Miami and Erie Canal

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In 1825, the Ohio Legislature approved funding to construct an Ohio water works system. It took from 1825 to 1845 to complete the Miami-Erie Canal & have it operational.

The Miami and Erie Canal was a canal that connected the Ohio River in Cincinnati, Ohio with Lake Erie in Toledo, Ohio. It consisted of 19 aqueducts, 3 guard locks and 103 canal locks. Each lock measured 90 by 15 feet and they collectively raised the canal 395 feet above Lake Erie and 513 feet above the Ohio River. The peak of the canal was called the Loramie Summit and extended 19 miles between New Bremen, Ohio to lock 1-S in Lockington north of Piqua, Ohio. The system consisted of 301.49 miles of canal channel and was completed at a cost of $8,062,680.07 in 1845. Boats were towed along the canal using either donkeys or horses walking on a prepared towpath along the bank. The boats typically travelled at a rate of 4 to 5 miles per hour.

Grand Lake St. Marys, an artificial lake west of St. Marys, Ohio was originally constructed as a reservoir to supply water for the canal.

Contents

Construction Standards

  • 4 ft. water depth.
  • 40 ft. wide at water level.
  • 10 ft. wide towpath in addition to mandated outer slopes.
  • All slopes are 4-1/2 ft. horizontal to 4 ft. perpendicular.
  • The canal could handle boats up to 32 ft. long and 14 ft. wide.

Decline and Abandonment

Completed just before most of the railroads in Ohio were built, the canal competed with railroads through much of its useful life. Ice in the winter, as well as the slowness of the boats, made it fairly impractical compared to railroads, and by 1906, the canal had largely ceased to operate. A catastrophic flood of the Great Miami River in 1913 and the subsequent flood control measures constructed by the Miami Conservancy District destroyed much of the canal infrastructure along the southern portion of the route where it paralleled the Great Miami River. One of the original locks (#17) is located in the Carillon Historical Park in Dayton, Ohio.

Much of the original towpath served as the right-of-way for the Cincinnati and Lake Erie Railroad, an electric interurban streetcar that operated until 1940.

From 1920 to 1925 $6 million dollars was spent to use the bed of the canal to build a downtown subway. The surface was paved over to form Central Parkway. Funds ran out before the Cincinnati Subway was completed.

Cities and Towns Along the Canal

The following is a list of towns and cities (arranged North to South) along the Miami and Erie Canal.

External links