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Six Canals That Built New England

newenglandhistoricalsociety.com /six-canals-built-new-england/

9/9/2017

In 1803, one of the first New England canals made Boston the undisputed commercial center of New England.

Called the Incredible Ditch, the Middlesex Canal allowed a barge to haul 30 tons of goods back and forth between
Chelmsford (now Lowell) and Charlestown (now Boston). A horse and wagon could haul perhaps three tons over the
rough roads of the era.

Canal fever broke out in New England during the early 19 th century with the opening of the Erie Canal, finished in
1825. The Erie Canal gave New York City an unbeatable advantage over other port cities, and a frenzy of canal-
building broke out throughout New England and the Mid-Atlantic States.

New England states built dozens of canals, first to transport goods to seaports and then to power mills and factories.
By 1840, there were 3,300 miles of canals in the United States.

Today the canals are mostly gone, filled in, paved over or maybe declared a Superfund site. Some still function as
recreational trails, waterways for pleasure boats or even sources of hydroelectric power.

Here are six canals built in New England before the Civil War. If you know of other interesting canals, please mention
them in the comments section below.

Farmington Canal

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An old lock along the Farmington Canal.

The Connecticut Legislature granted six canal charters to private companies, but only two the Enfield and
Farmington were actually built.

Beginning in 1825, Irish immigrants and farmers along the route dug the canal, four feet deep and 20 feet wide using
handmade shovels, wheelbarrows and wagons. The private investors got no state help and struggled financially. It
took 10 years to dig the canal, which began at New Haven, snaked through Granby and ended at the Connecticut
River in Northampton, Mass. The laborers also built 60 stone locks along the 80-mile waterway.

When the New Haven-to-Farmington leg of the canal opened in 1828, four African American boys rode gray horses
that pulled a boat carrying 200 dignitaries sipping refreshments. For a while the towns along the canal prospered,
as apples, butter, cider, and wood flowed south to New Haven; coffee, flour, hides, molasses, salt, and sugar headed
north.

In Plainville, Edna Whiting built a general store with doors opening onto the canal for dropoffs, which included the
original Eli Terry clock weights.

But heavy rains damaged the canal, which required repairs, and toll revenue covered only 20 percent of expenses.
The Farmington Canal turned a profit in just one of its first 10 years, and canal operations were slowly phased out.
Eventually the Farmington Canal owners sold the land to the New Haven and Northampton Company, which built a
railroad that became the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad.

The railroad was turned into a rail trail in the 1990s, and today the Farmington Canal Trail runs from downtown New
Haven to Northampton, Mass.

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Cumberland and Oxford Canal

A steamboat like the ones that used the Cumberland and Oxford Canal between Sebago and Long Lakes
about 1910.

Unlike Connecticut, Maine lawmakers decided the state should support a new canal from inland lakes to the
Portland seaport. A state lottery raised $50,000 and a bank was chartered to provide the funds for the $206,000
project.

The Cumberland and Oxford Canal, opened in 1832, connected the large
lakes of southern Maine with Portland along the Presumpscot River. The 38-
mile canal required 27 locks to reach Sebago Lake, 267 feet above sea level.
Passengers paid a half cent to go through each lock.

Barges carried lumber, firewood, masts, barrel hoops and apples from Maines
forests and farms to the sea. From Windham, the Oriental Powder
Company mills sent down the canal a quarter of the gunpowder used in the
Civil War.

When the railroad that became the Maine Central opened a station in Sebago
Lake, the canal started its decline. A steamboat company continued to carry
tourists between Portland and the Lake Region until the last
steamboat Goodrich burned at its dock in 1932. Songo Lock is still in service
for pleasure boats.

Tours have been held along the old canal in Portland.

Lowell Power Canals

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The Pawtucket Gatehouse, which controls power from the canals.

Lowell, Mass., contains the worlds largest system of canals that generate hydro-electric power, but they began as a
modest transportation waterway in 1796.

The Pawtucket Canal was built so New Hampshire logs could be hauled around the Pawtucket Falls in East
Chelmsford, Mass., to shipyards in Newburyport, Mass.

By 1806, the Middlesex Canal made the Pawtucket Canal irrelevant.

In the early 1820s, associates of Francis Cabot Lowell (who had just died) gave new life to the Pawtucket Canal:
They saw it could be used to power textile mills instead of hauling canal boats. The subsequent canals that fed off
he widened and deepened Pawtucket Canal created the City of Lowell.

First the Merrimack Canal powered the Merrimack Manufacturing Co. Then waterpower from the Hamilton Canal
was sold to other companies. Then the Northern Canal and the Moody Street Feeder increased the waterpower to
the system. The canal owners finally built the Pawtucket Gatehouse to control flow from the Pawtucket Dam into the
Northern Canal.

Lowell's six-mile canals are still there and working. They are part of the Lowell National Historical Park, established
in 1978. For a map of walks along Lowells canals, click here.

Amoskeag Canals

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One of the canals along the Amoskeag Millyard in Manchester, N.H.

Manchester, N.H., was a tiny town called Derryfield when industrialist Samuel Blodget declared, "For as the country
increases in population, we must have manufactories, and here at my canal will be a manufacturing town, the
Manchester of America!"

It was 1807, and Blodget was as good as his word. He had gotten money from state lotteries in Massachusetts and
New Hampshire. In 1798, he broke ground on the canal, which ran parallel to the Merrimack River. Ten years later,
the granite-lined canal was ready for business.

Why a canal? It was nearly impossible to travel up the Merrimack River in New Hampshire. Between Chelmsford,
Mass., and Concord, N.H., the river falls 135 feet, including a 54-foot drop at the Amoskeag Falls. The canal
bypassed the falls through a series of locks.

In 1810, the first textile mills were built along Blodgets canal, then renamed the Amoskeag Canal. They used
secondhand machinery bought from Samuel Slater, but it didnt work well. In 1831 the Amoskeag Manufacturing Co.
bought the land and water rights along the canal and built the enormous brick Millyard, which became a
manufacturing powerhouse until the 1920s.

A second canal was built one block east of the Amoskeag Canal along the length of the Millyard and parallel to the
river. The two canals were used to power the mills. By the 1880s the mill owners switched to electricity and steam
power (with disastrous results in 1891).

The canals were paved over in the 1970s. One became Commercial Street, the other a railroad track.

Today, the remains of two small canals sit at the top of Manchester's Millyard near PSNH's Energy Park.

Blackstone Canal

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The Moshashuck River portion of the canal in Providence, ca 1968. Photo courtesy Library of Congress.

During the canal mania of the 1820, Providence merchants wanted to profit from trade with the farming communities
near Worcester County and the Blackstone Valley. Until then, farmers sent their products by wagon to Boston.

In 1823, shortly before the Erie Canal opened, Massachusetts gave a charter to the Blackstone Canal Co. Rhode
Island soon followed. Irish immigrants dug the canal, a ditch next to the Blackstone River. In Providence, the
Moshassuck River became the lower part of the canal.

Benjamin Wright, the chief engineer, had supervised work on the Erie Canal and applied lessons learned to the
Blackstone Canal.

The 45-mile canal opened on Oct. 7, 1828, when the canal boat Lady Carrington arrived in Worcester. For the next
20 years, the canal brought prosperity to farmers, sparked the construction of textile mills along its banks and
sustained the growth of Providence and Worcester.

In 1847, the Providence and Worcester Railroad opened, putting the Blackstone Canal out of business the next year.

Today, long sections of the canal are parts of the Blackstone River and Canal Heritage State Park in Massachusetts
and the Blackstone River State Park in Rhode Island.

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The WaterFire Festival in Providence.

Every summer in Providence, the Moshassuck and Providence rivers attract tourists to the WaterFire Festival.
Eighty-six fires are lit in braziers anchored just above the waterline as world music is played.

Pine Street Barge Canal

Aerial view of the Pine Street Barge Canal and Lake Champlain.

In the 1860s, Burlington, Vt., was one of the busiest lumber ports in the United States, and the Lake Champlain
waterfront near Battery Street was out of room. City planners dreamed up the Pine Street Canal to expand the
waterfront and allow canal boats to be loaded and unloaded. A breakwater was also built near the shore of Lake
Champlain.

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The plan worked. Commerce flourished and factories sprang up along the Pine Street Barge Canal. Unfortunately,
the factories also dumped toxic waste into the water.

The Pine Street canal is now a 38-acre polluted swamp thats been designated a Superfund site perhaps the only
superfund site with four shipwrecks in it. At the canal entrance, surveyors found three construction barges from the
mid-20th century and the mid-19th century schooner Excelsior.

The brick factories that grew up around the Pine Street Barge Canal are now restaurants, an antiques mall and yoga
studios.

Images of canals: Farmington Canal By Staib (talk) - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0,
https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=22646095; Pawtucket Gatehouse By Emw - Own work, CC BY-
SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=21042220

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