Ohio History Journal

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SANDUSKY, PIONEER LINK BETWEEN SAIL AND RAIL

SANDUSKY, PIONEER LINK BETWEEN SAIL AND RAIL

 

by LEOLA M. STEWART

Lakewood High School, Lakewood, Ohio

Sandusky, Ohio, located on a large bay indenting the shore line

of Lake Erie and possessing one of the finest natural harbors on

the Great Lakes, was the first port west of the Appalachians to

profit from the advantages afforded by the combination of two

means of transportation: sail and rail. It became the lake terminus

of two railroads, the Mad River and Lake Erie, which made the

first connection between Cincinnati and Lake Erie, and the Sandusky,

Mansfield, and Newark, which extended southeastward through the

state, and it built up a thriving commerce fed by them. By the early

1850's its importance as a transshipment center made Sandusky

second only to Cleveland, the terminus of the Ohio and Erie Canal,

located sixty miles to the east. But the combination of sail (literally

steam) and rail upon which Sandusky depended was to be replaced

as the most significant facility of transportation by the great rail-

road systems running east and west, leaving Sandusky a thriving

minor port far outdistanced by Cleveland, Detroit, Toledo, and

Chicago.

Before the advent of the railroad Sandusky was an important

transfer point for passengers and freight passing through Buffalo

and over the Erie Canal. A stage line operated from there to Mans-

field and Delaware after 1822, with travel greatly increased after

the opening of the Erie Canal; a second line was opened in 1826-27

through Fremont, Tiffin, Urbana, and Springfield.1 Charles Dickens

on his tour of the West in 1842 took the boat from Sandusky.2 In the

autumn of 1848 troops for the Oregon service were moved from

New York to Jefferson Barracks in St. Louis by steamboat, canal

boat, and lake steamer to Sandusky, thence by railroad to Urbana.

They marched overland to the Little Miami Railroad on which they

 

1 W. W. Williams, pub., History of the Firelands Comprising Huron and Erie

Counties, Ohio (Cleveland, 1879), 435.

2 H. L. Peeke, Centennial History of Erie County, Ohio (Cleveland, 1925), I, 80.

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