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Canal
Structures
The
canal itself was a "prism", wider at the water's surface
than at the bottom, and large enough for two boats to pass each
other. Digging and blasting the channel for the canal was hard and
dangerous work, and the result was often just referred to as a ditch.
The masonry parts were held in higher esteem, and were termed "works
of art" in the canal company's documents. These included the locks,
culverts, aqueducts, and the waste weirs that regulated the flow
of water through the canal and turned it into an engine to lift
and lower the canal boats.
The
stonemasons were the most prominent craftsmen of the canal, painstakingly
cutting blocks of stone to as small a tolerance as a half-inch.
Unfortunately, this sort of craftsmanship is much too time consuming
and expensive for the modern world. The highway bridges that vault
the river and the canal are more sensibly formed of concrete, but
this sort of construction did not develop until well after the canal
was built. Concrete was not used on the canal until 1906, and is
most commonly found as replacement work in waste weirs and lock
pockets.
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History | Canal
Structures | Washington
Aqueduct | Great
Falls Fishladder | The
Incline Plane | Monocacy
Aqueduct | |