Main Line of Public Works - Western Division Canal

Western Division Canal

Western Division-Pennsylvania Canal
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
Location: Along the Conemaugh River, Bolivar, Derry Township, and Fairfield Township
Area: 15 acres (6.1 ha)
Built: 1830
Built by: Pennsylvania Canal Commission
Governing body: Federal
NRHP Reference#: 74001817
Added to NRHP: September 17, 1974
Western Division of the PA Canal
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
Location: Along the Conemaugh River, Bell, Derry, and Loyalhanna Townships
Area: 15 acres (6.1 ha)
Built: 1830
Built by: White, Canvas; Geddes, James
Governing body: Federal
NRHP Reference#: 82001537
Added to NRHP: November 14, 1982

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 1,140 feet (347 m), 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 810 feet (250 m) under Grant's Hill in Pittsburgh, with the Monongahela River.

Subsequent Western Division Canal extensions went from Freeport up the Kiskiminetas and Conemaugh Rivers to Blairsville and then to the western end of the Allegheny Portage Railroad at Johnstown. East of Tunnelton, the route went through a canal tunnel of 817 feet (249 m) built to avoid a long loop of the Conemaugh River. The first fully loaded freight boat traveled from Johnstown to Pittsburgh in 1831; the route through Grant's Hill opened in 1832. Over its length of 104 miles (167 km), the canal employed 68 locks, 16 river dams, and 16 aqueducts. From Freeport, a separate extension, the Kittanning Feeder, ran 14 miles (23 km) up the Allegheny River to Kittanning.

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