|  Warren County 
          Local History by Dallas Bogan | 
| Contributor:  | Dallas Bogan on 30 August 2004 | 
| Source: | original article by Dallas Bogan | 
| Return to Index to see a list of other articles by Dallas Bogan | 
 The Great Miami River begins in Hardin County and flows southward for about 
  150 miles, empting into the Ohio River near North Bend. The Indians used it 
  long before the white man settled this part of the country. They used this route 
  to maneuver their canoes up the Great Miami and down the Maumee to Lake Erie. 
  
  The first record of a European in this part of the country was that of the Frenchman 
  Rene Robert Cavelier, Sieur de LaSalle, in 1669. LaSalle went by boat from Lake 
  Erie over the portage of about eight miles to Lake Chautauqua, and thence down 
  the Allegheny and the Ohio to the falls at Louisville, where he was deserted 
  by most of his men. Some historians suggested that he returned to Lake Erie 
  by going up the Great Miami, but there is some uncertainty as to this venture.
  Next came the explorers for the Albany fur traders. They came to the Ohio Valley 
  in 1692 but soon left.
  In the name of the King of France, in 1749, Celeron de Bienville was sent with 
  a large force of soldiers and Indians to take possession of the whole country 
  northwest of the Ohio. With twenty-three birch canoes he passed down the Ohio 
  and up the Great Miami. He had shortened the trip by traveling up the latter 
  stream, which the French then called Rock River, to the Miami towns where he 
  remained a week. 
  The water was low at this time of year (autumn), and instead of carrying his 
  canoes over the portage he bought some horses and rode five and one-half days 
  to the Maumee, and then paddled to Lake Erie.
  From 1809 thru 1813, complaints were registered concerning the brush obstructions 
  and the fish baskets along the Great Miami, Mad and Stillwater rivers. A petition 
  was presented to the Legislature that the Mad and the Stillwater Rivers be declared 
  a public road, and that the Great Miami so far as the mouth of Stony Creek, 
  be declared the same, using a part of the three per-cent fund set aside by the 
  Government for the improvement of highways.
  Fish baskets were considered a bottleneck. A fish basket was a box constructed 
  of wooden slats and placed at the riffles in the center, at a level lower than 
  the dam. An opening allowed the fish to enter, but due to its construction, 
  exiting was next to impossible. 
  The Dayton Republican published an article, dated September 4, 1815, which expressed 
  concern of the obstructions in the Great Miami River. It says: 
  "The wealth and increased population of the waters of the Great Miami demand 
  immediate attention to the navigation of that stream, without which the country 
  loses half of its value. Will the people tamely submit to suffer a few men so 
  essentially to injure the country? The obstructions in the river must be removed. 
  All are interested in an object so important, and it is hoped the settlers on 
  the waters of the Great Miami will immediately turn their attention to improving 
  its navigation."
  The Great Miami was sometime later considered a public road. But without a policing 
  method, the mill-owners and the fish basket installers were free to do as they 
  pleased.
  A navigational board met in Franklin on the fourth Monday of May 1816, which 
  concerned river congestion versus river traffic; board members were William 
  C. Schenck and William Sayre of Warren County, along with persons from Montgomery, 
  Greene, Champaign and Miami counties.
  With the obstructions still in place, the early spring rains were the only solution 
  to part time river traffic. The flatboats and keelboats were usually loaded 
  and ready for the water surge. Passage over the milldams was generally performed 
  with ease.
  During the last week of March 1819, eight flatboats and one keelboat were loaded 
  at Dayton and passed down the Great Miami, thru Franklin and on to the Ohio 
  River, their destination, New Orleans. Several of the flatboats were loaded 
  with flour, pork and whiskey.
  In May of the same year there passed thru Franklin a large keelboat, its dimensions 
  being upward of seventy feet in length, with a load of twelve tons of merchandise 
  from Cincinnati. This was the only keelboat that had ascended the Great Miami 
  from Cincinnati to Dayton in years because of the river obstructions.
  During the first part of April 1821, the Great Miami ran high because of heavy 
  rains. Many boats carrying cargo down the river were successful because of the 
  extremely fast current.
  In 1822, the Dayton paper, The Watchman," expressed for the first time 
  its doubts about the navigational policy of the Great Miami. It reads:
  "On the 16 of March 1822, a combination of seven flat-bottom boats and 
  one keelboat left for New Orleans. The safety of this fleet was in doubt. The 
  low water of the river was the concern. Some of the boats did not arrive safely."
  On March 26th and 27th, 1825, a fleet of thirty or more boats was waiting for 
  the river to rise due to a rain that had occurred a few days earlier. The community 
  of Dayton was anxiously awaiting, shouting and hurrahing the gentle rise of 
  the river. 
  On Saturday, the 26th, many wagons were nervously being unloaded onto the waiting 
  boats. Flour, pork, whiskey, etc., was being loaded for the final trip to New 
  Orleans; these goods were estimated at about $100,000. On Sunday, the 27th, 
  the water slowly began to fall and the boats got underway. Most of them finished 
  their journey.
