CANAL LOCK 99 – REMOVAL OF VEGETATION

Donald A. Windsor

Canal Lock 99 was overgrown with vegetation when we began buying it.   On 2-3 July 2012, we had the Headwaters Youth Conservation Corps remove the honeysuckle bushes that had been growing atop and alongside it.   On 31 October 2014 we had Tom Pasternak cut down the trees.

Here are three photos that show the progression of the clearing.

Pics2012 #2089, 2 July 2012, shows the lock from the downstream (south) end.

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Pics2012 #2092, 2 July 2012, shows the same view after the clearing.

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Pics2014 #2372, 10 November 2014, shows the same view with the trees removed.

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Our next step will be to try to stabilize the deterioration of the lock walls. We do not want to rebuild the lock, because it is a historical ruin. However, we do want to retard its decomposition.

We also want to have it listed on the State and National Registers of Historic Places.

Our ultimate goal is to protect more portions of the Chenango Canal.

CANAL LOCK 99 PURCHASED BY THE CHENANGO LAND TRUST

Donald A. Windsor 

Chenango Canal Lock 99
100_2373 Chenango Canal Lock 99

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The Chenango Canal was the most important thing that ever happened to the Chenango valley. It transformed a self-reliant lifestyle into a membership in a much larger economy. Before the Canal, commerce was confined within isolated local areas, due to poor roads. After the Canal opened in 1837, entrepreneurs could engage in the rich markets provided by its connection to the Erie Canal, which provided access to the Hudson River and Lake Erie. No longer did residents have to make and grow everything they needed. No longer did they have to worry about what to do with any surpluses they produced. The corridor between Binghamton and Utica was changed forever.

The Chenango Canal stretched between Utica and Binghamton,a distance of 93 miles. To cross over the intervening uplands, an elevation of 706 feet above Utica and 300 above Binghamton, 116 locks were built.

As important as this canal was, none of its remains in Chenango County were secure; pieces of it are lost every year. However, now the situation is being remedied. The Chenango Land Trust has obtained Lock 99, the crown jewel of Chenango Canal remains. Built near South Oxford between 1833 and 1837, this cut-stone structure served to raise and lower boats until 1878.

The photos show the imposing interior of Lock 99.

The Chenango Land Trust intends to conserve as much of the canal remains as it can, using easements, donations, and ownership. Anyone who is interested in saving canal remnants is encouraged to contact us at 607-336-4628.

We will be offering a field trip to Lock 99 in the near future.