Showing posts with label canalPA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label canalPA. Show all posts

Friday, March 13, 2026

Union Canal Lock #47 northwest of Reading, PA

(Satellite)

ReadingEagle
"Daniel Roe, historic resource supervisor for the Berks County Parks and Recreation Department, looks over the completed stonework rehabilitation at Lock 47 along the Union Canal Towpath. (BILL UHRICH – READING EAGLE)"

ReadingEagle, BILL UHRICH - READING EAGLE
The lock was restored in 1976. I could not find a date for this article about its rehabilitation.

ReadingEagle, Courtesy of Berks County Parks
"The original restoration of Lock 47 occurred in 1976. Crews work on the large, wooden lock gates. (Courtesy of Berks County Parks)"

ReadingEagle, BILL UHRICH - READING EAGLE
"The wooden lock gates had deteriorated by early 2020."
The removed the vegitation and reset some of the large stones. They did not have enough money for the project to build new wood gates.

esreading
This page has a date of Oct 24, 2023. A major part of the rehabilitation was relocating the wildlife that lived in and near the lock. There were many turtles in the area.

This video was made before the rehabilitation work was done.
Facebook Reel


Sunday, September 7, 2025

1828-85 Pennsylvania Union Canal Overview

Graciela Whitcher posted three images with the comment: "Pennsylvania's Union Canal was a significant water transportation route that existed in the 19th century. Proposed by William Penn in 1690, it aimed to connect Philadelphia with the Susquehanna River. Construction began in 1792 and was completed in 1828, running approximately 82 miles from Middletown to Reading. The canal played a crucial role in shipping anthracite coal and lumber eastward to Philadelphia, and it featured 93 locks and a 4-foot deep channel. The Union Canal Tunnel, in Lebanon, Penna., is the oldest existing transportation tunnel in the U.S., remains a notable part of its legacy."
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[See also "1827-1885 Union Canal Tunnel near Lebanon, PA; the Oldest Extant Transportation Tunnel in USA"]

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lsthistoricpreservation
"The Union Canal was completed and opened to grade between 1821 and 1828.....In a distance of just 81 miles between Reading and Middletown, the canal climbed 311 feet to the summit level of the canal at Lebanon.  It then descended a total of 192 feet to the level of the Susquehanna River at West End.  To accomplish this a total of 93 lift locks, 75 feet long and 8 ½ feet wide, were used....With the development of the Pennsylvania Railroads, the canal system and the Union Canal were finally abandoned in 1885."

Features for which I have written some notes.

Sunday, March 23, 2025

Girard Locks on Beaver Division Canal in Rochester, PA

(Satellite, this was the upstream end of the river-side lock wall because the sewage plant was built on the old locks. Much of the canal has been submerged by the pool of the Montgomery Dam.)

Little Beaver Historical Society posted
1910) view of Rochester, showing the Girard Locks of the Beaver Division Canal long in disuse.
Lloyd Scott Hardin shared

Beaver County,Penna Historic Exploration posted
Girards Lock.
Beaver River 
Taken from old Rochester-Bridgewater Bridge
Rochester, Penna 
1911

The satellite location is based on this photo.
jaep

This explains what "Beaver Division Canal" means. The Beaver Division was the southern part of the Erie Extension.
jaep
 
TimesOnline, Beaver County Times
Construction of the canal began in 1834. The railroad arrived in 1851 and a collapsed aqueduct shut down most of the canal in 1872. "Only the Girard Locks of Rochester, which were large enough to accommodate smaller steamboats, survived beyond that point. The final boat passed through Rochester in 1901. The Girard Locks were still visible until the mid-1970s, when a sewage pump station was built over top of them."

