10 feet by 12 feet and housed two bunks each 36 inches wide supposedly for one person but often occupied by two While most cabin floors were bare in one survey 14 had linoleum covering The cabins were divided between sleeping quarters and the stateroom by a diagonal wall The feed box 4 feet by 4 feet in the center boat often doubled as sleeping quarters with a blanket thrown over the feed Occasionally the deck was used for sleeping 178 Cooking was done on a stove burning corncobs from the mule feed or sometimes coal Washing clothes and children was typically done at night by moonlight after tying up the boat along the side of the canal 172 Food and provisions for the trip e g flour sugar coffee salt pork smoked meat etc were bought in Cumberland on Wineow street from stores such as Coulehan s Dennis Murphy s or John McGrinnis s 166 Some boatmen carried chickens or pigs on the boats Fish caught in the canal also served as food as well as turtles Additional supplies could be bought along the way from lockkeepers and at towns 172 Legends and ghosts editMany legends have been documented along the canal during its operating days nbsp Recent view of the 9 mile level between 33 and 34 miles where the ghosts were reported to haunt On the 9 mile level around the 33 34 mile mark some boats were used to transport soldiers to the Battle of Ball s Bluff during the American Civil War One of the boats sank and it was said that departed ghosts of the soldiers haunted the area Canallers would avoid tying up at night in that area 179 It was also said that the mules would sense it and would hurry through the area it was also called Haunted House Bend and also that there were tales of a ghost dog there 180 There was reported the ghost of an Indian chief on the 14 mile level around Big Pool 180 A lady ghost was reported on the 2 mile level at Catoctin between locks 28 and 29 which would walk over the waste weir down the towpath and to the river 180 A headless man was reported to haunt the Paw Paw Tunnel 181 A Romeo and Juliet like story was documented near Lock 69 Twigg s lock See Locks on the C amp O Canal Lock names for more info nbsp Monocacy Aqueduct in 2023 where the ghost of a robber could allegedly be seen on moonless nightsA report of buried treasure somewhere between Nolands Ferry and the Monocacy river that could be found if one followed a ghost of a robber allegedly seen from time to time on moonless nights crossing the Monocacy Aqueduct carrying a lantern 182 Points of interest editHere is a list of items on the canal as a canaller traveling by boat from Georgetown to Cumberland would see Note some present day items are on this list also A typical canaller would know the canal by the names of the levels and the locks 183 Most list of points of the canal s points of interest do not contain a list of the levels with their names like we have here Also note that most lists of locks do not include Guard Locks 4 and 5 which a boat would have to pass through if navigating the entire canal It was generally possible for boats to pass through the other guard locks also but that is if they were going to other destinations usually on the Virginia West Virginia side of the river Also note sometimes there are often slight discrepancies in mileages for instance NPS and Hahn 184 reports Lock 75 at 175 60 miles Davies lists 175 35 175 50 185 and Hahn also reports the NPS mile markers are in the wrong place from Milepost 117 to Lock 51 186 further adding to the confusion Also note that Some streets