The West: Its Commerce and Navigation |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 49
Page 19
... built annually at a cost of five hundred thousand dollars . The capital invested in commerce in this city is said to amount also to above twenty millions of dollars , so that our trade and manufactures bear nearly equal proportions to ...
... built annually at a cost of five hundred thousand dollars . The capital invested in commerce in this city is said to amount also to above twenty millions of dollars , so that our trade and manufactures bear nearly equal proportions to ...
Page 33
... built in 1818 ; there were now on Lake Erie alone sixty - four steamboats . After going to some extent in these statistical details , Mr. Giddings , to give Southern gentlemen a more adequate conception of what the Western commerce ...
... built in 1818 ; there were now on Lake Erie alone sixty - four steamboats . After going to some extent in these statistical details , Mr. Giddings , to give Southern gentlemen a more adequate conception of what the Western commerce ...
Page 50
... built court houses , jails , schools , and churches ; we have covered a wilderness with productive farms , and flourishing villages . All this has been done by a people , who brought little wealth into the country , from the products of ...
... built court houses , jails , schools , and churches ; we have covered a wilderness with productive farms , and flourishing villages . All this has been done by a people , who brought little wealth into the country , from the products of ...
Page 55
... built upon , but covered with scattered buildings , were all inun- dated ; the serpentine channel of Mill creek was entirely lost in the view , and in its stead was a wide expanse of water , covering the whole plain to the bases of the ...
... built upon , but covered with scattered buildings , were all inun- dated ; the serpentine channel of Mill creek was entirely lost in the view , and in its stead was a wide expanse of water , covering the whole plain to the bases of the ...
Page 114
... built in great numbers on the various tributary streams , and floated out in high water , with produce for New Orleans . The French , who navigated the northern lakes , the Mis- sissippi , and its tributaries , adopted , in their trade ...
... built in great numbers on the various tributary streams , and floated out in high water , with produce for New Orleans . The French , who navigated the northern lakes , the Mis- sissippi , and its tributaries , adopted , in their trade ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
advantages afford aggregate Albany amount annual armory arrivals average banks bbls brls built Burnt bush bushels canal cent channels Cincinnati 1832 Cincinnati and St coal commerce constructed employed enterprise estimated exports extent facilities feet flatboats flour four hundred freight furnish h Browns'ille h Marietta hundred and fifty important improvement increase Indian iron Kentucky labor Lake Erie lakes land Licking river Little Miami railroad loss Louis Louisville low water manufacturing Marietta Robert ment merchandise Miami canal miles millions Mississippi Missouri navigation North Bend number of boats number of steamboats obstructions Ohio river Orleans passengers passing Pittsburgh 1835 population port portion prosperity railroad rapid region Snagged steam steamboat tonnage Sunk thousand tons tion tolls tonnage Total towns trade transportation tributaries trip turnpikes twenty United valley vast vessels voyage wealth West western rivers Wheeling Whitewater canal whole Worn
Popular passages
Page 48 - The navigable waters leading into the Mississippi and St. Lawrence, and the carrying places between the same, shall be common highways, and forever free, as well to the inhabitants of the said territory, as to the citizens of the United States, and those of any other states that may be admitted into the confederacy, without any tax, impost, or duty therefor.
Page 117 - The proprietor of these boats, having maturely considered the many inconveniences and dangers incident to the common method hitherto adopted of navigating the Ohio, and being influenced by a love of philanthropy and a desire of being serviceable to the public, has taken great pains to render the accommodations on board the boats as agreeable and convenient as they could possibly be made.
Page 121 - And how touching is the sentiment found in one of his journals : — " the day will come when some more powerful man, will get fame and riches from my invention ; but nobody will believe that poor John Fitch can do any thing worthy of attention.
Page 120 - ... with proper exactness. Fitch became embarrassed with debt, and was obliged to abandon the invention, after having satisfied himself of its practicability. This ingenious man, who was probably the first inventor of the steamboat, wrote three volumes, which he deposited in manuscript, sealed up, in the Philadelphia library, to be opened thirty years after his death. When or why he came to the West we have not learned ; but it is recorded of him, that he died and was buried near the Ohio.
Page 131 - Ohio thought himself lucky if the reckless boatmen would give the smallest trifle for the eggs and chickens which formed almost the only saleable articles on a soil whose only fault is its too great fertility. Such was the case twelve years since. The Mississippi boats now make five...
Page 60 - From 1822 to 1827 the loss of property on the Ohio and Mississippi, by snags alone, including steam and flat boats, and their cargoes, amounted to $1,362,500. The...
Page 180 - ... the largest proportion Were emigrants. They were mostly deck passengers, many of whom were poor Germans, ignorant of any language but their own, and the larger portion consisted of families, comprising. persons of all ages. Although not a large boat, there were eightyfive passengers in the cabin, which was a much larger number than could be comfortably accommodated; the number of deck passengers is not exactly known, but...
Page 13 - ... country. They have cheerfully encountered obstacles from which a less resolute body of men would have shrunk in despair ; and have won the fruitful fields which they possess through toils and dangers such as rarely fall to the lot of the husbandman. But without detracting from the merits of either of these classes, what would this country have been now, without commerce ? Suppose its rural population had been left to struggle with the wilderness, without the aid of the...
Page 255 - ... miles. Considering the Missouri as one river from its sources to the Gulf of Mexico, it is the longest in the world. Its average rapidity is nearly twice that of the Mississippi, as the average level of its valley is nearly twice more elevated than that of the Mississippi. The first year a steamboat navigated the Missouri was 1819. The following is an exhibit of the number of steamboats engaged in the trade of that river from 1 833 to 1846:— Year.
Page 120 - ... of the Mississippi, but without any better success. At length a company was formed, and funds subscribed for the building of a steamboat, and in the year 1788, his vessel was launched on the Delaware. Many crowded to see and ridicule the novel, and, as they supposed, the chimerical experiment. If It seemed that the idea of wheels had not occurred to Mr. Fitch; but instead of them, oars were used, which worked in frames.