This richly illustrated and engagingly written book tells the story of
the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal from its origins in George Washington's
decision to link the nation's new capital with the western frontier;
through the beginning of construction in 1828 (fatefully, on the same
day that the cornerstone of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad was set); to
the "completion" of the project. Planned to go as far as Ohio and to
take twelve years in construction, the Canal company's ambitions were
scaled back after 22 years of toil, $14 million in expense, and the
bankruptcy of several contractors took them only as far as Cumberland,
at the eastern shed of the Alleghenies.
Describing in detail how the C&O operated in its heyday, Elizabeth Kytle
takes the story through the shut-down of operations in 1924, after the
Canal was purchased by its competitor, the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad,
and the efforts that resulted in its preservation as a National
Historical Park in 1971. Enriching this narrative, the book also
provides oral history accounts of eleven men and women who worked on or
grew up along the banks of the Canal.