Jump to content
Main menu
Main menu
move to sidebar
hide
Navigation
Main page
Recent changes
Random page
Help about MediaWiki
Special pages
Niidae Wiki
Search
Search
Appearance
Create account
Log in
Personal tools
Create account
Log in
Pages for logged out editors
learn more
Contributions
Talk
Editing
Chesapeake and Ohio Canal
(section)
Page
Discussion
English
Read
Edit
View history
Tools
Tools
move to sidebar
hide
Actions
Read
Edit
View history
General
What links here
Related changes
Page information
Appearance
move to sidebar
hide
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
==Locks and engineering== ===Canal prism=== The dimensions of the canal vary quite a bit. Below Lock 5, the width is 80 feet wide and 6 feet deep.<ref>[[#hahn-towpath|Hahn, Towpath Guide]] p. 25</ref> Above Lock 5 to Harper's Ferry it is 60 feet wide and 6 feet deep, and above Harper's Ferry, 50 feet wide.<ref>[[#hahn-towpath|Hahn, Towpath Guide]] p. 62</ref> ===Lift locks and guard locks=== {{Main|Locks on the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal}} To build the canal, the C&O Canal Company used a total of [[Locks on the C&O Canal|74 lift locks]] that raised the canal from sea level at Georgetown to {{convert|610|ft|m}} at Cumberland.<ref name="hahn7">[[#hahn-pathway|Hahn, Pathway]], 7.</ref> Locks 8β27 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]]).<ref>{{cite book|last=Peck|first=Garrett|title=The Potomac River: A History and Guide|year=2012|publisher=The History Press|location=Charleston, SC|isbn=978-1-60949-600-5|pages=62β63}}</ref> 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.<ref>[[#Unrau|Unrau]] p. 208 footnote, 470</ref> 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.<ref>[[#hahn-towpath|Hahn, Towpath Guide]] p. 62-63</ref> The Shenandoah river (about {{convert|422|ft}} 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.<ref>[[#hahn-towpath|Hahn, Towpath Guide]] p. 99-100</ref> After the 1889 flood destroyed the nearby dam in Shepherdstown, the raison d'Γͺtre for the Shepherdstown lock was gone, and so it was filled in.<ref>[[#Unrau|Unrau]] p. 167, 238</ref> At night, lock tenders were required to remove the cranks and handles from all paddle valves to prevent unauthorized use.<ref name="Unrau P. 336">[[#Unrau|Unrau]] p. 336</ref> ====Composite locks==== <!-- "Article" links here --> Despite Mercer not wanting any composite locks, due to measures to economize on the last {{convert|50|mi}} of construction, and the scarcity of good building stone, Locks 58β71 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.<ref>[[#Kytle|Kytle]] p. 71-72.</ref> In time, some of the composite locks were lined with concrete, since the wood kept rotting. ===Levels=== The stretch of canal between locks is called a [[Canal pound|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.<ref>[[#hahn-boatmen|Hahn, Boatmen]] p. 55</ref> Waste weirs and [[Locks on the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal#Bypass flumes|bypass flumes]] at the locks helped control the height of water in the levels (see below about waste weirs). ===Feeders=== <!-- "Article" links here --> [[image:Great Falls Feeder Culvert and Lock 18 on Chesapeake and Ohio Canal, arrow indicating inlet culvert.jpg|right|thumb|200px|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).<ref>[[#Unrau|Unrau]] p. 185</ref> 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.<ref>[[#hahn-towpath|Hahn Towpath]], p. 51</ref> The remains of the Tuscarora feeder can still be seen, but it was made redundant by Dam No. 3 and was no longer used.<ref>[[#hahn-towpath|Hahn, Towpath Guide]] p. 82.</ref> ===Slackwater navigation=== [[Image:Boat at Big slackwater in C and O Canal.jpg|150px|thumb|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 {{convert|3|mi|0}} long, Little Slackwater is about {{convert|1/2|mi|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.<ref>[[#Unrau|Unrau]] p. 343</ref> 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.