in Georgetown were renamed mostly as numbered streets pursuant to an 1895 law See Georgetown street renaming Locks and FeaturesLock or Level Mile Features LocationTidewater Lock 0 Beginning of Canal Watergate complexRock Creek Level 02 Rock CreekLock 1 0 38Short Level 0 42 Green St Bridge 29th St NW Lock 2 0 42Short LevelLock 3 0 49 Washington Street Bridge 30th St NW Short LevelLock 4 0 54 Jefferson St Bridge Thomas Jefferson Street NW 4 Mile Level of Georgetown 0 59 Congress St Bridge 31st St NW 0 68 High St Bridge Wisconsin Avenue NW 0 61 Water intake blocked off for mill 0 80 Potomac Street Bridge0 81 Water intake abandoned for Wilkens Rogers Mill0 84 Market St Bridge 33rd St NW 0 84 Frederick St Bridge 34th St NW 0 91 Another water intake abandoned Wilkens Rogers Flour Mill 1 0 Key Bridge1 07 Abutment of former Aqueduct Bridge to Alexandria1 51 Spillway1 52 Waste weir 1st and 2nd on this level 2 26 Inclined plane3 1 Fletcher s Boat House3 23 Waste weir 3rd 3 64 Arizona Avenue Railway Bridge Capital Crescent Trail 3 9 Spillway 2nd 4 2 Chain Bridge4 54 Dalecarlia Water Treatment plant discharge pipe runs under the canal to the Potomac R Lock 5 Brookmont 5 02 Inlet gate 1 lower Short Level 5 20 Service road to Upper Inlet GateLock 6 Magazine Lock 5 4Two mile level of Magazine 5 64 Groundbreaking started here Also Dam No 15 78 Little Falls diversion dam amp pumping station Washington Aqueduct 6 08 Overfall overflow 187 6 46 Sycamore Island BridgeLock 7 7 0One mile level of Cabin John 7 10 Waste weirLock 8 1st of 7 locks 8 33Lock 9 7 Locks 8 7Lock 10 7 Locks 8 79Short Level 8 93 Rock Run culvert Rock Run was a feeder Lock 11 7 Locks 8 97Lock 12 7 Locks 9 29Lock 13 7 Locks 9 37 American Legion BridgeLock 14 Last of 7 Locks 9 47Four mile level of the Log Wall 9 67 Waste weir9 9 Abutment of swivel bridge9 9 Billy Goat C Trail downstream entrance10 41 Carderock10 76 Informal overflow 188 10 95 Billy Goat C Trail upstream entrance11 44 Billy Goat B Trail downstream entrance11 52 Marsden Tract Campground12 1 Billy Goat B Trail upstream entrance12 28 Anglers Inn12 60 Wide Water begins till Lock 15 12 8 Billy Goat A Trail downstream entrance13 00 Bridge and waste weir13 2 Billy Goat A Trail Emergency exit trailLock 15 1st of 6 Locks 13 45 End of Wide WaterLock 16 6 Locks 13 60Short Level 13 75 Stop gate13 76 Billy Goat A Trail Upstream EntranceLock 17 6 Locks 13 99Short Level 14 05 Trail to Great FallsLock 18 6 Locks 14 09Short Level 14 10 Impound dam for Unused Great Falls feederLock 19 6 Locks 14 17Lock 20 Last of 6 Locks 14 30 Great Falls TavernTwo mile level of Six Locks 14 34 Waste weir15 76 Informal overflow 189 15 98 Rockville water plant intakeLock 21 Swain s Lock 16 64Three mile level of White Oak Spring 16 67 Waste weir16 74 Informal overflow 190 17 36 WSSC water plant intake17 60 Transcontinental Gas Pipeline17 74 Culvert 25 Watts Branch17 78 Columbia Gas PipelineLock 22 Pennyfield Lock 19 632 Mile Level 19 67 Waste weir20 01 Muddy Branch Culvert 30 Lock 23 Violette s Lock 22 12 Inlet Lock 2 Seneca Feeder Short Level of Seneca 22 4 Waste weirLock 24 Riley s Lock 22 80 Seneca Aqueduct No 1 amp waste weirEight mile level of Riley s Lock 24 94 Informal Overflow 100 long 191 26 0 Horsepen Branch Hiker Biker campsite27 2 Sycamore Landing30 5 Chisel Branch Hiker Biker30 64 Goose Creek River LocksLock 25 Edward s Ferry 30 8Nine mile level of Whites Ferry 30 89 Waste weir31 94 Broad Run Trunk Aqueduct 34 4 Turtle Run Hiker Biker Campsite35 49 White s Ferry38 2 Marble Quarry