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Illinois and Michigan Canal
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==History== ===Conception=== The first known Europeans to travel the [[Illinois Country|area]], [[Father Marquette]] and [[Louis Joliet]], went through the [[Chicago Portage]] on their return trip. Joliet remarked that with a canal they could remove the need to [[portage]] and the French could create an empire spanning the continent. The first quantitative survey of the portage was performed in 1816 by [[Stephen H. Long]]. It was on the basis of these measurements that he was able to make a specific proposal for a canal.<ref>{{cite book |last=Long |first=Stephen H. |author-link=Stephen H. Long |editor-last1=Kane |editor-first1=Lucile M. |editor-last2=Holmquist |editor-first2=June D. |editor-last3=Gliman |editor-first3=Carolyn |title=The Northern Expeditions of Stephen H. Long |url=https://archive.org/details/northernexpediti0000long|url-access=registration |year=1978 |publisher=Minnesota Historical Society |page=[https://archive.org/details/northernexpediti0000long/page/7 7] |isbn=9780873511292 }}</ref> With several [[slave states]] recently admitted to the Union, [[Nathaniel Pope]] and [[Ninian Edwards]] saw the opportunity to make [[Illinois]] a state. They proposed moving the border northward from the southern tip of Lake Michigan to allow the canal to be within a single state. They believed that the canal would firmly align Illinois with the free states and so Congress granted them [[U.S. state|statehood]] even though Illinois did not meet the population requirements. ===Construction=== [[File:Illinois-michigan-canal.png|thumb|The location and course of the Illinois and Michigan Canal]] In 1824, [[Samuel D. Lockwood]], one of the first commissioners of the canal, was given the authorization to hire contractors to survey a route for the canal to follow.<ref name="coffin">{{cite book | last = Coffin | first = William | title = Life and Times of Hon. Samuel D. Lockwood | url = https://archive.org/details/cu31924018816870 | publisher = Knight & Leonard Co. | year = 1889 | location = Chicago, IL | page = [https://archive.org/details/cu31924018816870/page/n50 41]}}</ref> Construction on the canal began in 1836, although it was stopped for several years due to an [[Illinois]] state financial crisis related to the [[Panic of 1837]]. The Canal Commission had a grant of {{convert|284000|acre|ha}} of federal land which it sold at {{convert|1.25|$/acre|$/sqkm}} to finance the construction. Still, money had to be borrowed from [[Eastern United States]] and [[United Kingdom|British]] investors to finish the canal. Most of the canal work was done by [[Irish people|Irish]] immigrants who [[Navvy|previously worked]] on the [[Erie Canal]]. The work was considered dangerous and many workers died, although no official records exist to indicate how many. The Irish immigrants who toiled to build the canal were often derided as a sub-class and were treated very poorly by other citizens of the city. The canal was finished in 1848<ref>{{cite web |title=Wards of Chicago in 1900 Part 4βFifth & Sixth Wards |url=https://chicagology.com/goldenage/wardsofchicagopart4/ |website=chicagology.com |access-date=7 January 2025}}</ref> at a total cost of $6,170,226. Chicago Mayor [[James Hutchinson Woodworth]] presided over the opening ceremony. Pumps were used to draw water to fill the canal near Chicago, which was soon supplemented by water from the [[Calumet Feeder Canal]]. The feeder was supplied by water from the Calumet River and originated in [[Blue Island, Il]]. The [[DuPage River]] provided water farther south. In 1871 the canal was deepened to speed up the current and to improve [[sewage]] disposal. ===Completion=== The canal was eventually {{Convert|60|ft}} wide and {{Convert|6|ft}} deep, with [[towpath]]s constructed along each edge to permit mules to be harnessed to tow barges along the canal. Towns were planned out along the path of the canal spaced at intervals corresponding to the length that the mules could haul the barges. It had seventeen [[canal lock|locks]] and four [[Navigable aqueduct|aqueducts]] to cover the {{Convert|140|ft|adj=on}} height difference between Lake Michigan and the Illinois River. From 1848 to 1852 the canal was a popular passenger route, but passenger service ended in 1853 with the opening of the [[Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad]] that ran parallel to the canal. The canal had its peak shipping year in 1882 and remained in use until 1933. Experiencing a remarkable recovery from the devastating [[Great Chicago Fire]] of 1871, Chicago rebuilt rapidly along the shores of the Chicago River. The river was especially important to the development of the city since all wastes from houses, farms, the stockyards, and other industries could be dumped into the river and carried out into Lake Michigan. ===Decline and replacement=== [[File:Starved Rock Lock (COE) tow downbound.jpg|thumb|New lock and dam structures that replaced the historic Illinois and Michigan Canal]] The lake, however, was also the source of drinking water. During a tremendous storm in 1885, the rainfall washed refuse from the river, especially from the highly polluted [[Bubbly Creek]], far out into the lake (the city water intakes are located {{convert|2|mi|km}} offshore). Although [[Chicago 1885 cholera epidemic myth|no epidemics occurred]], the Chicago Sanitary District (now [[Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago|The Metropolitan Water Reclamation District]]) was created by the Illinois legislature in 1889 in response to this close call.<ref>[http://www.straightdope.com/columns/041112.html The Straight Dope: Did 90,000 people die of typhoid fever and cholera in Chicago in 1885?<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> This new agency devised a plan to construct channels and canals to reverse the flow of the rivers away from Lake Michigan and divert the contaminated water downstream where it could be diluted as it flowed into the [[Des Plaines River]] and eventually the Mississippi. In 1892, the direction of part of the Chicago River was reversed by the [[United States Army Corps of Engineers|Army Corps of Engineers]] with the result that the river and much of Chicago's sewage flowed into the canal instead of into [[Lake Michigan]]. The complete reversal of the river's flow was accomplished when the [[Sanitary and Ship Canal]] was opened in 1900. It was replaced in 1933 by the [[Illinois Waterway]], which remains in use. [[File:I and M canal near Willow Springs 2.jpg|left|thumb|Illinois and Michigan Canal west of [[Willow Springs, Illinois|Willow Springs]], where the unused canal is clogged with fallen trees]] ===Rejuvenation=== The actual origin site of the Illinois and Michigan Canal has been converted into a nature park that integrates history, ecology and art to communicate the Canal's importance in the development of Chicago. In 2003 the Chicago Park District, in cooperation with the I & M Canal Association, hired Conservation Design Forum to develop plans to convert the [[brownfield land|brownfield site]] into a landscape that provided for passive recreational uses in a landscape setting with native plant species. Interpretive panels built into a wall along a bike trail were designed by local high school art students.<ref>[http://www.cdfinc.com/Project?project_id=54 Conservation Design Forum]</ref> The plans also called on landscape stabilization techniques to repair a significantly degraded shoreline (water levels can fluctuate as much as 5 feet). Today much of the canal is a long, thin [[linear park]] with canoeing and a {{convert|62.5|mi|km|adj=on}} hiking and biking trail (constructed on the alignment of the mule tow paths). It also includes museums and historical canal buildings. It was designated the first [[National Heritage Corridor]] by [[Congress of the United States|US Congress]] in 1984.
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