Tuesday, March 29, 2011

The Erie Canal




Erie Canal was the first important national waterway built in the United States. It crossed upstate New York from Buffalo on Lake Erie to Albany to Troy on the Hudson River. Completed in 1825, the canal joined the Atlantic Ocean with the Great Lakes system. It provided a route over which manufactured goods and settlers could flow into the Midwest without passing through Canada, and over which timber and agricultural products could be transported to the East.

For a hundred years before the Erie Canal was built, people had been talking about a canal that would join the Great Lakes and the Atlantic Ocean. The man who planned the Erie Canal and carried the plans through was De Witt Clinton. Clinton was mayor of New York City for most of the period between 1803 and 1815. He was governor of the state from 1817 to 1822 and again from 1825 until his death in 1828. Those who opposed the canal laughingly called it “Clinton’s Ditch.”

Clinton and Gouverneur Morris went to Washington in 1812 to ask for federal help for the project, but they were unsuccessful. In 1816, Clinton petitioned the New York State Legislature to build the canal. His petition won so much support that the governor appointed a canal commission and made Clinton its head. Clinton became governor in 1817, and shortly afterward, on July 4, 1817, broke ground for the canal in Rome, New York, then a village on the Mohawk River. Construction took eight years. The canal formally opened on Oct. 26, 1825. The first barge to travel its entire length, the Seneca Chief, left Buffalo with Clinton on board on Oct. 26, 1825. It arrived in New York City on November 4 and was greeted all along the way by enthusiastic crowds.

The building of the canal was paid for by the state of New York. It cost $7,143,789, but it soon earned its price many times over. The canal cut freight rates between Buffalo and New York City by more than 90 percent and strengthened New York City’s position as the nation’s largest city and principal port. As the canal traffic grew, towns along its course prospered. Albany, Utica, Syracuse, Rochester, and Buffalo became major cities.

The original canal was 363 miles (584 kilometers) long. It was 28 feet (8.5 meters) wide at the bottom, 40 feet (12 meters) wide at the top, and 4 feet (1.2 meters) deep. It could carry barges that were 80 feet (24 meters) long and 15 feet (4.6 meters) wide, with a draft of 31/2 feet (1.1 meters). The canal had 83 locks, which raised vessels on the canal about 565 feet (172 meters) from the Hudson River to Lake Erie. Barges were towed along the canal by horses and mules on shore. At first, travel on the canal was slow. The famous editor Horace Greeley wrote that passengers traveled a mile and a half an hour on the Erie Canal for a cent and a half a mile. But fast passenger boats could travel 100 miles (160 kilometers) a day.

The canal was enlarged several times between 1835 and 1862. But business began to fall off in the 1870’s as railroads became the main long-distance carriers of freight and passengers. In 1903, the people of New York voted to build a great modern waterway, linking the Erie Canal with three shorter canals in the state to form what now is called the New York State Canal System. This system, which is 524 miles (843 kilometers) long, opened in 1918. See New York State Canal System.

"Erie Canal." World Book Student. World Book, 2010

Questions

1) What year was the Erie Canal Completed?


2) According to the article, what had people been talking about for 100 years before the Erie Canal was built?


3) Name two things the canal was used for.


4) How many years did it take to build the canal?


5) Who paid for the building of the canal? how much did it cost?


6) How long was the original canal?


7) Why did business on the Erie Canal began to fall off in the 1870’s?


8) Think of one question of your own and answer it based on the information in the article.


9) Why would business people want to join the Great Lakes to the Atlantic Ocean?


10) What reasons do you think people had for using the railroad instead of the canal?







Next we will look at some Document Based Questions to answer some more questions about the Erie Canal.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Reflection On Unit 4




In your social studies notebooks please answer the following:

1) Explain the focus of our research in Unit 4.

2) Summarize the steps taken to research our topic.

3) Assess the tools we used to present our research.

4) Write about one thing we did that you feel you did really well in this unit.

5) Write about one thing we did that you think you need improvement on.

Be sure that you answer using full sentencesand proper punctuation.

Unit 4

Grade 4

Unit 4: The New Nation

Essential Question: What does it mean to be free?

Focus: The U.S. Constitution

Students will create a PowerPoint presentation about the U.S. Constitution.

Activities:

1) Students will understand the main idea and supporting details of the writing of the US Constitution by taking notes during
a short film*.

2) Students will open and save a PowerPoint presentation.

3) Students will import photos and add text to multiple slides in their PowerPoint presentations.

4) Students will upload finished presentations to a class blog.

* Films are closed-captioned so students can watch, read and listen.


Students that meet twice a week each made their own PowerPoint presentation:



Students that meet once a week made PowerPoints as a group: