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A pictorial history of a piece of Ohio's canal heritageIn this study of Akron's Cascade Locks, canal historian Jack Gieck examines the story of this remarkable lock system, including a look at early-nineteenth-century entrepreneurs who exploited the precipitous terrain to found one of the first industrial centers in the American Midwest.A steep staircase of sixteen locks was required to raise canal boats 149 feet in a single mile in order to reach the Akron Summit - the highest point on the 309-mile-long Ohio & Erie Canal. But what was considered by some to be an impossible feat of engineering represented a commercial opportunity for others, beginning with Dr. Eliakim Crosby, who built a two-mile millrace from a dam on the Little Cuyahoga River at Middlebury to his Stone Mill at Lock 5 on the canal. After turning Crosby's millstones, the water became the Cascade Race, flowing down the steep slope stones, parallel to the canal, giving rise to more than a dozen industries, including several iron furnaces, a foundry, a woolen mill, a furniture factory, a distillery, several grist mills, and two rubber plants - all of them turned by waterpower. And they shipped their products to markets from New York to New Orleans via the canal running by their back doors.Early Akron's Industrial Valley is illustrated with photographs from the author's collection and the archives of the Canal Society of Ohio, the Ohio Historical Society, the University of Akron, and the Cascade Locks Park Association. It contains a guide for Canalway hikers and bikers on the towpath through Akron's Cascade Locks Park with original maps by Chuck Ayers. This book will be welcomed by historians and engineers as well as by the many who find the surviving canals to be fascinating symbols of Ohio's heritage.
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Date de parution

13 mars 2015

Nombre de lectures

0

EAN13

9781631011108

Langue

English

Poids de l'ouvrage

4 Mo

E ARLY A KRON’S I NDUSTRIAL V ALLEY

E ARLY A KRON’S I NDUSTRIAL V ALLEY
A History of the Cascade Locks
Jack Gieck
KENT STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS
Kent, Ohio
© 2008 by The Kent State University Press, Kent, Ohio 44242
All rights reserved
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 2007038504
ISBN 978-0-87338-928-0
Manufactured in the United States of America
12   11   10   09   08       5   4   3   2   1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Gieck, Jack.
Early Akron’s industrial valley: a history of the Cascade Locks / Jack Gieck.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN 978-0-87338-928-0 (pbk. : alk. paper) ∞
1. Canals—Ohio—History. 2. Industries—Ohio—Akron—History.
3. Entrepreneurs—Ohio—Akron—History. I. Title.
HE 395.034G537 2008
386′.480977136—dc22    2007038504
British Library Cataloging-in-Publication data are available.
C ONTENTS
Maps
Preface
Early Akron’s Industrial Valley
Postscript: Exploring the Exit
Appendix: Exploring the Valley
References
M APS
1840 P&O Planning Map
Route of Crosby’s Ditch
CHUCK AYERS
Cascade Locks Park
CHUCK AYERS
P REFACE
More than a year ago I started working on a brochure that would be a brief history of Akron’s Cascade Locks—the staircase of sixteen locks that was the last and steepest mile of these primitive hydraulic elevators that lifted Ohio & Erie Canal boats from the level of Lake Erie in Cleveland to the Akron summit 38 miles to the south. But when I began researching the subject, I realized that the parallel Cascade Race, rushing down this same precipitous slope and spawning a string of industries between the two waterways, constituted a tale that wouldn’t fit into a mere brochure. As an engineer, I developed even more enthusiasm for the project after getting acquainted with the entrepreneurs whose drive and ingenuity built this thriving string of mills, as well as cupola furnaces, iron foundries, a brewery, a distillery, and other industries all operating on water power.
What follows is a story of the successes and failures of these pioneers—how their efforts contributed to intense competition between the young community of Cascade and the well-established Akron, and how this rivalry was put to rest with the arrival of a second canal, the Pennsylvania & Ohio, through downtown Akron, paving the way for the city’s future position as the Rubber Capital of the World.
With sincere thanks to Bridget Garvin and to Bruce Norton for their considerable contributions, as well as those of artist-historian Chuck Ayers, who made new maps. Thanks to Steve Griebling for loaning Carl Griebling’s mill model for use in this book. Thanks also to George Knepper, Siegfried Buehrling, Joe Jesensky, Virginia Wojno-Forney, Doug Hausknecht, Al Brion, Carl Ehmann, Charles Snyder, John Henry Vance, and other historians.
J ACK G IECK
E ARLY A KRON’S I NDUSTRIAL V ALLEY
Akron is on the Continental Divide. Rain falling on the north side of town flows north into the St. Lawrence watershed. Rain landing in south Akron goes south into the Mississippi basin. You can actually see the water dividing and flowing both ways at the point where the Portage Lakes feeder enters the Ohio & Erie Canal across from Young’s Tavern on Manchester Road in south Akron. Water flowing to the left goes north through downtown Akron and Cuyahoga Falls into the Cuyahoga River and out into Lake Erie, from which it runs northeast through Lake Ontario, up the St. Lawrence River, and out into the North Atlantic Ocean. Water going to the right flows south into the Tuscarawas River and from there finds its way down to the Ohio River, a tributary of the Mississippi, which then carries it another 600 miles south and out into the Gulf of Mexico. Akron sits at the top of the ridge dividing the two continental watersheds—at the summit.
The barrier was well known to Native Americans long before Europeans arrived in North America. For hundreds of years Woodland Indians traveling south on the Cuyahoga River from Lake Erie lifted their canoes out of the water at Old Portage, carrying them up over the summit (from which Summit County takes its name) along 9 miles of the Portage Path before descending to the Tuscarawas River to continue their journey.
The north side of the Akron summit is much steeper than the south side. It is so steep, in fact, that when Ohio’s landmark Canal Act was passed in February 1825, canal engineers discovered that they would have to build sixteen locks to raise canal boats 149 feet in this last mile of the 38-mile trip from Cleveland, creating a staircase of locks. (This is why canal boats from the north often spent the night in the basin below Lock 15 before beginning the tortuous ascent, loading up on food and supplies in the morning after the Mustill Store opened.)
But what engineers viewed as an obstacle, Dr. Eliakim Crosby of Middlebury seized on as an entrepreneurial opportunity. He recognized that terrain this steep could be used to generate massive amounts of waterpower if an ample supply of water could be found. (Canal water couldn’t be used since it was needed to operate the cascade of locks.) But Crosby conceived a bold plan that would ultimately transform the site below Lock 5 into a dynamic industrial valley rivaling sites in England created by the Industrial Revolution.
Within a decade after Crosby implemented his plan, the valley came alive with several flour mills, a woolen mill, a furniture factory, five iron furnaces, and a distillery. The same water flowed out of one factory and into the next one, and all of them were powered by gravity. The site is preserved today from Lock 10 through Lock 16 as Akron’s Cascade Locks Park, developed by the Cascade Locks Park Association and operated by Metro Parks, Serving Summit County in cooperation with the City of Akron.

