Illinois and Michigan Canal (Ill.)
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Record of stone used for the lock and dam at Henry, 1869-1870. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37394469
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Register of canal indebtedness, 1842-1844. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37394576
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Record of appraised value of canal land, 1849. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37381359
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Canceled bond coupons, 1854-1855. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37453839
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Record of boat clearances and arrivals. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37477245
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Bills, vouchers, and receipts, 1823-1899. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37459087
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Boat inspectors' reports, 1858-1864. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37477257
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Canceled checks, 1856-1857. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37485005
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Record of notes paid, 1848-1871. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37390845
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Record of forfeited land and lots subject to resale, 1860-1868. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37381559
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Dividend payments, 1849-1856. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37453925
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Record of boat clearances at Chicago, 1863. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37477145
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Register of assignments or transfers of subscriptions, 1846. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37446625
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Weekly toll reports, 1848-1926. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37459194
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of List of lots and land conveyed to the trustees of the Illinois and Michigan Canal by the Governor, 1843-1848. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37381326
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Statistics of laborers, 1838-1848. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37394336
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Register of lockages and detentions, 1848-1902. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37476764
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Land granted by the federal government to the state of Illinois for construction of the Illinois and Michigan Canal, 1830-1856. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37502480
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Boat clearances, 1848-1932. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37476736
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Locktenders' reports, 1848. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37476750
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal for city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal was closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) and the Dept. of Transportation assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Reports, 1830-1898. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37365070
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Records of payments made to contractors, 1836-1864. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37391107
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Register of boats navigating the Illinois and Michigan Canal, 1855-1832. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37484865
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Record of payment of arrears of interest, 1854-1857. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37453937
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Levels of the Kankakee River and the head of the Kankakee feeder up to Beardsley's Dam, 1856. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37485397
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Register of interest payments on the $1.6 million canal construction loan, 1848-1853. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37459053
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal for city sewage disposal (1865) but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the money to the city following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Duties of the members of the Board of Trustees, 1845. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37364905
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Record of articles transported, cleared, and arrived, 1852-1907. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37476913
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Statements of timber used for construction, 1845-1847. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37394429
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Stone books, 1839-1876. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37394452
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Record of forfeited and resold land, 1851-1868. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37381452
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Cook, Grundy, and Will County surveys, 1835-1861. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37495787
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Fidelity bonds, 1845-1931. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37496075
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Register of boat lockages, 1886-1887. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37476781
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Supplies furnished to laborers, 1846-1857. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37394407
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Insurance policies, 1896-1932. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37485106
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Newspaper clippings, 1902. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37502516
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal for city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal was closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Quarterly reports to the Auditor of Public Accounts, 1903-1914. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37365295
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Powers of attorney, 1842-1847. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37496117
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Register of certificates for state bonds, 1841. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37394605
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Bank balances, 1836-1860. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37484957
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Collector's record of arrivals and departures on the canal at Chicago, 1897-1908. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37477211
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Record of original payments of 10 percent of principal, 1857-1870. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37459076
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Record of reappraised value of canal land, 1860-1870. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37381388
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Register of powers of attorney, 1845-1846. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37496154
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Register of interest payments due for land purchased on installment, 1837-1839. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37390941
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Register of initial land payments, 1849-1851. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37387049
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Journal of money received for land sales payments, 1851-1854. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37390966
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Construction contracts, 1836-1902. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37391078
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Original payments of 5 percent of principal, 1860-1871. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37454122
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Abstracts of tolls and lockages collected, 1850-1912. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37476652
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Register of canal expenses, 1836-1841. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37459154
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Contract bids, 1836-1848. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37391016
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Register of ninety-day checks, 1838-1844. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37484966
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Certificates of changes of boat names, 1849-1906. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37484879
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal for city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventaully canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of List of land patents issued by the state of Illinois, 1831-1885. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37365482
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Register of boat passes, 1910-1929. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37484898
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Receipts issued to subscribers to the $1.6 million canal construction loan, 1846-1847. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37453790
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Register of leases, 1840-1920. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37485051
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal for city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Certificates for land and lots, 1848-1870. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37365565
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Contract register, 1845-1848. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37391092
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Check ledger, 1893-1895. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37485028
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system conncting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal for cty sewage disposal (1865) but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the money to the city following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). Even after the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) and the Dept. of Transportation assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Board resolutions, 1837-1914. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37364870
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Construction estimates, 1836-1849. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37390989
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Rules and regulations for employees, 1845. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37394251
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Record of tolls received, 1868-1911. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37476670
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal for city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal was closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventaully, canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation assumed administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Preemption applications, 1945-1854. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37365446
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Tract books of canal land sales, 1830-1927. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37381211
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Abstract of title, 1830-1912. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37381266
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Toll rates, 1851. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37459169
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Record of boat arrivals at Chicago, 1867-1873. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37477170
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Check register, 1839-1843. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37484977
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal for city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested by a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). The canal was closed to commerce in 1935, but the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. After canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Land patents issued by the Illinois and Michigan Canal, 1842-1878. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37365517
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Cash received, 1836-1941. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37484945
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Bank drafts, 1846-1847. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37485038
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Illinois River levels, 1857. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37495850
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Survey and field notes, 1836-1922. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37485314
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Register of towpath passes, 1898-1927. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37484914
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Contractors' preemption petitions, 1845. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37391058
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal for city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal was closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Reports of the chief engineer, 1846-1848. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37365184
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Check stubs, 1845-1900. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37484995
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Record of installment payments for land, 1848-1850. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37387110
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Western Stone Company Account, 1895-1896. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37394489
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Register of subscribers to the $1.6 million canal construction loan, 1843. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37446516
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Chicago sewerage records, 1865. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37502462
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Abstracts of completed construction work, 1838-1848. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37391135
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Lists of unsold lots and land, 1852-1873. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37381479
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Register of boats locked, 1912-1915. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37476797
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal for cty sewage disposal in (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal was closed to commerce in 1935, the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually, canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) and the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Treasurer's reports to the trustees on the $1.6 million canal construction loan, 1848-1865. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37365160
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Register of lots and land sold but not patented, 1837-1843. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37381291
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Record of tolls paid, 1849-1926. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37459224
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Certificates of changes in boat ownership, 1857-1904. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37484874
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Arrears of interest payments to bondholders, 1855-1856. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37454007
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal for city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal was closed to commerce in 1935, the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventaully, canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) and the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed some administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeoogical, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Treasurer's reports, 1837-1842. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37365105
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Telegrams, 1849. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37496028
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Annual land sales reports, 1848-1865. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37381596
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Materials relating to riparian rights, submerged lands, rivers and lakes, and navigability in Illinois, 1854-1925. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37535089
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Register of messages sent via the Ohio and Mississippi Telegraph Company, 1848-1850. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37502435
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of General summary of unpaid dividends, 1848-1857. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37453909
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Account book of T. W. Trutch, 1857. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37495956
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Register of orders, 1840-1841. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37391121
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Loan certificates, 1845-1847. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37453814
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Plats and field notes of canal property, leases, and adjacent property, 1947-1958. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37485069
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal for city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal was closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually, canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) and the Dept. of Transportation assumed administrative responsibility (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Quarterly financial reports to the Governor, 1918-1934. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37365261
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Certificates of boat registration, 1849-1917. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37484856
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Specifications for locks on the Illinois River, 1869. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37394514
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Damage claims, 1843-1847. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37502354
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Grundy County field notes and surveys, 1863-1881. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37485239
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Register of interest and 6 percent of principal payments made to subscribers to the $1.6 million canal construction loan, 1845-1849. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37454106
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal for city sewage disposal (1865), but this process was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a guberatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal was closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Statement of collections made to the Auditor of Public Accounts, 1917-1934. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37365350
After the U.S. Congress granted nearly a hundred miles of public lands (between Lake Michigan and Illinois River headwaters) to the state of Illinois for canal construction (March 30, 1822), the General Assembly passed a canal bill (Feb. 14, 1923) establishing the Illinois and Michigan Canal Company. Following this company's failure, Congress donated Illinois land (March 2, 1827) "equal to one-half of five sections in width, on each side of the canal, reserving each alternate section to the United States." Ground was broken at Lockport and Bridgeport on July 4, 1836, but financial problems kept delaying construction, and it was not until April 1848, that the waterway opened for navigation. With its completion, the inland waterway system connecting New York with New Orleans was completed, spurring settlement and economic development along the canal route and transforming Chicago into a regional industrial and transportation center. Chicago's City Council donated funds to deepen the canal or city sewage disposal (1865), but this work was not completed until 1871, when the General Assembly refunded the city's money following the Chicago fire.
Having paid off all canal creditors by May 1871, the state resumed complete canal control and waterway administration was invested in a gubernatorially appointed Board of Canal Commissioners. This management continued until 1917, when jurisdiction transferred to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1917-1925); then to the Dept. of Purchases and Construction (1925-1933); and finally, back to the Dept. of Public Works and Buildings (1933-1955). After the canal closed to commerce (1935), the state continued to sell and lease property and waterpower sites. Eventually canal and adjacent lands became a state park (1955) while the Dept. of Transportation briefly assumed other administrative responsibilities (1971-1984). On August 24, 1984, President Reagan signed legislation establishing the canal lands as the nation's first National Heritage Corridor, an affiliated National Park Service unit. The Canal, currently administered by the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources, provides diverse archeological, natural, historic and recreational resources.
From the description of Land sales receipts, 1830-1842. (Illinois State Archive). WorldCat record id: 37381616
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