Hiker Biker Campsite39 17 Waste weirLock 26 Wood s Lock 39 37Two Mile level 39 49 Abandoned waste weir39 6 Dickerson Regional Park parking lotLock 27 Spink s Ferry 41 5Seven mile level of Point of Rocks 41 52 Waste weir42 19 Monocacy Aqueduct42 40 Indian Flats Hiker Biker overnight camp44 58 Nolands Ferry44 76 Frederick County water plant intake47 79 Point of Rocks Station on other side 48 20 Point of Rocks pivot bridge48 40 Point of Rocks Railroad Tunnel CSX Transportation 48 90 Waste weirLock 28 Fulton s Lock 48 932 Mile Level 48 96 Waste weirLock 29 Lander or Catoctin 50 89Four mile level of Brunswick 51 05 Waste Weir51 53 Catoctin Aqueduct No 3 53 21 Informal overflow 192 53 51 Brunswick Maryland begins54 95 Waste weirLock 30 Brunswick 55 0Three Mile Level of Weverton 57 87 Ruins of WevertonLock 31 Weverton 58 0Two mile Level of Sandy Hook 58 06 Waste weir58 08 Informal overflow 115 59 44 Closed Blue Ridge Hiker Biker campsite59 6 Sandy HookLock 32 60 23Short Level 60 62 Shenandoah River LockLock 33 Harpers Ferry 60 7 Harpers FerryGoodheart LevelLock 34 Goodheart s Lock 61 57Feeder Level 62 27 Dam No 362 27 Inlet Lock 3Lock 35 62 33 Drydock for boat repairsShort levelLock 36 62 44Four mile level below Mountain Lock 62 59 Waste weir64 89 Dargan Bend boat launchLock 37 Mountain Lock 66 96Six mile level below Shepherdstown 67 02 Informal overflow 193 67 15 Waste weir69 40 Antietam Creek Aqueduct No 4 72 65 Shepherdstown river lockLock 38 Shepherdstown lock 72 80One mile level above Shepherdstown 72 86 Informal overflow 194 Lock 39 One Mile Lock 74 0Five Mile Level of Sharpsburg 74 07 Waste weir76 69 Informal overflow 195 Lock 40 79 41Six mile level of Taylor s Landing 79 65 Waste weir80 95 Taylor s Landing amp Mercerville84 35 Waste weir84 40 Dam No 484 41 Stop gateGuard Lock No 4 85 4Big Slackwater 88 0 Stanley L Anderson stone building Ruin 88 1 McMahon s MillLock 41 88 9 Reenter canal from Big SlackwaterShort levelLock 42 89 04Four mile level of Big Slackwater 89 63 Dellinger Widewater91 24 End of Dellinger Widewater92 25 Midpoint of Canal92 73 Waste weirLock 43 92 96Six mile level below Williamsport 98 90 Waste weirLock 44 99 3 WilliamsportSeven mile level above Williamsport 99 65 Salisbury St Bridge99 69 Railroad lift bridge Western Maryland Railway 99 80 Conococheague Creek Aqueduct No 5 106 61 Waste weirGuard Lock 5 106 8 Dam No 5Little SlackwaterLock 45 Two Locks 107 27 Two Locks Reenter above Little Slackwater Short LevelLock 46 Two Locks 107 42Two mile level of Four Locks 107 62 Overflow semi formal 196 108 10 Charles Mill RuinsLock 47 Four Locks 108 8Short LevelLock 48 Four Locks 108 8Short LevelLock 49 Four Locks 108 8Short LevelLock 50 Four Locks 108 8Fourteen Mile Level 109 32 Waste weir109 54 North Mountain Hiker Biker campsite110 29 Stop gate112 4 Fort Frederick State Park amp Stop Gate112 5 Big Pool Begins113 02 Waste weir and spillway113 94 Big Pool Ends114 15 Stop gate116 04 Licking Creek Aqueduct No 6 118 46 Waste weir amp Culvert 166119 84 Little Pool lower end119 51 Waste weir amp Culvert 170119 71 Stop gate119 91 Informal overflow 197 120 39 Little Pool Hiker Biker campsite120 56 Abandoned waste weir overflow 198 120 75 Little Pool Upper end122 25 Waste weir amp Culvert 174Lock 51 122 59Short LevelLock 52 122 85Seven mile level of Hancock 122 92 Tonoloway Creek Aqueduct No 7 amp waste weir123 56 Hancock Maryland begins124 38 Hancock Maryland ends126 43 White Rock Hiker Biker campsite126 84 Waste weir amp Culvert 186127 00 Site of waste weir and overflow 