Chenango Canal

The Million Dollar Ditch

Nonfiction, Art & Architecture, Architecture, Public, Commercial, or Industrial Buildings, Reference & Language, Transportation, Ships & Shipbuilding, History, Photography, Pictorials, Travel
Cover of the book Chenango Canal by Wade Allen Lallier, Arcadia Publishing Inc.
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Author: Wade Allen Lallier ISBN: 9781439660843
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing Inc. Publication: June 26, 2017
Imprint: Arcadia Publishing Language: English
Author: Wade Allen Lallier
ISBN: 9781439660843
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing Inc.
Publication: June 26, 2017
Imprint: Arcadia Publishing
Language: English

Chenango Canal: The Million Dollar Ditch chronicles the story of a central New York State canal and how it changed the region. In 1825, the Omnibus Canal Bill had called for a survey of a canal linking the Susquehanna River at Binghamton to the Erie Canal in Utica. The idea of a canal was well received in the Chenango Valley but was opposed by many outside it. After eight years of legislative battles, the canal was finally authorized in 1833 with a proposed million-dollar budget. Against seeming insurmountable odds, the 97-mile canal was completed in 1836. Touted as "the best built canal in New York State," the canal was never profitable for the state, but it did bring a measure of prosperity to the communities along its length, delivering cheap coal from Pennsylvania to emerging steam-powered factories.

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Chenango Canal: The Million Dollar Ditch chronicles the story of a central New York State canal and how it changed the region. In 1825, the Omnibus Canal Bill had called for a survey of a canal linking the Susquehanna River at Binghamton to the Erie Canal in Utica. The idea of a canal was well received in the Chenango Valley but was opposed by many outside it. After eight years of legislative battles, the canal was finally authorized in 1833 with a proposed million-dollar budget. Against seeming insurmountable odds, the 97-mile canal was completed in 1836. Touted as "the best built canal in New York State," the canal was never profitable for the state, but it did bring a measure of prosperity to the communities along its length, delivering cheap coal from Pennsylvania to emerging steam-powered factories.

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