Milton Public Library

Early Akron's industrial valley, a history of the Cascade Locks, Jack Gieck

Label
Early Akron's industrial valley, a history of the Cascade Locks, Jack Gieck
Language
eng
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Early Akron's industrial valley
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Responsibility statement
Jack Gieck
Sub title
a history of the Cascade Locks
Summary
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 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 and includes 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
Target audience
adult
Classification
Contributor
Content

Incoming Resources