199 127 4 Round Top Cement Mill ruins128 0 Pump remains for Sand Glass129 87 Waste weirLock 53 Irishman s Lock 130 0Four Mile Level below Dam No 6 130 8 Leopard s Mill Cement mill 130 93 Informal overflow 200 132 40 Informal overflow 201 133 17 Waste weir133 94 Feeder canal from Dam No 6Lock 54 133 96Short LevelLock 55 134 08Two mile level above Dam No 6aka Two Mile Level of Pearre dd 134 06 Dam No 6 and Guard lock No 6 134 25 Waste weir amp spillwayLock 56 Sideling Lock 136 2 Sideling HillThree Mile Level of Sideling Hill 136 56 Sideling Hill Creek Aqueduct No 8 amp waste weirLock 57 139 2Five Mile Level below Orleans 140 8 Little Orleans140 90 Fifteen Mile Creek Aqueduct No 9 amp waste weir142 04 Informal overflow 202 Lock 58 143 9Two mile level of Bill Bell s Lock 146 02 Waste weirLock 59 146 6Three mile level of the brick house 149 45 Waste weirLock 60 149 7Four mile level below the tunnel 153 01 Waste weirLock 61 153 1One Mile level below the tunnelLock 62 154 17Short Level 154 29 Waste weirLock 63 1 3 154 49Short LevelLock 64 2 3 154 6Short LevelLock 66 154 7Seven Mile Level above the Tunnel 155 20 Downstream portal of Paw Paw Tunnel155 78 Upstream portal of Paw Paw Tunnel156 2 Division Superintendent s house156 65 Spillway and overflow156 66 Waste weir160 26 Waste weir amp spillwaysLock 67 Darbey s Lock 161 77Three mile level of South Branch 162 34 Town Creek Aqueduct No 10 162 40 Abandoned waste weir162 41 Waste weir amp culvert164 79 South Branch of Potomac RiverLock 68 Crabtree s Lock 164 8Two Mile level of Old Town 164 85 Abandoned overflow waste weir 203 165 3 Basin166 24 Waste weirLock 69 Twigg s Lock 166 45Short LevelLock 70 Oldtown 166 7Short LevelLock 71 167 06Eight Mile level of Old Town 167 11 Waste weir167 5 Deep cut171 45 Spillway173 6 Patterson s Creek bridge174 10 Steam pump aux water 204 174 32 Waste weirLock 72 The Narrows or 10 Mile Lock 174 46One mile level of the Narrows 175 30 Head of the NarrowsLock 73 North Branch 1 175 4Lock 74 North Branch 2 175 5Short level 175 58 Waste weirLock 75 North Branch 3 or Keifer s Lock 175 6Nine mile level 179 35 Waste weir and Culvert 237180 66 Evitts Creek Aqueduct 11 183 39 Stop gate and waste weir183 55 Spillway and waste weir184 Cumberland Maryland Basin184 Canal PlaceGuard Lock No 8 184 5 End of CanalCitations edit The Grand Old Ditch the C amp O In American Transportation History Archived May 20 2014 at the Wayback Machine Hahn Pathway 1 Kytle p 10 Kytle p 12 Ward George W 1899 Early Development of Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Project Johns Hopkins Press Retrieved 2013 12 20 George Washington Ward p 63 Kytle p 20 a b Kytle p 25 Bearss Edwin C The Composite Locks NPS 1968 p 57 According to the Army Engineers report in 1874 75 the B amp O Railroad mainline from Cumberland to Pittsburgh follows the route originally surveyed for the canal See Hahn Pathway 258 259 a b Unrau p 55 Unrau p 56 Unrau Harland D Historic Structure Report the Culverts Historical Data National Park Service Denver Colorado January 1976 p 6 7 Unrau p 105 Hahn Towpath Guidep 7 J Thomas Scharf History of Baltimore City and County published 1881 reprinted 1971 Hahn Towpath Guide p 27 On the same day the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad set its First Stone with the aging sole surviving Signer of the Declaration of Independence Charles Carroll of Carrollton Kytle p 27 Unrau p 25 Unrau Harland D Historical Structure Report The Canal Prism Including Towpath with Canal Berm and River Revetments