<ref>[[#Unrau|Unrau]] p. 251-252</ref> 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.<ref>[[#Kytle|Kytle]] p. 145-146</ref> 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.<ref>[[#hahn-boatmen|Hahn, Boatmen]] p. 70</ref> 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.<ref>[[#hahn-boatmen|Hahn, Boatmen]] p. 69</ref> 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.<ref>[[#Kytle|Kytle]], p.66</ref> ===Waste weirs, spillways, and informal overflows (mule drinks)=== {{multiple image | width = 150 | image1 = Waste_Weir_Closed_on_C_and_O_Canal.jpg | alt1 = Waste Weir | caption1 = A waste weir, looking from above. | image2 = Spillway_on_C_and_O_Canal.jpg | alt2 = A spillway | caption2 = A spillway }} To regulate the level of water in the canal prism, waste weirs, informal overflows, and spillways were used. '''[[Waste weir]]s''' removed the surges of water from storms or excess when a lock was emptied.<ref name="Kytle p.67">[[#Kytle|Kytle]] p.67</ref> 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.<ref>[[#hahn-towpath|Hahn, Towpath Guide]] p. 75</ref> Another used to be at Pennyfield lock in 1909β1911. '''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).<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.hscl.cr.nps.gov/insidenps/report.asp?STATE=&PARK=&STRUCTURE=&SORT=2&RECORDNO=221 |title=List of Classified Structures |publisher=Hscl.cr.nps.gov |access-date=2016-08-11 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161213115444/http://www.hscl.cr.nps.gov/insidenps/report.asp?STATE=&PARK=&STRUCTURE=&SORT=2&RECORDNO=221 |archive-date=2016-12-13 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Another spillway near Foxhall road<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.hscl.cr.nps.gov/insidenps/report.asp?STATE=&PARK=&STRUCTURE=&SORT=2&RECORDNO=113 |title=List of Classified Structures |publisher=Hscl.cr.nps.gov |date=1979-08-09 |access-date=2016-08-11 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161213044907/http://www.hscl.cr.nps.gov/insidenps/report.asp?STATE=&PARK=&STRUCTURE=&SORT=2&RECORDNO=113 |archive-date=2016-12-13 |url-status=dead }}</ref> at mile 1.51, was made in 1835. The spillway and waste weir at Big Pool was built in the 1840s<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.hscl.cr.nps.gov/insidenps/report.asp?STATE=&PARK=CHOH&STRUCTURE=&SORT=&RECORDNO=724 |archive-url=https://archive.today/20130615065941/http://www.hscl.cr.nps.gov/insidenps/report.asp?STATE=&PARK=CHOH&STRUCTURE=&SORT=&RECORDNO=724 |url-status=dead |archive-date=2013-06-15 |title=List of Classified Structures |publisher=Hscl.cr.nps.gov |date=1979-08-09 |access-date=2016-08-11 }}</ref> [[image:Informal_Overflow_or_Mule_Drink_on_Chesapeake_and_Ohio_Canal.jpg|thumb|right|200px|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".<ref>[[#Kytle|Kytle]] p. 271</ref> There are documented informal overflows at mileage 10.76, 49.70, and 58.08.<ref>[[#hahn-towpath|Hahn, Towpath Guide]] p. 36, 86, 96</ref> These usually had a drainage ditch which was riprapped with stone to prevent erosion. Historically the towpath dropped two feet to form this overflow.<ref name="Hahn p. 96">[[#hahn-towpath|Hahn, Towpath Guide]] p. 96</ref> 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.<ref>[[#hahn-towpath|Hahn, Towpath Guide]] p. 86</ref> Many of these (e.g. the one at Pennyfield lock) were replaced by a waste weir.<ref>[http://www.canaltrust.org/quarters/pdf/Pennyfield_Lock_CLI.pdf p. 93] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130618224116/http://www.canaltrust.org/quarters/pdf/Pennyfield_Lock_CLI.pdf |date=2013-06-18 }}</ref> ===Paw Paw tunnel=== {{Main|Paw Paw Tunnel}} [[Image:Boat in Paw Paw Tunnel.JPG|150px|thumb|Paw Paw Tunnel]] One of the most impressive engineering features of the canal is the Paw Paw Tunnel, which runs for {{convert|3118|ft|m}} under a mountain.