The Patowmack Company was a great American enterprise, intended both to makes its owners rich and serve a national purpose -- binding the settlers across the Appalachians more tightly to their country, thus unifying the nation before it had a chance to fall apart.
The skirting canal at Great Falls was the most challenging of the five canals built by the company, and it took seventeen years to finish. Above, one of the surviving locks.
View of the cut through the cliffs to the point below the falls where the canal began. The canal operated off and on until 1828, when the C&O Canal was built past this point along the northern side of the river. Alas for canal lovers, the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad won the race to the west, and the C&O never fulfilled its designers' dreams.
The gorge below the falls.
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