Historical Data PDF US Department of the Interior National Park Service Archived PDF from the original on 2017 02 25 Retrieved 2013 08 02 p 45 Hahn Towpath p 60 61 a b Unrau p 227 Unrau p 239 Kytle p 84 a b c Lynch John A Justice Douglas the Chesapeake amp Ohio Canal and Maryland Legal History University of Baltimore Law Forum 35 Spring 2005 104 125 Kytle p 33 34 Unrau Canal Prism p 43 Kytle p 43 Unrau Canal Prism p 42 The Canal Connection marker The Historical Marker Database Archived from the original on 2011 07 26 Retrieved 2011 03 02 Washington City Canal Plaque beside the Lockkeeper s House marking the former location of in Washington D C Memorials monuments statues amp other outdoor art in the Washington D C area amp beyond by M Solberg Archived from the original on 2010 02 23 Retrieved 2011 03 02 The Washington City Canal marker The Historical Marker Database Archived from the original on 2011 07 26 Retrieved 2011 03 02 Lock Keeper s House marker HMdb org The Historical Marker Database Archived from the original on 2018 12 17 Retrieved 2011 03 02 Coordinates of lock keeper s house 38 53 31 N 77 02 23 W 38 8919305 N 77 0397498 W 38 8919305 77 0397498 Lockkeeper s house from Washington branch of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Kytle p 84 Hahn Pathway 6 Unrau p 41 Unrau Canal Prism p 49 Unrau Canal Prism p 50 51 Unrau Canal Prism p 52 Bearss p 33 Coordinates of abutment and canal bed of Potomac Aqueduct Bridge 38 54 16 N 77 04 13 W 38 904328 N 77 070407 W 38 904328 77 070407 Abutment and Canal Bed of Potomac Aqueduct Bridge Unrau Canal Prism p 56 George Washington Howard The Monumental City Its Past History and Present Resources p 648 Unrau pp 239 242 Unrau p 237 a b Edwin C Bearss The Composite Locks PDF US Department of the Interior National Park Service Archived PDF from the original on 2013 07 13 Retrieved 2013 05 24 p 20 Kytle p 53 54 a b Archived copy PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2012 10 25 Retrieved 2013 05 15 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Unrau p 251 Unrau p 174 ff Unrau p 207 208 Bearss p 57 Kytle p 64 Mackintosh 1 a b c Hahn Pathway 7 Kytle p 61 note 10 Hahn Pathway 257 Davies p ix Davies does not indicate if this tunnel was ever used nor its location Davies p ix 41st annual report of the C amp O Canal Company 1869 p 4 5 Unrau p 476 a b Unrau p 813 Frequently Asked Questions Chesapeake amp Ohio Canal National Historical Park U S National Park Service Nps gov 2016 03 16 Archived from the original on 2021 03 24 Retrieved 2016 08 11 a b Unrau p 811 Local Financial News Evening Star Washington D C No 15716 July 9 1903 p 2 Retrieved 30 July 2021 Unrau p 814 815 RE THE TITLE TO C amp O CANAL FROM THE DISTRICT TO POINT OF ROCKS On The Question Of Whether The United States Can Acquire By Purchase A Valid Title To The Portion Of The Chesapeake And Ohio Canal Extending From Washington To Point Of Rocks Md Mr Assistant Attorney General Blair November 14 1936 Unrau p 457 Unrau p 814 Unrau p 446 447 a b Unrau p 498 Hahn Boatmen p 15 17 Kytle p 154 155 Hahn Boatmen p 42 a b Hahn Boatmen p 49 Hahn Boatmen p 48 Hahn Boatmen p 47 Unrau p 848 a b Hahn Boatmen p 79 Unrau p 318 Donald R Shaffer We are Again in the Midst of Trouble Flooding on the Potomac River and the Struggle for the Sustainability of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal 1828 1996 PDF US Department of the Interior National Park Service Archived PDF from the original on 2012 11 13 Retrieved 2013 05 23 p 64 Unrau p 499 Shaffer p 