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Justice
William O. Douglas and the C&O Canal
On October 12, 1998, the C&O Canal National Historical Park
commemorated the 100th Anniversary of William O. Douglas' birth
by unveiling a portrait of Justice Douglas hiking along the towpath.
Speakers at the ceremony included Park Superintendent Douglas D.
Faris, U.S. Representative Connie Morella (MD), and those in the
picture on the right. At the podium is former U.S. Representative
Gilbert Gude (MD) who introduced the legislation that preserved
the C&O Canal by designating it a National Historical Park.
Seated from left to right are Cathleen Douglas Stone (widow of Justice
Douglas), Carl Linden (C&O Canal Association), Tom Kozar (the
portrait's artist), and U.S. Senator Paul Sarbanes (MD).
The
portrait, commissioned by the C&O Canal Association, now hangs
in the Great Falls Tavern Visitor Center.
Millions
of people each year enjoy the natural, cultural, and recreational
resources of the C&O Canal, making it one of the most heavily
visited national parks in the country. Yet, many visitors don't
realize that this beautiful strip of land alongside the Potomac
River was almost paved over.
In
1938, the U.S. government purchased the right of way of the 184.5
mile long canal. Unused as a commercial waterway since 1924, the
government hoped to restore it as a natural recreational area. The
first 22 miles of the canal had been repaired and rewatered when
World War II restrictions halted the remainder of the project. After
the war, Congress came up with what it thought would be a better
use of the canal. The representatives appropriated $40,000 for a
joint survey and report on the feasibility of using the land for
a vehicular parkway. They felt a road could provide people with
better access to the beauty and recreational opportunities of the
Potomac River Valley. They also felt it would provide economical
assistance to many towns in western Maryland. On January 3, 1954
an editorial in the Washington Post endorsed the government's
plan. One reader in particular disagreed with the idea of experiencing
nature from the seat of a car. He was U.S. Supreme Court Justice
William O. Douglas and the actions he took saved the C&O Canal.
William
O. Douglas, an avid outdoorsman, devoted much of his personal time
to saving the environment. He often spoke and wrote on the importance
of conservation. He fought to preserve the natural state of rivers
and lead successful campaigns to stop construction of dams in Kentucky,
Arkansas, Illinois, and Washington. When in Washington, D.C., he
often hiked along the canal. He said he was grateful that an accident
of history created a continuous strip of park land along one of
America's most beautiful rivers.
Justice
Douglas felt that the long-neglected canal, like the river, was
rich in beauty, history, wildlife, and recreational opportunities.
He felt it needed to be preserved and maintained. He wrote a letter
to the editors of the paper. Realizing that words alone could not
save the canal from being paved over, he issued a challenge in his
letter.
His
letter, which appeared in the January 19, 1954 edition of the Washington
Post, was the first step toward the eventual establishment of
the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historical Park.
The
discussion concerning the construction of a parkway along the
Chesapeake and Ohio Canal arouses many people. Fishermen, hunters,
hikers, campers, ornithologists, and others who like to get acquainted
with nature first-hand and on their own are opposed to making
a highway out of this sanctuary.
The
stretch of 185 miles from Washington, D.C. to Cumberland, Md.,
is one of the most fascinating and picturesque in the Nation.
The river and its islands are part of the charm. The cliffs, the
streams, the draws, the beaches, the swamps are another part.
The birds and game, the blaze of color in the spring and fall,
the cattails in the swamp, the blush of buds in late winter-these
are also some of the glory of the place.
In
the early 20's Mr. Justice (Louis D.) Brandeis traveled the canal
and river by canoe to Cumberland. It was for him exciting adventure
and recreation. Hundreds of us still use this sanctuary for hiking
and camping. It is a refuge, a place of retreat, a long stretch
of quiet and peace at the Capitol's back door-a wilderness area
where we can commune with God and with nature, a place not yet
marred by the roar of wheels and the sound of horns.
It
is a place for boys and girls, men and women. One can hike 15
or 20 miles on a Sunday afternoon, or sleep on high dry ground
in the quiet of a forest, or just go and sit with no sound except
water lapping at one's feet. It is a sanctuary for everyone who
loves woods a sanctuary that would be utterly destroyed by a fine
two-lane highway.
I
wish the man who wrote your editorial of January 3, 1954, approving
the parkway would take time off and come with me. We would go
with packs on our backs and walk the 185 miles to Cumberland.
I feel that if your editor did, he would return a new man and
use the power of your great editorial page to help keep this sanctuary
untouched.