bcpahistory
"The Beaver Division was built to carry Pittsburgh traffic north to Erie, to keep trade in Pennsylvania, but it also carried Lake Erie traffic (from New York's Erie Canal) down to the Ohio River. Countless emigrants to the west travelled this way. It was completed in 1832 and began at Rochester, stretching north to a point above New Castle called Harbor Bridge, a distance of 31 miles, where it joined the Erie Extension Canal to Erie. There was one important branch. At Mahoningtown, south of New Castle (and until 1849, part of Beaver County) the Pennsylvania and Ohio Canal branched off, heading to Youngstown, Warren, and Akron, where it joined the Ohio and Erie Canal. Nothing is left of the P and 0 Canal in Pennsylvania today.
"There were 17 locks on the Beaver Division, nine of them in present day Beaver County, and six dams. A lock is a stone chamber with wooden gates used to raise boats from one level to another, usually adjacent to a dam. A typical lock on the Beaver Division lifted the boats about eight feet. The locks were numbered south from New Castle, so the two at Rochester were numbers 16 and 17. They were called the Girard Locks, for a Philadelphia financier who invested in the canal, and were larger than the other locks, big enough to pass small steamboats."

Little Beaver Historical Society posted
Great photo of the Girard Lock on the Beaver Division Canal in Rochester . To give you an idea of the location, the bridge you see in the background is where the current Rochester Bridgewater Bridge is located.

Photo from hmdb

Since a steamboat used the locks in 1901, I'm surprised that the locks don't exist on this map.
1901/1958 Beaver Quad @ 62,500

Tuesday, December 31, 2024

1827-1885 Pennsylvania Union Canal Tunnel near Lebanon, PA; the Oldest Extant Transportation Tunnel in USA


This was part of the Pennsylvania Union Canal.

Uncovering PA posted four photos with the comment: "Did you know that the oldest existing transportation tunnel in the US can be found in Lebanon, PA? https://uncoveringpa.com/union-canal-tunnel"
Ryan Alexander: They have canal rides.
Wyatt Smolick: The first existing transportation tunnel in the US actually wasn't too far away on the Schuylkill Canal near Auburn, PA, but unfortunately was reduced to an open cut over the years of its operation.
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I fired up Google Earth to find a satellite image that didn't have leaves so that I could find the north portal.
Google Earth, Feb 2018

Work began in 1792, but that attempt failed financially after five locks were built. Work began again in 1821 and completed in 1828. And a branch canal was finished in 1830 to tap some coal fields and to feed some more water to the Summit Level. "The 107 locks of the Canal were built too small (8½’ x 75′) and could not accommodate the larger boats from the Pennsylvania Canal and the Schuylkill Canal. Enlargement took place in the 1850s, increasing lock size to 17′ x 90′." [LebanonCountyHistory]

"From 1827 to 1885 the Union Canal linked the commercial centers of Harrisburg, Reading, and by extension, the port of Philadelphia....Dug through the ridge dividing the waters of the Quittapahilla Creek [Susquehanna River watershed] and Clark’s Run [Schuylkill River watershed], the tunnel was originally 729 feet long. Drilling was done by hand and blasting with gunpowder through argillaceous slate rock with veins of hard flinty limestone 80 feet below the summit of the ridge....Boats were poled through the tunnel against the ceiling, while the mules were led over the top of the ridge." [LebanonCountyHistory_tunnel]

This 5:05 video talked about the geology instead of the history, so I didn't finish it.

lebtown, Credit Bob Frye
Aquisition of the right-of-way was the first use of eminent domain in the country's history. The canal reduced the travel time from Philadelphia to Harrisburg from three weeks to five days. That is a trip that is now less than 2.5 hours. Back then, Philadelphia was still the biggest market in the USA, and the canal helped move anthracite coal to that market. A Conestoga wagon pulled by six horses or mules could pull 5 to 10 tons. A canal boat pulled by just one mule could haul 50 tons. The 81-mile (130km) canal has 93 locks. (107 locks may have been the original canal, whereas 93 locks may be after it was enlarged.) The summit, Lebanon, was 311' (95m) higher than Reading and 192' (59m) higher than Middletown. For comparison the 68 miles of the Delaware Division Canal from Easton to Bristol has just 24 locks.

