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Satellite)
Given the angle of the gates, we are looking downstream. So we are looking East. That means the store was on the south side of the canal, where the tow path was. The recreated store is now on the north side.
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ErieCanal "Yankee Hill Lock [Lock 28], Erie Canal - date unknown, 1905? [CSNYS]" |
And the south side of the canal is now a parking lot. (The store is out-of-frame to the left.)
I think we are looking upstream (westbound) at the north lock.
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Jimmy Gonzales posted Town of Florida, NY
Walter J Eaker: Look how straight and flat lines of hand cut rock amazing work Tricia Shaw: Walter J Eaker this lock was one of the last ones on the Canal to be built. The stones was not hand cut by then. This lock didn't open for navigation until 1856. |
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| At Google Maps resolution |
This explains why only the southern (eastbound) lock was enlarged. It was to speed up the haulage of 250-ton grain barges.
Here we can see the notches for the gates in the original part of the south lock. I wonder why nature has grown on the original part, but not the enlarged part, of the lock.
Here we see nature growing out of the sides of the enlarged part. So those vines evidently grew in just the three years since Kathleen took the above photo.
This text is to the right of the above exhibit.
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