Page:Notes on the State of Virginia (1853).djvu/24

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8
RIVERS AND NAVIGATION.

The Ohio is the most beautiful river on earth. Its current gentle, waters clear, and bosom smooth and unbroken by rocks and rapids, a single instance only excepted. It is a quarter of a mile wide at Fort Pitt; 500 yards at the mouth of the Great Kanhaway; 1 mile and 25 poles at Louisville; quarter of a mile on the Rapids, 3 or 4 miles below Louisville; half a mile where the low country begins, which is 20 miles above Green River; one and a quarter at the receipt of the Tanissee; and a mile wide at the mouth. Its length, as measured according to its meanders by Captain Hutchings, is as follows:

From Fort Pitt:

Miles.
 
To Log's Town, 18½
Big Beaver Creek, 10¾
Little Beaver Creek, 13½
Yellow Creek, 11¾
Two Creeks, 21¾
Long Reach, 53¾
End Long Reach, 16½
Muskingum, 25½
Little Kanhaway, 12¼
Hockhocking, 16 
Great Kanhaway, 82½
Guiandot, 43¾
Sandy Creek, 14½
Sioto, 48¼
Little Miami, 126¼
Licking Creek, 8 
Great Miami, 26¾
Big Bones, 32½
Kentuckey, 44¼
Rapids, 77¼
Low country, 155¾
Buffalo River, 64½
Wabash, 97¼
Big Cave, 42¾
Shawanee River, 52½
Cherokee River, 13 
Massac, 11 
Missisipi, 46 

1,188

In common Winter and Spring tides it affords 15 feet water to Louisville, 10 feet to La Tarte's Rapids, 40 miles above the mouth of the Great Kanhaway, and a sufficiency at all times for light batteaux and canoes to Fort Pitt. The Rapids are in latitude 38° 8′. The inundations of this river begin about the last of March, and subside in July. During these, a first rate man of war may be carried from Louisville to New Orleans, if the sudden turns of the river and the strength of its current