The Main Line of Public Works was a package of legislation passed by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in 1826 to establish a means of transporting freight between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh. It funded the construction of various long-proposed canal and road projects, mostly in southern Pennsylvania, that became a canal system and later added railroads. Built between 1826 and 1834, it established the Pennsylvania Canal System and the Allegheny Portage Railroad.

Later amendments substituted a new technology, railroads, in place of the planned but costly canal connecting the Delaware River in Philadelphia to the Susquehanna River. The route from Philadelphia to Pittsburgh remained a patchwork of canals and railroads until the Pennsylvania Railroad was built in the 1850s.

Historic Background

thumb|As a side agreement in support of their allied Indians, the British Colonial authorities closed the region west of the [[Appalachian Mountains|Appalachians and the gaps of the Allegheny to further migrations, even resorting to having military patrols forcibly removing colonists from their homesteads. The policy was very unpopular among American colonists, and grew more so as time went by.]]

Trans-Appalachian settlement had begun in earnest during the latter years of the French and Indian War (1754-1763). Following the war, the British government made several agreements, primarily with the Iroquois, which resulted in official policies to curb the expansion of settlement in the colonial West (today's Midwest). This was one of many British policies that created support for the American Revolution along the American frontier for those hoping to emigrate into the Ohio Country, and also for East Coast seaboard populations that were blooming in the pre-industrialization period.

After the 1779 Sullivan Expedition broke the power of the Five Civilized Nations of the Iroquois towards the end of the American Revolutionary War, settlement became viable from the lower Susquehanna Valley to Upstate New York as far as Lake Erie. The U.S. was able to claim trans-Appalachian territories from the Ohio River to the lower Great Lakes, and west to Minnesota and Wisconsin.

As the Revolutionary War wound down in the 1780s, many family groups moved west, establishing scattered settlements from below the Wyoming Valley across the near west into the retreating western frontiers and the lands of the old Ohio Country. In the early 1800s, the new farms established along the moving frontier west of the Appalachian mountains were being connected back to Atlantic seaboard cities by turnpikes, canals, and other transportation infrastructure works funded mostly by private funds or local governments. By the 1810s the population west of the mountains was exploding. Regional transport hubs were established in Brownsville, Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Buffalo, Detroit, and New Orleans (and later in the 1840s St. Louis, Chicago, and St. Joseph, Missouri would develop similarly). The markets of this burgeoning population were targeted by the business class of Philadelphia and New Jersey.

The War of 1812 exacerbated a difficult energy crisis. Bituminous coal imports from Liverpool, England ground to a halt under an 1812 embargo, cutting off a major industrial fuel source for most American factories at that time. Simultaneously, residential heating fuel in the Philadelphia region was already becoming scarce and more expensive due to over-logging of the local forests on the eastern seaboard. These mounting fuel shortages would motivate Pennsylvanian lawmakers, industrialists, and residents to better exploit local coal resources in the decades during and following the war.

Previous interior transportation projects

On March 31, 1790 the Pennsylvania General Assembly passed a resolution that authorized several river surveys, following petitions from the Society for Promoting the Improvement of Roads and Inland Navigation. These surveys confirmed that several rivers within Pennsylvania were suitable for improvement into navigations. In 1791 following the results of the surveys, an appropriation was made by the state of Pennsylvania to improve the Lehigh River. With the expectation of a soon-to-be-navigable Lehigh River, the Lehigh Coal Mine Company was founded in 1793 and subsequently purchased of land in the Mauch Chunk region of the Pennsylvania Coal Region. They created a road from their Mauch Chunk mining operation to the bank of the Lehigh River. However, the state of Pennsylvania did not use public funds to improve Lehigh River, and the Lehigh Coal Mine Company was not successful in shipping its coal down the rough and unimproved Lehigh.

