Canal Connects Johnstown to the World
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Boat going through the Canal - towpath on the right of the photo. Shipping things over water was much faster and cheaper than over primitive roads with horses and wagons.
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The route of the Canal on an aerial view of Johnstown
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Canal boats were shaped to carry as much as possible in the shallow, narrow waterways.
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1850s map of Johnstown showing the Canal
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A canal basin
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Businesses grew up along the Canal in Johnstown
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An aqueduct carries the Canal over the Little Conemaugh River
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After the railroad put the canal out of business, parts of the Canal, like this wall, could still be seen in Johnstown.
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Aqueducts -- special bridges that carry water -- helped the Canal cross rivers.
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 This huge stone arch railroad bridge across the Little Conemaugh was orinally a Portage Railroad viaduct. It held back the waters of the 1889 flood until it suddenly broke letting loose a huge floodwave.
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This is a painting of an aqueduct in action across the LIttle Conemaugh River in 1845.
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A map of Johnstown during the Canal heyday.
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The canal charged tolls based on freight. Loaded boats were weighed at weighlock near Clinton Street in Johnstown.
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The Portage Railroad carried canal boats over the mountains from Hollidaysburg to Johnstown. It was the engineering wonder of its time.
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Some of the Portage Railway buildings still stand at the National Portage Railroad Historic Site in Portage.
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