62 Hahn Boatmen p 79 Unrau p 321 Shaffer p 65 Floods on Potomac PDF Archived PDF from the original on 31 March 2014 Retrieved 28 March 2014 Hahn Towpath Guide p 25 Hahn Towpath Guide p 62 Peck Garrett 2012 The Potomac River A History and Guide Charleston SC The History Press pp 62 63 ISBN 978 1 60949 600 5 Unrau p 208 footnote 470 Hahn Towpath Guide p 62 63 Hahn Towpath Guide p 99 100 Unrau p 167 238 a b Unrau p 336 Kytle p 71 72 Hahn Boatmen p 55 Unrau p 185 Hahn Towpath p 51 Hahn Towpath Guide p 82 Unrau p 343 Unrau p 251 252 Kytle p 145 146 Hahn Boatmen p 70 Hahn Boatmen p 69 Kytle p 66 a b Kytle p 67 Hahn Towpath Guide p 75 List of Classified Structures Hscl cr nps gov Archived from the original on 2016 12 13 Retrieved 2016 08 11 List of Classified Structures Hscl cr nps gov 1979 08 09 Archived from the original on 2016 12 13 Retrieved 2016 08 11 List of Classified Structures Hscl cr nps gov 1979 08 09 Archived from the original on 2013 06 15 Retrieved 2016 08 11 Kytle p 271 Hahn Towpath Guide p 36 86 96 a b Hahn Towpath Guide p 96 Hahn Towpath Guide p 86 p 93 Archived 2013 06 18 at the Wayback Machine National Park Service The Paw Paw Tunnel is 3118 feet 950 m long and is lined with over six million bricks The 3 4 mile 1 200 m long tunnel saved the canal builders almost six miles 10 km of construction along the Paw Paw bends of the Potomac River It took twelve years to build and was only wide enough for single lane traffic Unrau p 22 Coordinates of inclined plane 38 54 28 N 77 05 29 W 38 907882 N 77 091272 W 38 907882 77 091272 Inclined Plane Unrau p 480 a b c Hahn Towpath Guide p 20 Skramstad Harold The Georgetown Canal Incline Technology and Culture Vol 10 No 4 Oct 1969 p 555 Hahn Towpath Guide p 19 Unrau p 578 Unrau p 594 davies p xiv List of Classified Structures Hscl cr nps gov 1979 08 09 Archived from the original on 2015 09 24 Retrieved 2016 08 11 Shaffer p 83 Hahn Towpath Guide p 97 for instance Unrau p 239 241 Unrau p 331 Unrau p 338 Unrau p 761 a b c Unrau p 337 Unrau p 349 350 Unrau p 357 Hahn Boatmen p 29 Unrau p 360 Hahn p 64 Unrau p 365 Unrau p 367 Hahn boatmen p 40 Unrau p 383 Unrau p 808 Hahn Boatmen p 76 a b Unrau p 724 Kytle p 221 Western Maryland Historical Library Whilbr Archived from the original on 2016 09 18 Retrieved 2016 08 11 Hahn Towpath Guide p 112 Unrau p 360 361 Unrau p 820 Unrau p 219 220 Hahn Pathway p 40 a b Kytle p 173 Hahn Boatmen p 14 Kytle p 155 Kytle p 171 Footnote a b c Hahn Boatmen p 64 Unrau p 220 Hahn Boatmen p 15 Unrau p 344 Unrau p 345 Archived copy PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2016 03 05 Retrieved 2014 11 27 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b Unrau p 806 a b Unrau p 818 Unrau p 810 Springer Ethel M Canal Boat Children U S Department of Labor 1923 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2014 06 05 Retrieved 2013 07 25 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link p 5 a b c Springer p 6 Springer p 8 Springer p 4 a b c Unrau p 819 Unrau p 765 a b Springer p 11 Kytle p 133 Springer p 7 Hahn Boatmen p 21 22 Unrau p 817 Hahn Towpath Guide p 68 69 a b c Hahn Boatmen p 66 Hahn Towpath Guide p 198 Hahn Towpath Guide p 82 Note digging on park property is illegal without permission Hahn Boatmen p 54 Hahn Towpath p 217 Davies p 581 Hahn Towpath p 166 Davies p 55 Hahn Towpath Guide P 36 Hahn Towpath Guide p 46 Davies p 96 97 Davies p 117 Hahn Towpath Guide P 89 Hahn Towpath Guide p 117 Davies p 243 Davies p 253 He calls it an overfall Hahn Towpath Guide p 158 Hahn