Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2007/07/11
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]On Jul 11, 2007, at 2:35 PM, lug-request@leica-users.org wrote: > That Recent Unpleasantness? > > Sonny Carter <sonc.hegr@gmail.com> wrote: On 7/11/07, Robert Meier > wrote: >> >> "Since the advent of rail..." Would that be in the decades after the >> Civil >> War? >> > > > You mean the War of Northern Aggression? ;-) Regardless of what you call it, the age of rail started long before the (multiple named) war. Competitive rail lines started running alongside of the route of the Erie Canal as early as 1831. Rail was faster but much more expensive. The cheapest way to transport bulk cargo was, and still is, by water. A pair of mules could haul a canal boat loaded with 75 tons of produce as long as you didn't want to go faster than three or four miles an hour. Since most of the cargo from the midwest farm states was agricultural goods or raw materials, the canal was a natural. In 1852, just before the Civil Aggression between the States, the Erie Canal transported thirteen times as much cargo as all the rail lines in New York State combined. The canal has been rebuilt several times, It is now a series of damed, canalized rivers which parallels the route of the "Old Erie" canal. The old canal was about the width and depth of the British canals that Geebee so lovingly photographs. Portions of it still remain as a museum. For foreign LUG members: New York State is no more like New York City than Paris is like France. Once you get 20 or so miles outside of a metropolitan area the state becomes low density rural farmland. Most population centers followed the waterways of two centuries ago. New York City is the main seaport, with towns and villages located up the Hudson River, the Erie Canal, Lake Ontario and Lake Champlain. Most of the rest of the state is wild. In fact the Adirondack Park, three times the size of Yellowstone, is classified as "permanently wild." It may not be as spectacular as Yellowstone but it has its own rugged beauty. Painters of America's first art movement, the Hudson River School, were no dopes. They spent a lifetime depicting the magesty of the Hudson Valley and the Adirondacks. So if you visit New York, forget the fleshpots of Gotham, rent a car and drive up the Hudson to Lake Champlain, then follow the waterside highway across the state ending at Niagra Falls. Bow in the direction of Rochester as you drive by and take a lot of pictures. Larry Z