At the outbreak of the War of 1812 the foundries of Philadelphia suddenly lacked the inexpensive bituminous coal previously imported from England. Philadelphia industrialists were pressed for some solution to their foundries' fuel needs. During the war, an employee of Pennsylvania industrialist Josiah White had devised a method of burning "Rock Coal" properly in an effort to better exploit the relatively untapped coal resources within the local Pennsylvanian interior. White began buying shipments of local anthracite where he could, including two shipments from the Lehigh Coal Mine Company which had survived the trip down the Lehigh River. Pressure by various groups would encourage the Philadelphia Legislation to incorporate the Schuylkill Navigation Company on March 8, 1815. The Schuylkill Navigation Company was chartered to improve the Schuylkill River into the Schuylkill Navigationin 1815. The aim was to reliably connect the Coal Region (especially the Panther Creek Valley) in the Pennsylvanian interior to major cities on the coast, the industrial works near them, and their ports (for interstate coal export). White was one of the incorporators of the Schuylkill Navigation Company, however he would distance himself from the project when the project's backers took to quarreling over the best way to proceed. despite the more difficult waterways of the Lehigh. White and his business partners approached the failing LCMC, and after discussion "obtained the lease of their properties for a period of twenty years at an annual rental of one ear of corn". White and partners then approached the Philadelphia Legislature and successfully incorporated the Lehigh Navigation Company in March 1818, giving the company the rights to construct the Lehigh Canal. The Lehigh Navigation Company would go on to construct the initial leg of the planned route, which would later be known as the Lower Lehigh Canal, from 1818 to late 1820 using private funding.

In 1823, White proposed creating a navigational canal that would allow deep keeled coastal ships to reach docks and pickup and transship coal down the Lehigh Canal (which White had full ownership of by 1818

By 1818, White had obtained the legal permissions "to ruin himself" fixing up the Lehigh, founding the Lehigh Navigation Company and using a quasi-lock of his own design to construct what is now known as the Lower Lehigh Canal between 1818 and 1820. The works had made sufficient improvements by late 1820 to deliver 365 tons of anthracite coal to Easton — by 1825 the annual anthracite tonnage had climbed to over per annum. White's ventures firmly established anthracite as a reliable inexpensive fuel and proved that once-treacherous inland Pennsylvania waterways could be engineered into profitable industrial shipping routes.

A couple years later, the legislature declined another offer by the Lehigh Coal and Navigation Company (LC&N) which had built the Lehigh Canal with private funds. LC&N was unquestionably one of the most innovative companies of the era, driving the mining, transportation and industrial development of Pennsylvania by example, implementation, and by funding quite a few projects, as well. This new proposal was to build&mdash;at the companies expense&mdash; the project that would (in concept) become their version of the eventual Delaware Canal (alternatively the 'Delaware Division of the Pennsylvania Canal') built by the states engineering managers a few years later.<!-- or ---> The route was nearly the same, but the Delaware Canal as the state built it had numerous engineering flaws, including locks both too short and unpaired (single & supporting only one way traffic) locks LC&N's experience and expertise would have mitigated. LC&N had started coal flowing to Philadelphia using short squared-off blocky barges it called coal arks, but in 1822-23 was already re-doing the upper four locks on the Lehigh Canal to support a steam powered tug pulling boats over built to support two way traffic with full locks. By 1825 the volume of coal coming down the Lehigh & Delaware to Philadelphia was becoming huge and problematic &mdash; LC&N was rapidly over logging the forests feeding the Lehigh to build boats for the one way trip.

Begun with Navigations construction along the Susquehanna and the West Fork of the Susquehanna with surveys for the best route over the barrier of the northern Allegheny Mountains, the system in time ran from Philadelphia on the Delaware estuary westwards across the great plain of southern Pennsylvania (goal of connecting the Susquehanna to New York City via canals) through Harrisburg and across the state to Pittsburgh and connected with other divisions of the Pennsylvania Canal. It consisted of the following principal sections, moving from east to west:

  • Philadelphia and Columbia Railroad: from Philadelphia to Columbia near the former ferry site known as Wright's Ferry, in Lancaster County. Originally expected to be a bona fide canal in the 1820s conception, the easternmost leg of the Pennsylvania Canal was to be a continuation of the first funded and more difficult to construct engineering navigations and construction farther west in less populated rural regions. The canal joining the Delaware and Susquehanna rivers was to run across the most populated expanse of Pennsylvania's Great Valley region (and so was delayed politically in part) but its planning was overtaken by the growth of railroad technology, which by the mid-1830s had demonstrated sufficient promise to adopt the new technology for the leg of the capability and funding and construction was shifted to a railroad&mdash;it was faster and cheaper to build above ground and make bridges than it was to dig a deep ditch and provide it with reliable water supplies to enable two way barge traffic.
  • Eastern Division Canal: from Columbia to Duncan's Island at the mouth of the Juniata River.
  • Juniata Division Canal: from Duncan's Island to Hollidaysburg
  • Allegheny Portage Railroad: from Hollidaysburg to Johnstown
  • Western Division Canal: from Johnstown to the terminus in Pittsburgh.

