Canals were the superhighways of early Nineteenth Century America. Canal promoters
saw them as the key to a permanently upward spiraling economy. George Washington and Thomas Jefferson were both big boosters of canals, envisioning them as a system of routes which would link all parts of the United States together. They would make travel across the United States easier than ever, and would give the farm and industrial products of the newly opening West convenient access to markets in the East.
Congress passed legislation for building the Wabash and Erie Canal in 1827. The first
shovel-full of dirt was turned in 1832 and the first section of the canal, linking Fort Wayne with Huntington, was completed in 1835. The first canal boat, the Indiana, reached Huntington July 3, 1835, and returned to Fort Wayne on the Fourth of July, bearing the proud citizens of both cities and accompanied by loud salutes from a small cannon brought to Huntington just for the occasion.
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This site is maintained by Historic Forks of the Wabash. |