Towpath Guide P 169 Davies p 386 Davies p 403 Hahn Towpath Guide p 179 Hahn Towpath Guide p 180 Hahn Towpath Guide p 189 Davies p 539 See Unrau p 470 First installed in 1856 at south branch but later moved upstream to here in 1872 According to Hahn Hahn Towpath Guide 215 the pump s capacity was 24 cu ft per sec Note that a lock about 11400 cu ft can consume 50 cu ft sec 355 gal sec when filling General and cited references editCamagna Dorothy 2006 The C amp O Canal From Great National Project to National Historical Park Gaithersburg Maryland Belshore Publications ISBN 0 9770449 0 4 Davies William E 1999 The Geology and Engineering Structures of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal An Engineering Geologist s Descriptions and Drawings PDF Glen Echo Md C amp O Canal Association Archived PDF from the original on 2014 07 25 Retrieved 2014 07 21 Hahn Thomas F Swiftwater 1984 The Chesapeake amp Ohio Canal Pathway to the Nation s Capital Metuchen New Jersey The Scarecrow Press Inc ISBN 0 8108 1732 2 Hahn Thomas F Swiftwater 1993 Towpath Guide to the C amp O Canal Georgetown Tidelock to Cumberland Revised Combined Edition Shepherdstown WV American Canal and Transportation Center ISBN 0 933788 66 5 Hahn Thomas F Swiftwater 1980 The C amp O Canal Boatmen 1892 1924 Shepherdstown WV American Canal and Transportation Center Kytle Elizabeth 1983 Home on the Canal Cabin John MD Seven Locks Press ISBN 978 080185328 9 Mackintosh Barry 1991 C amp O Canal The Making of A Park Washington D C National Park Service Department of the Interior National Park Service 2006 08 08 C amp O Canal Educational Programs Lessons Page United States Department of the Interior Archived from the original on 2008 10 12 Retrieved 2008 06 02 Unrau Harland D Historical Resource Study Chesapeake amp Ohio Canal PDF US Department of the Interior National Park Service Archived PDF from the original on 2015 07 14 Retrieved 2013 05 02 This resource survey has a lot of information unavailable elsewhere on the construction and operation of the canal Butcher Russell D 1997 Exploring Our National Historic Parks and Sites Roberts Rinehart Publishers National Park Service Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historical Park Retrieved 2010 05 11 Further reading editLife on the Chesapeake amp Ohio Canal 1859 York Pa American Canal and Transportation Center 1975 Achenbach Joel The Grand Idea George Washington s Potomac and the Race to the West Simon and Schuster 2004 Blackford John 1771 1839 Ferry Hill Plantation journal life on the Potomac River and the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal 4 January 1838 15 January 1839 2d ed Shepherdstown W Va American Canal and Transportation Center 1975 Cotton Robert The Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Through the Lens of Sir Robert Cotton Fradin Morris Hey ey ey lock Cabin John Md See and Know Press 1974 Gutheim Frederick The Potomac New York Rinehart and Co 1949 Guzy Dan Navigation on the Upper Potomac and Its Tributaries Western Maryland Regional Library Archived 2011 08 20 at the Wayback Machine 2011 Hahn Thomas F The Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Lock Houses and Lock Keepers High Mike The C amp O Canal Companion Johns Hopkins University Press 2001 Kapsch Robert and Kapsch Elizabeth Perry Monocacy Aqueduct on the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Medley Press 2005 Kapsch Robert The Potomac Canal George Washington and the Waterway West Morgantown WV West Virginia University Press 2007 