Towpath Walking Tour Brochure
Transcription
Towpath Walking Tour Brochure
© Emily Fuller 2008 The Manayunk Canal served as an important link in the operation of the SNS between the Delaware, Schuylkill, and Susquehanna Rivers. Its combination of water power and canal transportation propelled Manayunk as an industrial power, and pushed the City of Philadelphia to the top of the industrial revolution. Today the canal still functions to meet some industrial needs. Manayunk was planned by the Schuylkill Navigation Company (SNC) in 1821 on land owned by the company. SNC also sold canal water to Manayunk businesses to supplement income for navigational tools. By 1824, businesses in the canal area rejected the proposed name of “Udoravia” and the common name “Flat Rock” for a simplified version of the Native American name Manayunk. By the mid 1800’s, Manayunk’s population was nearly 7,000, including many Polish immigrants employed by the textile mills. The Manayunk Canal began at the Flat Rock Dam and ended at outlet locks 69 and 70. Initially, mules were ferried across the river on board the boats, but later a towpath bridge was constructed over the river directly below the combine locks. During the 19th century, Manayunk became an industrial power within Philadelphia. Before 1810, nine mills were built. By 1819, the Manayunk Canal was completed to navigate around the flat rock falls and manufacture water power. Although the Erie Canal is awarded the distinction as the first large inland waterway in the United States, the SNS (a private enterprise) was completed five months before the Erie Canal (a public work of the State of New York). ments of hand-dug canal (the other segment is in Montclare) in the oldest anthracite navigation system in the country to carry stormwater as well as meet the community’s recreational needs. As the only mile of intact canal with both the upper and lower locks of the larger 108 mile original system, the Manayunk Canal is eligible for the National Register of Historic Places and the area is located within the Manayunk Historic District. The word “Manayunk,” which has its origins in the language of the Lenni Lenape, means “where we go to drink.” For the Native Americans, the water of the Schuylkill River in this area satisfied their thirst. During the 1800s, the Manayunk Canal was constructed parallel to the Schuylkill River as a part of the larger Schuylkill Navigation System (SNS) that brought anthracite coal (hard coal with the fewest impurities) to Philadelphia. Today, the Manayunk Canal is one of two surviving seg- History Main Street, Manayunk, Pa. c.1916 A floodplain functions best when left undisturbed. However, where disturbance is unavoidable, every precaution should be taken to insure the safety of people and property. Floodplains also filter water helping to improve water quality. When soil is eroded, it can move into fish habitats and human drinking water sources. Preserving floodplains not only protect us from more serious flooding but also can mean less sedimentation in our streams and rivers, keeping water clear and clean. Flooding can damage businesses, transportation routes, and utilities. Floodplains protect other areas from flooding by absorbing flood waters into the soil and vegetation. Floodplains also provide wildlife habitat, recreational sites for boating, hiking, fishing, and wildlife observation. All imges optained via Google Images except where noted. Development Friends of the Manayunk Canal have installed stations along the canal equipped with plastic bags and trash bins to encourage people to clean up after their pets. Please be a responsible pet owner and utilize these stands to clean up after your pet! The City of Philadelphia is performing improvements to the Manayunk Canal, which would include minor restoration work on the upper locks and Sluice house, bank stabilization as well as removal of sediment to increase water flow into and through the canal. This project will not include any improvements to the Towpath adjacent to the canal. Manayunk Canal Restoration Project A 130-160 unit condo development by Dranoff Properties. Venice Island Lofts A 280 unit condo development proposed by Neducsin Properties, in which initial plans show up to 80% of the area between Leverington Avenue and Green Lane on Venice Island being covered with impervious surface. Venice One Project Condo development proposed by Realen Properties Associates, who originally announced that they planned to build 270 units on the site of Connelly Containers, a number which was then reduced to 205 in November 2005. Cotton Street