UncoveringPA, Public Domain
This webpage is a person visiting the canal and park rather than a history.

Pennsylvania Junkie posted 0:41 video

📍ADD this to your PA roadtrip list! I quite literally stumbled upon this historic gem and am so glad I did because it’s not only so cool, but the park around it is gorgeous. Most people have no idea the oldest transportation tunnel in the U.S. is hiding in Lebanon, PA. Hand-dug in 1827, the Union Canal Tunnel once carried boats between the Susquehanna and Schuylkill Rivers. Now it’s a hauntingly quiet piece of overlooked PA history.Where should I venture next? 👀 Be sure to follow me @pennsylvaniajunkie for more historical gems and PA destinations!

Thursday, December 7, 2023

1844-73 Erie Extension (Beaver and Erie) Canal Overview and Lock #10

This canal connected Lake Erie with the Ohio River in western Pennsylvania. I knew of two canals in Ohio (Miami & Erie and Ohio & Erie) and one in Indiana (Wabash & Erie) between Lake Erie and the Ohio River, but I did not know of this one. I learned of this canal while researching the Shenango Dam.
Brochure via LoC

The canal cut the travel time for passengers between Erie and Pittsburgh to 36 hours. [0:26 video @ 0:08]

See Girard Lock for the southernmost lock.

It was finished in 1841. [0:26 video @ 0:08]
It was finished in 1844. (All the other sources that I read agree with 1844.) The canal was built North from Beaver to Erie. It needed 137 locks. [ErieHistory]
It was 136 miles long. The 137 locks handled an elevation difference of 977' (300m). The 91 mile (146km) east/west Pennsylvania & Ohio Canal connected this canal at New Castle, PA, with the Ohio & Erie Canal. [blogspot]

ErieHistory
"At Sharpsville, Pennsylvania,  lock #10, the only remaining lock, now has a walking trail through it."
[This explains why I could not find it in a satellite image, it is obviously covered by a tree canopy. I think it is along the Trout Island Trail.]

"In 1873, the destruction of an aqueduct across Elk Creek Gorge which had allowed canal boats to cross the deep river gorge spelled the end of the Erie Extension Canal. Some believed that railroad designers had deliberately caused its destruction. Railroads were becoming the preferred transportation of the period; the canal beds provided the perfect basis for the railroad bed." [memory]

The aqueduct was 500' (152m) long and 100' (30m) above the creek. This source put the collapse in Sep 1871. [blogspot]

Given this map, the aqueduct was here.
Map

ErieHistory and HagenHistory

ErieHistory

The Canal Museum in Greenville, PA, is at the location of Lock #22. (Greenville also has a railroad museum.)

Update:
Anita Breitweiser Chase Palmer posted ten photos with the comment:
In 1834, construction began on the Erie Extension Canal’s Beaver Division or the southern part of the canal.
The southern ending of the canal was the confluence of the Beaver River with the Ohio River in Beaver County, about 20 miles downstream from Pittsburgh; and the northern ending was in Erie county, ending at the foot of Sassafras Street in the city of Erie. The canal needed a total of 137 locks to overcome a change in elevation of 977 feet.
In the early 19th century, the Erie Extension canal system was a 136-mile-long waterway that connected Lake Erie to the Ohio River and Pittsburgh, it was sometimes used by enslaved people to escape from southern plantations. The Erie Canal Extension ran through the center of Girard, PA beginning around 1840,
German immigrants, who were paid $8 a month, and three jiggers of whiskey a day, dug a canal that was 60 feet wide and 10 feet deep. The primary challenge was in overcoming an elevation change of about 1,000 feet over the entire 136-mile stretch from the Ohio River to Lake Erie. The canal’s elevation was accomplished through the placement of 137 locks, 72 of which sat between Erie and Conneaut Lake. There were 28 locks alone in a two-mile stretch of canal through what is now Platea.
Regular travel began in the spring of 1845, opening a faster and more-workable form of transportation. The canal gave travelers a direct north-south route to connect with railroads that largely traveled east and west at the time. A trip from Erie to Pittsburgh that once took days by wagon or horseback, over rough country roads and Indian trails, could now be done in 36 hours by packet boat for $4. The new mode of travel helped boost the region's population and brought in some notable people, they included famed performer Dan Rice who rode the canal into Girard in the 1850s to set up winter quarters for his circus and to use the transportation system to travel south.
Eventually the Railroad was seen to be more efficient. It was cheaper to build and you could lay tracks almost anywhere. It wasn’t depended on the weather to have an adequate water level, like a canal system, and you could lay tracks way beyond the reach of any canal system.