<ref name="hahn7"/> Built to save {{convert|6|mi|spell=in|0}} of construction around the obstacle, the {{convert|3/4|mi|m|adj=on}} 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.<ref name="pawpaw">[[#park-service|National Park Service]], "The Paw Paw Tunnel is 3118 feet (950 m) long and is lined with over six million bricks. The {{convert|3/4|mi|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."</ref> 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.<ref name="nps.gov"/> ===Inclined plane=== [[Image:Inclined Plane Remains on C and O Canal.jpg|thumb|150px|Remains of the inclined plane]]Engineer [[William Rich Hutton]] was instrumental in getting the inclined plane built.<ref name="Unrau p. 22">[[#Unrau|Unrau]] p. 22</ref> Starting in 1875, a [[canal inclined plane]] was built {{convert|2|mi|spell=in}} 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.<ref name="inclined plane">Coordinates of inclined plane: {{coord|38.907882|-77.091272|scale:500|name=Inclined Plane}}</ref> 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]].<ref>[[#Unrau|Unrau]] p. 480</ref> The first boat went through in 1876; 1,918 boats used the inclined plane that first year.<ref name="Towpath20">[[#hahn-towpath|Hahn ''Towpath Guide'']] p. 20</ref> Usage reports conflict: Hahn reports that was only really used for two years, and sporadically in 1889,<ref name="Towpath20"/> 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.<ref>Skramstad, Harold. "The Georgetown Canal Incline" Technology and Culture, Vol. 10, No. 4 (Oct. 1969), p. 555</ref> Although Hahn says it was the largest inclined plane in the world at that time, it was {{convert|600|ft}} long,<ref>[[#hahn-towpath|Hahn ''Towpath Guide'']] p. 19</ref> which is short compared to Plane 9 West of the [[Morris Canal]] at {{convert|1500|ft}}. It originally used a turbine to power it (like the Morris Canal) but was later switched to use steam power.<ref name="Towpath20"/> 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]].<ref name="canal"/> ===Telephone system=== In the late 1870s, the Company installed a telephone system, rather than a telegraph as was the railroad practice, for $15,000.<ref>[[#Unrau|Unrau]] p. 578</ref> 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).<ref>[[#Unrau|Unrau]] p. 594</ref> It is unknown if there are currently any remains of this system. ===Culverts=== [[Image:Muddy Branch and C and O Canal.jpg|150px|thumb|Culvert #30 lets Muddy Branch under the canal]] To carry small streams under the canal, 182 culverts,<ref>[[#davies|davies]] p. xiv</ref> usually of masonry, were built. For instance, culvert #30 was built in 1835 to carry [[Muddy Branch]] under the canal.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.hscl.cr.nps.gov/insidenps/report.asp?STATE=&PARK=CHOH&STRUCTURE=culvert&SORT=&RECORDNO=176 |title=List of Classified Structures |publisher=Hscl.cr.nps.gov |date=1979-08-09 |access-date=2016-08-11 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924031817/http://www.hscl.cr.nps.gov/insidenps/report.asp?STATE=&PARK=CHOH&STRUCTURE=culvert&SORT=&RECORDNO=176 |archive-date=2015-09-24 |url-status=dead }}</ref> 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.<ref>Shaffer p. 83</ref> Some culverts have disappeared or were abandoned, although they still appear in company records.<ref>[[#hahn-towpath|Hahn, Towpath Guide]] p. 97, for instance</ref> ===Aqueducts=== {{Main|Aqueducts on the C&O Canal}} Eleven aqueducts carried the canal over rivers and large streams that were too large to run through a culvert.<ref>[[#Unrau|Unrau]] p. 239-241</ref> ===Canal repairs=== [[Image:Work at BigPool on Chesapeake and Ohio canal.jpg|right|thumb|150px|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.<ref name="Kytle p.67"/>
Summary:
Please note that all contributions to Niidae Wiki may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource (see
Encyclopedia:Copyrights
for details).
Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)
Search
Search
Editing
Chesapeake and Ohio Canal
(section)
Add topic