Landing Project While the entire length of Venice Island has been and continues to be under intense development pressure, the lower section of the island, from Cotton Street to the island’s southern tip below Lock Street, is slated as the location for a Philadelphia Water Department retention basin. The construction of this water retention basin has been mandated by the EPA to help to prevent raw sewage from flowing untreated into the Schuylkill River during storm and flood events. The project will about take two years to complete. Construction would require the demolition of all of the current recreational facilities located on this portion of the island. If adequate funding is raised, new, improved recreation facilities are planned. Lower Venice Island For more information about the Friends of the Manayunk Canal and upcoming events visit: http://www.manayunkcanal.org/ A flood is defined as a general but temporary condition of partial or complete inundation of normally dry land areas from the overflow of streams, rivers, or other waters. Therefore, floodplains are the areas along rivers or streams that have been or may be expected to be submerged by floodwaters in a 100-year frequency flood (probability of occurring once every one hundred years). Floodways are defined as a channel for diverting floodwaters and are likely to be the place were the waters are the deepest and the fastest. Venice Island is located in the floodway of the Schuylkill River. Floodplains and Floodways AWalk Along the Manayunk Canal’s Towpath © Emily Fuller 2008 ~ 7 6 Channel Catfish Ictalurus punctatus 5 Dominant Fish Species American eel Anguilla rostrata Eofcological T our the ManayunkTowpath Baltimore Orioles, Orchard Orioles, Northern Rough-winged Swallows, Black-crowned Night Herons, Great Blue Herons, Green Herons, Great Egrets, Mallard Ducks, Wood Ducks, Kingbirds, Cedar Waxwings, White-eyed Vireos, Warblers including Redstart, Yellow, Black-throated Green, Black-throated Blue, Black-and-white, Tennessee, Cerulean, Parula, Magnolia, and Palm, Kingfishers, Carolina Wrens, Canada Geese 3 The towpath (dotted line) is a flat trail perfect for walking, biking, or running. Most of the trail is fine gravel and dirt with some paved areas and boardwalks. 3 4 Smallmouth Bass Micropterus dolomieu Birds 4 1 2 Fish ladder is located at Flat Rock Dam to help fish in their natural migration. White Sucker Catostomus commersonii Flat Rock Dam, Valley Forge 2 From the beginning of the path at locks 69 and 70 to Leverington Avenue, one finds mainly landscaped areas with native species, such as the inkberry shrub. Just north of Leverington Avenue is Riparian Slope Forest. Here you’ll find native trees such as red maple, sycamore, box elder, and exotics such as tree-of-heaven. These trees act as stabilizers for steep slopes and providing a buffer. The area along Fountain Street is blanketed mainly by vines. The dominant vines found here are Japanese honeysuckle, Asiatic bittersweet, cucumber vine, and briars. An area of meadow can be found north of Fountain Street. Grasses, wildflowers, and roadside weeds occur where there is recent fill or abandoned paving. Some species include mullein, evening primrose and crown-vetch. Japanese knotweed, purple loosestrife, and creeping water-primrose grow along the banks of the canal. The former two are non-native invasive species that one might seek to eradicate. However, in this environment these species play an important role in bank stabilization and wildlife habitat. 6 7 An area of Herbaceous Wetland is located below Domino Lane. This area is described as an historic wetland. In the canopy you’ll see European black alder, box elder, and black willow. In the shrub layer you’ll find false indigo and buttonbush, and an herbaceous layer of spotted touch-me-not, forget-me-not, false nettle, horehound, and purple loosestrife. Tree-of-Heaven Invasive Center City Philadelphia 1 ~ 5 Lowland Forest surrounds the Herbaceous Wetland. It includes the native red maple, silver maple and sycamore and the non-native species tree-of-heaven and European black alder. Immediately north of Flat Rock Dam is another Lowland Forest supporting a canopy of box elder, silver maple, and sycamore and an herbaceous layer of stinging nettle, wood nettle, false nettle, pale touch-me-not, spotted touch-me-not, and poison ivy. Green Heron Cedar Waxwing Purple loosestrife invasive Belted Kingfisher Great Blue Heron Mullein Spotted Touch-me-not Crown Vetch Invasive Red-bellied turtle Threatened Stinging Nettle Japanese Knotweed Invasive
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