Ohio History Journal

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FLATBOATING DOWN THE OHIO AND MISSISSIPPI,

FLATBOATING DOWN THE OHIO AND MISSISSIPPI,

1867-1873

Correspondence and Diaries of the William Dudley Devol Family

of Marietta, Ohio

 

PART I

edited by ROBERT LESLIE JONES

Professor of History, Marietta College

I

The phrase "flatboating down the Ohio" is apt to evoke a

mental picture of an immigrant family setting off from Pittsburgh

aboard a broadhorn, or of a group of backwoodsmen from almost

any tributary taking advantage of the spring freshets to get their

little surplus to New Orleans. It is easy to overlook the fact that

flatboating continued long after the pioneer era, in fact to about

1890, as a method of disposing of the farm produce of the region

adjacent to the Ohio. According to one estimate, about seven

hundred flatboats a year passed Louisville between 1849 and

1870, with the exception of the Civil War period. A few of these

were "straight loads" of flour being shipped by millers to New

Orleans. The rest were "mixed loads" for the local trade along

the Mississippi. A mixed load typically consisted of from one

thousand to twelve hundred barrels of potatoes, apples, cider,

flour, and pork, together with bags of oats, corn, or beans, sides

of meat, firkins of butter, and other miscellaneous articles stowed

wherever space could be found for them.1 If the cargo was mostly

1 Adelaide F. Stacy, ed., Flatboat Reminiscences of Capt. Miles A. Stacy (un-

published manuscript in Campus Martius Museum, Marietta, Ohio), 6-7, 16. The

largest flatboat to leave the Muskingum River for the lower Mississippi of which the

writer has found mention was one owned by Pitnam Lyman Stowe (1859-1929), which

started south in the autumn of 1886 with two thousand barrels of apples and potatoes

and some onions, beans, and miscellaneous produce. Marietta Register, November

19, 1886. The straight loads of flour shipped out of the Muskingum to New Orleans

ran from twelve hundred to fourteen hundred barrels. Irven Travis, "Navigation on

the Muskingum," Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Quarterly, XIV (1905),

417.

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