The official end came in September 1871, when a 500-foot-long aqueduct that carried canalboats 100 feet above the Elk Creek gorge near Girard caved in. Some blamed it on lack of maintenance; while others suspected that people who had an interest in the railroad helped it fail.

The canal is remembered today, mostly by 12 roadside historical markers, all dedicated by the state in 1948 that marks various points in Erie and Crawford counties where the canal or its feeder systems were located.. the former canal bed remains visible in some areas to this day.
Source; Hagen History Blog, Wikipedia
Digger Mincer: There is a canal museum in Greenville, Pa by riverside park. The canal ran through Greenville. You can check it out on on the web.
Gary Dufford: Our local canal extension was in use until 1919 when the big flood when all the dams were destroyed. As far as I know the barges just carried coal from the mines to the coke facilities up and down the river.
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Sandy and Beaver Canal posted three photos with the comment:
Lock 39, eastern division. Beaver Creek State Park. This location is steeped in history. Harmony School Rd. once forded  Little Beaver Creek here. William Heald constructed one of the area's initial mills, subsequently owned by Joseph Heap. Attentive observers can still discern vestiges of the foundation. Beaver Creek State Park
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Tuesday, October 24, 2023

1900 Trail/Reading Pencoyd Bridge over Schuylkill River at Philadelphia, PA


The Pencoyd Bridge is now also a trail bridge. [BicycleCoalition] The trail is cantilevered on the side of the bridge because the bridge itself provides vehicle access to some buildings on the west side of the river. (A source implied that the cantilevered passage was always there, but it carried a horse&wagon road while the bridge carried an industrial spur.)
Street View, Jul 2019

If you are here because of this nearby concrete arch bridge, then you need to go there.
Street View, Jul 2019

This view shows that the trusses are skewed so that the piers are parallel to the flow of the water.
TaylorWiseman
"The structure, originally built in 1900 as a railroad bridge, consists of two 183-foot truss spans and one built-up through-plate girder span."

It looks like a pin-connected truss.
B ES, Mar 2020

Yep, it is pin connected.
wje
"Constructed in 1900, the privately owned Pencoyd Bridge was built to carry an industrial spur of the Pennsylvania Railroad. In 2016, the bridge was rehabilitated to a one-lane, reversible private roadway providing vehicular access between the Royal Athena apartment complex in Lower Merion Township and Main Street in Manayunk."
[Looking at the topo map, I don't see how this spur connected to the Pennsy.
This source says it was built in 1894 by the Pencoyd Iron Works. But that source was ChatGPT, so I don't trust it. And the text is a good example of how you can use a lot of words but still say very little by repeating, several times, a few concepts.]

The Pencoyd Iron Works used to be on the land between the railroad and the river.
MickRicereto
 
ThisIsLowerMerion
The iron works built the metal parts for the Main Exibition Building for the 1876 Centennial Exposition, then the largest building in the world.

The remnents of the iron works have been gentrified as the Pencoyd Landing.
land-collective, this webpage has a lot more photos of the Pencoyd Landing

The Manayunk trail shows up on the Philadelphia Parks trail map, but the Pencoyd trail does not.