The Champlain Canal is a canal in New York, USA. It is now part of the New York Barge Canal. The Canal du Midi in Toulouse, France Canals are man-made waterways, usually connecting existing lakes, rivers, or oceans. ... State nickname: Empire State Other U.S. States Capital Albany Largest city New York Governor George Pataki (R) Official languages None (English is de facto) Area 141,205 km² (27th) - Land 122,409 km² - Water 18,795 km² (13. ... The New York Barge Canal is a successor to the Erie Canal and other canals within New York. ...
The Champlain Canal connects the south end of Lake Champlain to the Hudson River. Landsat photo Lake Champlain, named for the French explorer Samuel de Champlain, who encountered it 1609, is a large lake in North America, mostly within the borders of the United States (states of Vermont and New York) but partially situated across the US-Canada border in Quebec. ... View of the Hudson in the 1880s showing Jersey City The Hudson River, called Muh-he-kun-ne-tuk in Mahican, is a river running mainly through New York State but partly forming the boundary between the states of New York and New Jersey. ...
The Champlaincanal was to be connected with the Hudson river at Waterford by a lateral cut with three locks.
In consequence of increasing the depth of the canal, the water was gradually but constantly encroaching on the banks, thus narrowing the tow-path and endangering the stability of the embankments, and also filling in the bottom of the canal and thereby decreasing the depth of water.
Of the Champlaincanal, he said that on the completion of the work then under contract there would be about twenty-eight and one-half miles of enlarged canal, the greater part of which would have a uniform depth of six feet, forty-four feet bottom width and fifty-eight feet water-surface.