Ohio History Journal

  • 1
  •  
  • 2
  •  
  • 3
  •  
  • 4
  •  
  • 5
  •  
  • 6
  •  
  • 7
  •  
  • 8
  •  

THE OHIO CANAL

THE OHIO CANAL

 

AN ACCOUNT OF ITS COMPLETION TO CHILLICOTHE

 

 

BY GEORGE PERKINS

About this time (1831) the news of the completion of

the Ohio Canal reached our village. This immense un-

dertaking was brought about by the lack of proper

means of transportation. The roads throughout the

state were primitive. The wagons that traversed them

were inadequate to transport products and needed goods,

and a universal sentiment was aroused for building a

canal. Uncle John Briggs and Samuel Probst, having

business in Chillicothe at the same time, concluded to

stay over and attend the exercises connected with the

opening of the canal as far as that point.

A short description of the canal from its first sugges-

tion to the completion may be in order. George Wash-

ington seems to have been the first to suggest a canal

from Lake Erie to the Ohio River, which he did in a

letter to the Governor of Virginia in 1784. The matter

was often brought up and talked over until the year

1822, when the Ohio Legislature passed a bill authoriz-

ing the Governor to employ an engineer and appoint a

board of commissioners to make examination, surveys

and estimates of the cost of constructing a canal. The

commissioners secured the services of James Geddes as

engineer. For three years surveys and examinations

were made. The commissioners then reported in favor

of beginning at once the building of the canal. Within

(597)