
Monocacy Aqueduct
Posted by:
flyingmoose
N 39° 13.440 W 077° 27.133
18S E 288316 N 4344500
Quick Description: This Stone aqueduct is not only the longest along the C&O Canal but easy to get to as well!
Location: Maryland, United States
Date Posted: 4/1/2008 10:04:02 AM
Waymark Code: WM3G59
Views: 16
Long Description:Construction of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal began in 1828 in
Georgetown, District of Columbia, and reached its terminus in
Cumberland, Maryland, in the summer of 1850. The C&O Canal
system included eleven stone aqueducts designed to carry the canal
across the major river tributaries that drain into the Potomac
River along the canal's route. Today, the C&O Canal is the most
intact canal resource of the 36 major canals constructed in the
Untied States between 1806 and 1850. The C&O Canal's chief
engineer, Benjamin Wright, is considered by many as the father of
American Civil Engineering. He was the lead engineer on the Erie
Canal prior to engineering the C&O Canal.
The Monocacy Aqueduct is the largest of the eleven aqueducts
erected along the C&O Canal, and is often described by many
historians as one of the finest canal features in the United
States. Ten of the eleven aqueducts remain as key features of the
Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historical Park, which was
designated as a National historical park in 1971. The Catoctin
Aqueduct collapsed after its piers were gradually undercut and a
flash flood took it down in 1972.
Construction of the Monocacy Aqueduct began in 1829 and was
completed four years later. Three separate contractors labored on
the immense stone structure, which was constructed for $127,900.
The plan for the Monocacy Aqueduct, often referred to as C&O
Canal Aqueduct No. 2, was for a stone masonry structure with a
waterway of 19 feet at the bottom and 20 feet at the top. The
towpath parapet wall is 8 feet wide and the upstream wall is 6 feet
wide. Benjamin Wright drew the plans with 6 piers, 2 abutments and
7 arches, each with a span of 54 feet. The piers are 10 feet thick
with pilaster at each end. The aqueduct is 438 feet in length. Much
of the building material was large granite stone blocks quarried at
the base of nearby Sugarloaf Mountain.
Following the 1972 Hurricane Agnes flood, the National Park
Service and the Federal Highway Administration designed a steel
banding system to stabilize the structure and installed a steel rod
reinforcing system. The National Park Service and park supporters
have long been concerned about the structural stability of the
aqueduct and a major engineering evaluation is underway to
determine stabilization needs and associated cost. The C&O
Canal National Historical Park and its partners plan to undertake a
major stabilization project for the aqueduct to ensure long-term
sustainability for the structure. The project would provide for the
removal of the steel banding support system and allow the visiting
public to view the structure as originally constructed.