Bike Trail Historical Lock No. 14
It all began with the Great Miami River, as the early pioneers sought ways to get their goods to market in New York. The landscape made this an impossible route to drive cattle so the pioneers built flatboats and rafts to float their wheat, corn, lard, furs and flour south to New Orleans, via the Great Miami, Ohio and Mississippi Rivers. The travelers broke up the raft for firewood for the return trip and walked back along the Natchez Trace, 444 miles of road that commemorates an ancient wilderness trail from Natchez, Mississippi to Nashville, Tennessee. Thomas Jefferson suggested a canal as an inland route and in 1825, the General Assembly passed the canal legislation enabling the start of the canal in Middletown, Ohio and continuing to Dayton and Piqua. Piqua then became a boomtown, since all of the goods from Cincinnati and points beyond arrived there: such as coffee, salt, glass windows and other more expensive imported objects. It was then possible to bring raw materials up the canal. Industry was born and new towns bloomed along the waterway.HM Number | HM2IFC |
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Series | This marker is part of the The Miami & Erie Canal series |
Tags | |
Placed By | Miami County Foundation Miami County Park District |
Marker Condition | No reports yet |
Date Added | Thursday, July 4th, 2019 at 2:03pm PDT -07:00 |
UTM (WGS84 Datum) | 16T E 739389 N 4432737 |
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Decimal Degrees | 40.01091667, -84.19526667 |
Degrees and Decimal Minutes | N 40° 0.655', W 84° 11.716' |
Degrees, Minutes and Seconds | 40° 0' 39.3" N, 84° 11' 42.96" W |
Driving Directions | Google Maps |
Closest Postal Address | At or near , , |
Alternative Maps | Google Maps, MapQuest, Bing Maps, Yahoo Maps, MSR Maps, OpenCycleMap, MyTopo Maps, OpenStreetMap |
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