The canals reduced travel time between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh from at least 23 days to just four.

The Main Line of Public Works was completed in 1834 and was sold to the Pennsylvania Railroad on June 25, 1857, for $7,500,000. Within a year, the PRR replaced the Philadelphia-Pittsburgh route with an entirely rail-based system.

Philadelphia and Columbia Railroad

thumb|An 1854 illustration of the [[Philadelphia and Columbia Railroad Depot]]

thumb|Railroads in [[Philadelphia that became a part of the Pennsylvania Railroad]]

The Philadelphia and Columbia Railroad began in Philadelphia at Broad and Vine Streets, ran north on Broad and west on Pennsylvania Avenue, a segment later taken over and submerged and tunneled over by the Reading Railroad, then headed northwest across the Columbia Bridge over the Schuylkill River. Just after crossing the river, it traveled up the Belmont Plane, an inclined plane in the current location of West Fairmount Park, and continued west across the eastern part of the state to Columbia, where the Columbia Plane headed down to the Susquehanna River. At that point, the eastern division of the canal continued north along the river and then west.

The Northern Liberties and Penn Township Railroad was incorporated in 1829 to build a branch continuing east on Noble Street and Willow Street to the Delaware River. This opened in 1834.

Belmont Plane

thumb|View of the Inclined Plane, near Philadelphia, an 1838 portrait

thumb|A Tioga Locomotive in 1848

The Belmont Plane ran from the Schuylkill River for , rising per for a total rise of . Steam-driven cables dragged the railway cars to the top of Belmont Hill.

The Plane was the site of a signal event in railroad history. On July 10, 1836, the Philadelphia-based Norris Locomotive Works drove a 4-2-0 locomotive up the Incline, making it the first steam locomotive to climb an ascending grade while pulling a load. The engine, named George Washington, hauled a load of , including 24 people riding on the tender and one freight car, up the grade at per hour. So remarkable was this accomplishment that reports in engineering journals doubted its occurrence. Nine days later, the engine repeated the feat in a more formal trial with an even greater load.

In 1850, the state bought the West Philadelphia Railroad, which had been incorporated in 1835 to bypass the Belmont Plane and failed after completing only the section from 52nd Street west to the main line at Rosemont. The state built the rest from 52nd Street east to downtown, but on a different alignment than the one originally planned; the new line, put into operation October 15, 1850,

Eastern Division Canal

The Pennsylvania Canal's Eastern Division, which opened in 1833, ran along the east side of the Susquehanna River between Columbia and Duncan's Island at the mouth of the Juniata River. The canal included 14 locks with an average lift of . The state originally planned a canal of running between the Union Canal at Middletown to the Juniata. However, the plan changed in 1828, when the state opted to extend the Eastern Division further south to connect with the newly decided replacement of a canal by the Philadelphia and Columbia Railroad at historic Wright's Ferry.

Engineers faced complications at the northern end of the Eastern Division Canal, where it met the Juniata Division Canal and the Susquehanna Division Canal at Duncan's Island. Boats had to cross from one side of the Susquehanna River to the other between either the Susquehanna Division or the Juniata Division on the west side and the Eastern Division on the east side. They solved the problem by building a dam long and high between the lower end of Duncan's Island and the east bank of the Susquehanna. This formed a pool across which boats could be pulled from a wooden, two-tier towpath bridge at Clark's Ferry. Two Duncan's Island lift locks raised or lowered the boats traveling between the dam pool and the other canals.

The Juniata Division Canal was approved in segments starting in 1827 with a canal from near Duncan's Island in the Susquehanna River to Lewistown, upstream. Subsequently, the state agreed to extend the canal to Hollidaysburg and the eastern end of the Allegheny Portage Railroad, from the Susquehanna. A total of 86 locks were required to overcome a change in elevation of over the full length of the canal, which opened in 1832.

