Tech24 Deals Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the Tech24 Deals Content Network
  2. Wabash and Erie Canal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wabash_and_Erie_Canal

    The Wabash and Erie Canal was a shipping canal that linked the Great Lakes to the Ohio River via an artificial waterway. The canal provided traders with access from the Great Lakes all the way to the Gulf of Mexico. Over 460 miles long, it was the longest canal ever built in North America. The canal known as the Wabash & Erie in the 1850s and ...

  3. Miami and Erie Canal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miami_and_Erie_Canal

    The Miami and Erie Canal was a 274-mile (441 km) canal that ran from Cincinnati to Toledo, Ohio, creating a water route between the Ohio River and Lake Erie. [1] Construction on the canal began in 1825 and was completed in 1845 at a cost to the state government of $8 million ($262 million in 2023). At its peak, it included 19 aqueducts, three ...

  4. Great Miami River - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Miami_River

    The Great Miami River (also called the Miami River) ( Shawnee: Msimiyamithiipi[ 2]) is a tributary of the Ohio River, approximately 160 miles (260 km) long, [ 3] in southwestern Ohio and Indiana in the United States. The Great Miami originates at the man-made Indian Lake and flows south through the cities of Sidney, Piqua, Troy, Dayton ...

  5. Maumee River - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maumee_River

    The Wabash and Erie Canal was constructed on the south side of the river, continuing southwest from Defiance to Fort Wayne, Indiana, crossing the "summit" to the Wabash River valley (in Miami-Illinois the Wabash River was known as Waapaahšiki siipiiwi). Both canals were important pre-railway transportation methods in the 1840–60 period.

  6. Miami people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miami_people

    Miami people. The Miami ( Miami–Illinois: Myaamiaki) are a Native American nation originally speaking one of the Algonquian languages. Among the peoples known as the Great Lakes tribes, they occupied territory that is now identified as north-central Indiana, southwest Michigan, and western Ohio.

  7. Whitewater Canal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whitewater_Canal

    Whitewater Canal. Coordinates: 39°27′33″N 85°06′34″W. Whitewater Canal (Metamora, Indiana) The Whitewater Canal, which was built between 1836 (188 years ago) and 1847 (177 years ago), spanned a distance of 76 miles (122 km) and stretched from Lawrenceburg, Indiana on the Ohio River to Hagerstown, Indiana near the West Fork of the ...

  8. Canal Lands - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canal_Lands

    The era of canal building in the west began after the success of the Erie Canal in New York. States wanted to build canals to connect the Great Lakes with the Mississippi River basin. The first federal action to support such canals was for Indiana , to allow a canal between the Wabash River and Lake Erie , in 1824.

  9. Wabash River - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wabash_River

    Upon entering Indiana, the river has many sharp turns; these regularly lead to log jams that can block the river. Because of the many turns in the river, during the 1830s, the state created several separate canal channels to shorten the journey between the state line and Fort Wayne as part of the Wabash and Erie Canal project. The canals were ...