Eliakim Crosby arrived in Middlebury about 1820. Born in Litchfield, Connecticut, in 1779, he was well educated and taught school until he was twenty-seven years old, when, in 1806, he moved to Buffalo and studied medicine. After completing his internship, he settled in Simco, Ontario, where he opened a medical practice and married Marcia Beemer in 1810. But when the British invaded the United States during the War of 1812 and Crosby entered the U.S. Army as a surgeon, the British confiscated his Canadian property, which forced him to return to the United States.
Dr. Crosby continued to practice medicine after arriving in Middlebury, a village bordering the Little Cuyahoga River along today’s Case Avenue north of East Market. The ambitious doctor built a small iron furnace on the river in Middlebury. Since his medical practice was limited to a handful of families, he was exploring other sources of income. Running a major canal through his hometown, where he already had a business, would invite prosperity. Because Middlebury was on one of several possible canal routes over the Continental Divide, Crosby and other community activists lobbied for the canal.
But General Simon Perkins of Warren, a surveyor and an agent for the Connecticut Land Company, had other ideas. In addition to representing the land company, Perkins was privately speculating in land. Using state records, he acquired a substantial amount of property simply by paying modest amounts of past-due taxes on the land. He had, in fact, by 1825, amassed 1,003 acres at a total cost of $4.07. Perkins’s properties were located 2 miles west of Middlebury, adjacent to property owned by settler Paul Williams, in an area that would become downtown Akron.
Akron did not exist when the Canal Act was passed in 1825. Northeast Ohio was still a wilderness. In all of Ohio there were fewer than 300,000 people, about the population of greater Akron today. In what is now the Akron area there were only three settlers. As Henry Howe explains in his Historical Collections of Ohio , “In 1811, Paul Williams, Amos and Miner Spicer came from New London, Connecticut, and settled in the vicinity of Akron, at which time there was no other white settlement between here and Sandusky.” In fact, one of the objectives of Ohio’s Canal Act was to encourage the settlement of the northeastern part of the state.
Perkins persuaded Williams to combine their properties and lay out a town, one comprised of 172 acres, the majority owned by Perkins. When they registered it in the county seat of Ravenna, they called their town Akron, derived from a Greek word meaning “high.” In a skillful political move, Perkins had the town plat drawn with a canal running through the center of the village. And to clinch the deal, he deeded a third of the town lots to the state. This, together with Perkins’s vigorous lobbying in Columbus, was irresistible to the canal commissioners, who adopted the route through Akron.
Undaunted, Crosby, a clever politician as well as innovator, went to see Perkins, asking the general to partner with him on what Perkins first thought was a wildly ambitious scheme. Crosby proposed that they purchase water rights to the Little Cuyahoga River in Middlebury and build a diversion dam at the foot of Bank Street. From this dam they would “build a river,” a 2-mile-long millrace that would run west along the rim of the Little Cuyahoga Valley, turn south down what would later become Akron’s Main Street, and then go west down what would be called Mill Street, pouring its contents into the hydraulics of a gristmill that Crosby would build on the edge of the canal at Lock 5 (on the present site of the Radisson Hotel). After turning the machinery in Crosby’s mill, the effluent water (the tail race gushing from the mammoth mill) would flow down the precipitous slope becoming a new millrace running parallel to the canal (and through property that Perkins already owned). Crosby contended that this would attract other industries into the valley. But Perkins remained unconvinced, and it would take years for him to change his mind.
Meanwhile, work

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