From the canal basin, westbound boats began their journey by being elevated about by a lock that brought them to the level of a wooden aqueduct on which they were towed to the south side of the Juniata. At North's Island, from the Susquehanna, they were towed by a water powered continuous rope to the north side of the river across a slack water pool formed by a dam. From North's Island to Huntingdon, the river was dammed in three more places to feed water to the canal, and above Huntingdon, 14 more dams were needed to create of slack water navigation in the river to supplement of travel in segments of canal. In addition, the state built three reservoirs on Juniata tributaries to keep the upper parts of the canal filled with water.

The Pennsylvania Main Line Canal, Juniata Division, Canal Section was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2002. At its summit, the railroad reached an elevation of above sea level.

thumb|right|A map of downtown Pittsburgh in 1828 shows the routes of the [[Pennsylvania Canal in and near the city and the canal connections to the city's three rivers.]] <!--

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Western Division Canal

In 1826, the state legislature authorized the first segment of the Western Division Canal, from Pittsburgh up the Allegheny River to its confluence with the Kiskiminetas River at Freeport. Pittsburgh residents favored a route that would follow the south bank of the Allegheny River and terminate in Pittsburgh, while residents of the borough of Allegheny favored a north bank canal ending in the borough, across the river from Pittsburgh. Eventually, the canal was run along the physically more favorable north bank, but the state agreed to build the main terminal and turning basin in Pittsburgh and a secondary terminal and connecting canal, the Allegheny Outlet, in the borough. Getting the main canal across the Allegheny River into Pittsburgh required an aqueduct of , the longest on the Pennsylvania Main Line route. Linking to the Ohio River at Pittsburgh, the Western Division Canal also linked, through a tunnel of under Grant's Hill in Pittsburgh, with the Monongahela River.

Remnants

The Tunnelview Historical Site shows where in 1830 a canal tunnel of was built through Bow Ridge to avoid a long bend on the Conemaugh River, west of Blairsville. Saltsburg Canal Park, where Loyalhanna Creek joins the Conemaugh River to form the Kiskiminetas River, recognizes the canal's economic contribution to Saltsburg.

| City at the eastern terminus of the Main Line of Public Works and the Columbia–Philadelphia Railroad

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| Columbia

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| Borough at the western terminus of the Philadelphia and Columbia Railroad and the southern terminus of the Eastern Division Canal

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| Duncan's Island

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| Island at the northern terminus of the Eastern Division Canal and the eastern terminus of the Juniata Division Canal

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| Lewistown

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| Borough at the western terminus of the Juniata Division Canal and the eastern terminus of the Allegheny Portage Railroad

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| Hollidaysburg

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| Borough at the western terminus of the Juniata Division Canal and the eastern terminus of the Allegheny Portage Railroad

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| Johnstown

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| City at the western terminus of the Allegheny Portage Railroad and the eastern terminus of the Western Division Canal

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| Pittsburgh

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| City at the western terminus of the Main Line of Public Works and the Western Division Canal

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| Kittanning

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| Borough at the northern terminus of the Kittanning Feeder Canal

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See also

  • Allegheny Portage Railroad
  • Delaware and Hudson Canal
  • Delaware Canal, aka later: Pennsylvania Canal (Delaware Division)
  • List of canals in the United States
  • Lehigh Canal
  • Pennsylvania Canal System

:* Pennsylvania Canal, aka later: Pennsylvania Canal (Eastern Division)

:* Pennsylvania Canal (North Branch Division)

:* Pennsylvania Canal (Susquehanna Division)

:* Pennsylvania Canal (West Branch Division)

:* Pennsylvania Canal Guard Lock and Feeder Dam, Raystown Branch

:* Pennsylvania Canal Tunnel

:* Pennsylvania Canal and Limestone Run Aqueduct

  • Schuylkill Canal

Notes

References

Further reading

For more on the Philadelphia and Columbia Railroad, see William Hasell Wilson, The Columbia-Philadelphia Railroad and Its Successor (1896). A reprint of this booklet was issued in 1985. See also John C. Trautwine, Jr., The Philadelphia and Columbia Railroad of 1834, in Philadelphia History, Vol. 2, No. 7 (Philadelphia, PA: City History Soc. of Philadelphia, 1925). This is a pamphlet written for The City History Society of Philadelphia and read at the meeting of March 15, 1921.

  • Pennsylvania Canal Society
  • American Canal Society
  • National Canal Museum
  • Historic American Engineering Record (HAER) documentation: