Page:Historic highways of America (Volume 14).djvu/156

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.

CHAPTER V

LOCAL INFLUENCES OF THE CANAL

A CAREFUL study of the influence of the Erie Canal upon the great commonwealth which built it has been made by Mr. Julius Winden, and the results of his investigation, important and interesting, have been placed at the disposal of the present writer.[1] The entire region affected by the canal, from New York City to Buffalo, is divided by Mr. Winden into three sections; the first covers the Hudson River valley from the mouth of the Mohawk to the sea; the second includes the Mohawk Valley from the Hudson to Utica where the canal left the valley; the third extends from the Mohawk to Lake Erie. The sections are designated, respectively, as Section A, Section B, and Section C.

  1. The Influence of the Erie Canal upon the population along its course, bearing the imprint of the University of Wisconsin, 1901.