Beginnings as the Central Canal
Canals were the interstate transportation systems of the early 19th century. The success of the Erie Canal, connecting the Hudson River in New York City to the Great Lakes, encouraged canal construction. A land grant in 1827 started the Wabash & Erie Canal, and with its progress additional land grants spurred a rash of canal-building. A race to create a route of transportation for goods from the East Coast was on.
In 1834, it was announced that the Central Canal would be built connecting Wabash River to the Ohio River, starting in Peru, continuing through Indianapolis, and terminating in Evansville. Following this announcement, the town experienced a resurgence of growth.
Construction on the Central Canal began in Evansville in 1836. Roughly 20 miles of the canal had been completed north by 1839, extending from 5th St to the Pigeon Creek dam near the Gibson County line.
Despite a promising start, a financial crisis in the 1840s put a halt to most of the canal projects, and the Central Canal sat uncompleted.
A project revitalized
In 1845 another land grant was established to complete the Wabash & Erie Canal. The Central and Cross-Cut Canals were joined into the Wabash & Erie, and a new route extending the canal all the way to the Ohio River was laid out in 1846. The Cross-Cut Canal (another abandoned canal project) connected from Terre Haute to Worthington. From Worthington, the canal headed south following the old proposed Central Canal route. Just as before, news of the canal bolstered Evansville. The city was granted its charter in 1847, and a wharf was built in 1848 to handle the transfer of goods from the canal to boat traffic. Small communities along the Wabash & Erie Canal, such as the town of Smyrna, were also established in the hopes the canal would help them flourish.
Construction resumed on the Wabash & Erie Canal, and it connected to Terre Haute in 1849. The abandoned Cross Cut Canal was completed by 1850, and the portion from Worthington south to Evansville was finished in 1853. Approximately 460 miles long, the canal became the nation's longest, connecting Lake Erie (at Toledo, Ohio) with the Ohio River. Just as it did Evansville, the Wabash & Erie Canal helped grow several Indiana cities along its towpath, including Fort Wayne, Lafayette, and Terre Haute. More locally it passed through towns like Francisco and Petersburg.
When the canal was completed in 1853, water was let into its ditch and it became operational. The "Pennsylvania" was the first boat to make the entire trip from Lake Erie to Evansville and arrived September 22, 1853. The canal in Evansville included a basin used for turning boats for return trips and docking facilities for loading and unloading passengers and cargo. As a byproduct, the canal was a major source of water power during the 1850s, and several businesses were built along its route.
In Evansville, the canal entered along the Southern RR parallel to State Road 62. It headed into town through the Wesselmen Park woods and continued to Canal St. The canal turned northwest at 5th St, though land was allocated for a spur continuing to 2nd St (uncertain if it was proposed or built). It jogged near Vine St to a basin on the old Courthouse block. The canal continued on what is now 4th St, and it crossed 3rd St Lamasco (Ohio St) and 4th St Lamasco (Pennsylvania St). The canal then turned west along (Indiana St) and finally ended in a basin at the corner of Seventh Ave and Canal St (Indiana). A good view of the canal can be viewed in the 1852 Evansville and Lamasco City map.
To ease accessability bridges were built over the canal on several downtown streets. The canal company agreed to build the bridges provided the city maintained them. Bridges were built across the following streets (still compiling the list).
- Boonville Rd (Lincoln Ave)
- 8th St
- Locust St
- Main St
- Sycamore St
- Vine St
- Ingle St
- Second Ave
- Fulton Ave













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