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From Rivers to Lakes:
Engineering Pittsburgh's Three Rivers
From first contact nearly three centuries
ago, European explorers of the trans- Appalachian West recognized
the strategic and commercial value of the Allegheny, Monongahela,
and Ohio rivers. They vied for control over the city of Pittsburgh
sited at the confluence of these vital water highways. Immediately
they prioritized the economic potential of the rivers and sought
to tame them for economic ends. They worked to improve navigation
of the three rivers—to simplify, manipulate, and thus control
the rivers’ natural hydrologic systems—to facilitate commercial
gain. This report discusses the evolving technologies various
interests employed to transform Pittsburgh’s three rivers from
hazardous, unpredictable natural streams into controlled interstate
water expressways.
The history of engineering Pittsburgh’s
three rivers may be divided into four technological stages.
The first spans colonial exploration and state efforts in the
early republic until 1824. During this time, French, British,
and American explorers mapped the Allegheny, Monongahela, and
Ohio rivers as well as their tributary streams and the watersheds
they drained. Once they obtained basic topographic and hydrologic
data, they attempted to improve the navigability of these streams
to win for Pittsburgh the role of commercial gateway linking
the trans-Allegheny western hinterlands with Atlantic port cities.
Colonial and state governments designated Pittsburgh’s rivers
navigable public highways and prohibited their obstruction by
artificial structures. Both private and public interests supported
an assortment of efforts aimed at improving the rivers’ channels,
including removing snags, scouring sand and gravel bars, and
exploding boulders and root clusters. These efforts required
extensive annual maintenance, however, and made no permanent
improvements to the navigability of the rivers.
The second period of river engineering marked
the beginning of federal participation in waterway improvement,
carried out under the auspices of the Army Corps of Engineers.
In 1824 Congress passed the first law giving the Army engineers
authority to improve navigability on the nation’s inland rivers.
For the next half century the Corps of Engineers persevered
through acrimonious sectional debate over federal involvement
in civil works projects, intermittent congressional funding,
and the disruptions of war to effect open-channel improvements
on the Ohio River. Like their predecessors, Army engineers pursued
comprehensive channel clearance work to remove obstructions
to navigation. They experimented with a variety of wing dams
to deepen channels and lengthen the navigation season for lighter-draft
vessels. But Army engineers were not the only ones active in
improving navigation on Pittsburgh’s rivers. During this period
the state of Pennsylvania pursued similar efforts on the Allegheny
River. Private parties attempted more comprehensive structural
engineering on the Monongahela River. The Monongahela Navigation
Company worked to control that river through a system of dams
with toll locks, providing a slackwater system navigable year-round.
After the Civil War it became evident to
federal planners that even the thirty-inch channel achieved
on the Ohio River was inadequate for the dramatically increasing
commercial tonnage on Pittsburgh’s rivers. From 1874 to 1929
the Corps of Engineers emplaced a system of dams with locks
on the Ohio River from Pittsburgh to its junction with the Mississippi
River at Cairo, Illinois. Canalization of the Ohio River guaranteed
a nine-foot navigation channel year-round, independent of the
vagaries of seasonal and meteorological flow fluctuations. With
the successful construction of the slackwater system, the corps
accomplished complete and permanent control of the Ohio River.
In addition, it canalized the Allegheny River and purchased
the Monongahela slackwater system from its private owners, restoring
toll-free navigation to Pittsburgh’s most commercial river.
By the onset of the Great Depression, the Allegheny, the Monongahela,
and the Ohio had been transformed from naturally flowing rivers
into restrained stairstepped chains of lakes.
In the most recent period of the history
of engineering Pittsburgh’s three rivers, the Corps of Engineers
modernized its slackwater systems to speed commercial navigation.
The corps replaced first-generation dams on the Ohio River with
concrete high-lift dams to reduce the number of lockage delays.
During this period Army engineers also replaced and remodeled
aging structures of the Monongahela slackwater system, one of
the oldest in the country. The Allegheny River slackwater system
is the youngest serving Pittsburgh and carries the least commercial
tonnage of the three. It has not yet required extensive modernization,
but many of its original structures are nearing the end of their
projected service lives. An opportunity may exist here to reconsider
the commercial utility of a controlled navigation system.
Over the course of nearly three centuries,
then, various private and public interests, dominated by the
Army Corps of Engineers, have progressively altered the Allegheny,
Monongahela, and Ohio rivers. These engineering efforts aimed
at mitigating the unpredictable, hazardous, and costly characteristics
of the rivers, transforming them into controlled chains of lakes
to facilitate inexpensive commercial traffic. Today Pittsburgh’s
three rivers function in the landscape of the built environment
more than they resemble their original natural hydrologic systems.
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Rivers to Lakes Report
in PDF Format
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Union
Bridge
(across the Allegheny
River)
Begun - 1874
Opened to traffic - 1875 Demolished - May, 1907
A two hundred year-old map
of Pittsburgh is overlaid upon an aerial photograph taken in 1995.
3R2N is interested in the morphology,
or changes to the streams and riverbanks over time The island
in the middle of the Monongahela river says, "island at low water
is sometimes sowed in grain." (click image to enlarge)
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