CANALS ALMOST
FORGOTTEN BY OHIO RESIDENTS

Submitted by
Martha Kounse

Tuesday, June 25, 1925----- The Morning Irontonian, Ironton,
Ohio
Columbus, June 15 -One hundred years ago, on July 21,
was started Ohio's first general system of transportation
superseding the mud roads-the canals.
Historians credit the Ohio canals with "converting a wide,
unimproved state into a profusion of wealth, prosperity and
greatness." The Miami and Erie canal was one of the most important
factors in opening up western Ohio.
From 1820-1825, the population of Ohio grew from 45,365 to 581,
295. The only means of transportation was by land, and the roads,
virtually impossible, constituted an almost insurmountable barrier
to commerce.
The state was poor, too. Its population consisted of farmers
mainly. In 1825, the entire revenue derived from taxation, was
only $131,733 annually. In 1822, wheat was selling for 25 cents a
bushel, corn for 12 1/2 cents a bushel and butter brought six
cents a pound.
It was these conditions which boosters of the canals promised
to remedy, by giving his products to market at a cheap rate.
A Cincinnati, man Ethan Allen Brown, who was governor of Ohio
in 1818, was the first to inquire into the possibilities of canal
building in this state. He corresponded with De Wit Clinton and
became so enthusiastic on the subject that the entire project
shortly was jibed at as "Brown's Folly." To Alfred Kelly, a
Cleveland lawyer and chairman of the board of canal commissioners,
however, is given the credit for being the "father of Ohio
canals".
After a great deal of preliminary discussions and
investigations, usually marked by hearted and personal debate, the
necessary legislation was enacted to permit the start on July 21,
1825. The canals were estimated to cost $5,715,203, but before the
system was finished it cost the state $15,967,562, a sum to
stagger the imagination in those days.
The Ohio and Erie canal was finished in 1833, but the Miami and
Erie was not completed until 1845. Both connected Lake Erie and
the Ohio river, but the former linked up Portsmouth and Cleveland
and the latter ran through the Miami valley.
To feed the canals, five reservoirs were constructed and the
Celina reservoir, now known as Lake St. Mary's, built in Mercer and
Auglaize counties near the watershed of the state, is the largest
artificial body of water in the world. It covers 15,744 acres and
cost $532,222.
The Laramie and Lewiston reservoirs, which compose Indian lake,
were located in Logan and Shelby counties. The Licking reservoir
was constructed in Licking, Perry and Fairfield counties and the
Portage in Summit county.
Canal building in the state ended in 1847, when the railroads
started to come in, and at that time there were 813 miles of the
waterways. For 30? years they served as carriers of freight and in
35 years their receipts exceeded expenditures by $7,073,111.
The total cost of the system was $29,023,663, and the gross
receipts up to the present time, it is estimated will total around
eighteen or nineteen million.
Of late years, the leaser and grant of canal lands has become a
subject for controversy in the general assembly the dispute
usually certain around the terms of the grant.
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