One
who walked the canal its full length could plead that cause with
the eloquence of a John Muir. He would get to know muskrats, badgers,
and fox; he would hear the roar of wind in thickets; He would
see strange islands and promontories through the fantasy of fog;
he would discover the glory there is in the first flower of spring,
the glory there is even in a blade of grass; the whistling wings
of ducks would make silence have new values for him. Certain it
is that he could never acquire that understanding going 60, or
even 25, miles an hour.
The
editors of the Washington Post accepted his challenge to
hike the entire length of the canal. Justice Douglas assumed the
hike would consist of three or four people simply backpacking along
the canal. However, news of the walk spread and many other conservationists
asked to join the hiking party.
The
hiking group grew to 58 by the time it left Cumberland on March
20. The group included Dr. Olaus Murie, president of the Wilderness
Society, and Sigurd Olson, president of the National Parks Association.
The group also included experts on geology, geography, ecology,
history, ornithology, and mammalogy. Each night the group was treated
to lectures on what it had seen and would see the next day. Sporting
clubs along the route hosted the group in the evenings, various
organizations prepared and served meals, and a trail club transported
the gear so the hikers wouldn't have to carry it.
Although
these additions made the trip more enjoyable, it was still a difficult
hike. The hikers averaged 23 miles a day, and Justice Douglas set
a brisk four mile per hour pace. They even had to contend with a
driving snow storm on the second day of the eight day hike. In fact,
only nine men, including the 55 year old justice, completed the
entire hike.
Incidents
along the way inspired Sigurd Olson and others to compose "The
Canal Song" and each night new stanzas were added to reflect
the events of the day. There were 31 verses by the end of the trip.
The following provide some insight into the hardships faced by the
group.
From
Cumberland to Washington
Is one-eight-nine they say;
That doesn't faze this dauntless band
It's downhill all the way.
Oh,
the mercury was dropping
And the snow was coming down
As we stepped out at break of dawn
And strode toward Paw Paw Town.
We
hurled ourselves into the storm,
Our jaws clenched tight with pain;
No food, no rest- just tortures damned,
And now they say it'll rain.
Oh
the old Potomac's rising,
No nobler band's come down;
We'll bleed and die, our cause is just,
We'll get to Hancock town.
The
people swarm around us
With cookies, fruit and cheer,
This is the consarned dangdest thing
That ever they did hear!
Last
night we took to sleeping out
Beneath the open skies;
The ground was hard, the dew was wet
But the stars were in our eyes!
The
duffers climbed aboard the truck
With many a groan and sigh,
But something faster passed them up
The Judge was whizzing by.
The
blisters are a'burning
And the tendon's getting sore,
While the shutter-boys from Washington
Keep yelling "Just one more".
The
miles are rolling right alone,
We're tough as nails by now;
We hold our broken bodies straight
As the Justice takes a bow!
The
knees are slowly playing out
The arches start to drop;
If we had John Brown's body here,
We'd like to make a swap.
Oh,
Rumsey built the steamboat
At good old Shepherdstown;
We wish we had the damned thing here,
So we could steam to town.
Oh,
the towpaths licks are standing
And the tunnel's still intact;
We know our friends will fight like hell
To stop the Cadillacs.
Glory
to the Immortal Nine,
The waiting thousands roared,
The conquering heroes hit Lock 5,
And hurled themselves on board.
And
now our journey's ended,
Our aches and troubles gone;
"But blisters heal", so says the Post,
And memories linger on.
As
the hike progressed, one man's effort to save a piece of wilderness
became a big news story. Wire services spread word of the hike to
thousands of newspapers across the country. Time magazine ran a
story. Movie theaters showed a newsreel of the hike. Reporters conducted
interviews with Justice Douglas as he walked.
Photographers
captured the hike on film. People came out to hike with the justice.
School children and townspeople shouted their support as the group
passed by their towns. Support grew in favor of saving the canal.
After seeing and experiencing nature up close and personal, the
editors of the Washington Post reversed their positions and
supported canal preservation.
On
the last night of the hike, the justice organized a committee that
would make recommendations and draft plans for preserving and protecting
the canal's resources. He served as chairman of this group (which
became the C&O Canal Association in 1957) which worked toward
creating an expanded canal park. Years of effort to preserve, restore,
and develop this remarkable strip of land culminated on January
8, 1971 with the passage of The Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National
Historical Park Act.
William
O. Douglas proved that one man can help make a difference. In 1977
the park was officially dedicated to the man who saved the canal.
Each year the C&O Canal Association holds a canal hike in his
honor. Late in life, someone asked the justice how he would like
to be remembered. Although he was involved in many landmark decisions
while serving on the Supreme Court, he replied as someone who tried
to make the earth a little more beautiful.
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William O. Douglas | Families
| Interviews with Canal
Workers | Charles Fenton
Mercer | The Spong Family
| Canal Workers | Benjamin
Wright | George Washington
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