Martin Edwin A Beginner s Guide to Wildflowers of the C and O Towpath 1984 Mulligan Kate Canal Parks Museums and Characters of the Mid Atlantic Wakefield Press Washington DC 1999 Mulligan Kate Towns along the Towpath 1997 Available from C amp O Association Here is Chapter 3 about Seneca National Park Service Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historical Park Washington DC NPS Division of Publications 1991 Rada James Jr Canawlers Legacy Press 2001 Southworth Scott et al Geology of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historical Park and Potomac River Corridor District of Columbia Maryland West Virginia and Virginia U S Geological Survey Professional Paper 1691 Archived 2011 06 29 at the Wayback Machine 2008 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chesapeake amp Ohio Canal Official National Park Service Site Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company records at the University of Maryland libraries Jack Rottier photographs and papers of the C and O Canal Online Collection Special Collections Research Center Estelle and Melvin Gelman Library The George Washington University C amp O Canal Trust C amp O Canal Association The economic impact of the C amp O Canal on canal communities in Washington County Maryland Preliminary Guide to the Thomas Hahn Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Collection 1939 1993 Special Collections Research Center Estelle and Melvin Gelman Library The George Washington University The Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Documentary produced by WETA TV C amp O Canal is part of the Chesapeake Bay Gateways and Watertrails Network The Building of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal A National Park Service Teaching with Historic Places TwHP lesson plan Historic American Engineering Record HAER No MD 23 Potomac Edison Company Chesapeake amp Ohio Canal Bridge Spanning C amp O Canal South of U S 11 Williamsport Washington County MD 13 photos 10 measured drawings 19 data pages 3 photo caption pages HAER No MD 24 Salisbury Street Bridge Spanning C amp O Canal Milepost 99 65 amp WM Railroad Williamsport Washington County MD 1 photo 2 measured drawings 2 data pages 1 photo caption page HAER No MD 26 Chesapeake amp Ohio Canal Lockhouse 75 State Route 51 amp Patterson Creek Cumberland Allegany County MD 1 measured drawing HAER No MD 27 C Chesapeake amp Ohio Canal Salty Dog Tavern Lock 33 vicinity Sharpsburg Washington County MD 1 measured drawing HAER No MD 28 Chesapeake amp Ohio Canal Mule Barn Four Lock Road Clear Spring Washington County MD 3 measured drawings HAER No MD 69 Chesapeake amp Ohio Canal White s Ferry Iron Bridge Mile 35 49 of C amp O Canal National Park Martinsburg Montgomery County MD 4 photos 5 data pages 1 photo caption page HAER No MD 70 Chesapeake amp Ohio Canal Iron Bridge at Lock No 68 Mile 164 82 of C amp O Canal National Park Oldtown Allegany County MD 5 photos 1 color transparency 6 data pages 2 photo caption pages HAER No MD 71 Chesapeake amp Ohio Canal McCoy s Ferry Road Culvert Mile 110 42 of C amp O Canal National Park Big Spring Washington County MD 2 photos 8 data pages 1 photo caption page HAER No MD 72 Chesapeake amp Ohio Canal Prather s Neck Road Culvert Mile 108 74 of C amp O Canal National Park Big Spring Washington County MD 3 photos 8 data pages 1 photo caption page Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chesapeake and Ohio Canal amp oldid 1198221204, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.