  With the completion of the Miami Canal river traffic was to be an extinct episode 
  in the building of the Miami Valley. In February 1828, the last boat, loaded 
  with produce for New Orleans, passed through Franklin. 
  This ended an era in which the pioneers of the Miami Valley, through much strife 
  and turmoil, succeeded in carrying on a tradition that was inherited from their 
  fathers and forefathers, which has been expressed in deed, toil and exhausting 
  labor.
 The writer has always been fascinated by river traffic and has often found 
  himself sitting along the Ohio River bank in the Cincinnati area simply watching 
  the water-craft going up and down this historic waterway.
  Due to simpler transportation methods, such as the vast trucking and rail systems, 
  the great river infrastructure has taken second place and seems to concentrate 
  on hauling heavy freight. 
  This has not always been the case. The steamboat, in the early days of river 
  traffic, traveled the great Mississippi River valley system for passenger and 
  trade purposes. Secondary water passages such as the Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, 
  White, Arkansas, and Red, were a significant part of this network. 
  Before the steamboat era, river traffic downstream had always been cheap and 
  easy, the different type boats simply drifting with the current. 
  I have at another time written about the flatboats and their necessity concerning 
  the migration of the pioneers and the transportation of their merchandise. 
  Products of the Miami Valley were shipped downstream, via the Great and Little 
  Miami River systems, to the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers, and eventually down 
  to New Orleans. 
  While researching this subject, I found the first recorded exports down the 
  Mississippi were in the first half of 1801. From January 1 to June 30, 1801, 
  goods were transported in 450 flatboats, 20 keelboats and 7 large canoes. 
  Twenty-five different types of cargo were recorded in this vast enterprise, 
  the largest being flour, cordage (ropes and cords), and meats and skins, respectively. 
  Also included was whiskey, peach brandy, cider, lard, iron nails, soap and ten 
  pairs of mill-stones. 
  The number of flatboats on the western rivers increased until after the War 
  of 1812. On the Ohio River in the first months of the winter of 1810-11, there 
  passed over the falls at Louisville Ky., 197 flatboats and 14 keelboats. 
  The "Despatch," a steamboat built around 1817, recorded on a voyage 
  of 25 days from Natchez to Louisville that it passed 2,000 flatboats going down 
  stream; no record was made during the night trip. 
  The sight of several flatboats being fastened together was not uncommon. One 
  gentleman recorded on one occasion that he was on board a fleet of eight flatboats 
  moving together in a way that resembled a kind of floating town. He could travel 
  over the roofs and take a sizable walk. 
  Bartering was the main feature on the trip southward. Each flatboat carried 
  different consignments. On one craft hogs were killed, and on another limited 
  amounts of whiskey were bargained for. A dry goods store was in operation on 
  one of the boats and stopped at different towns to trade. 
  Our story teller relates that at one point 100 boats would land at New Madrid 
  in a single day and would cover several acres. At dawn the next morning, all 
  would be underway. 
  The Ohio was the main tributary of the Mississippi River system. At the height 
  of river traffic Cincinnati was considered the nucleus of all ports. It was 
  centered in the richest agricultural district in the West, the Miami Valley. 
  During the War of 1812, the city annually exported several thousand barrels 
  of flour. 
  Large droves of hogs were moved to the city to be slaughtered and shipped down 
  river. Because of the many pork packing facilities, Cincinnati was accordingly 
  called "Porkopolis."
  Flatboats did not return up river. One estimate revealed that for a period of 
  several years, 500 persons descended the river from Cincinnati to New Orleans 
  with their loads and returned by foot. 
  At a later time, the introduction of larger craft resulted in a vessel called 
  a barge. It could be maneuvered upstream by means of oars, poles and ropes. 
  Sails were used when the winds were right.
  Freight was transported up the river systems from New Orleans rather than over 
  the mountains of the East. Barges could normally make two round trips from this 
  southern city annually. Cargo would consist mainly of sugar, cotton, molasses, 
  and coffee. 
  Keelboats were built not only to descend but ascend the river, this type craft 
  appearing at the end of the 18th century. As the name implies, it was fitted 
  with a keel which also had a pointed bow and stern. Propulsion was provided 
  by sail, oars or poles, the latter being most common in a shallow river such 
  as the Great Miami. 
  On the top end of the pole was fitted a shoulder piece, while the opposite end 
  was ironshod for digging into the river bed or bank. Polers pushed in relays 
  while walking along planks mounted on the gunwales (the upper edge of the side 
  of the boat). 
  A more practical method was needed to transport freight up the numerous waterways. 
  The invention of the steam engine, and eventually the steamboat, elevated river 
  traffic to great heights, and in the process, eliminated the labors of the past. 
NOTICE: All documents and electronic images placed on the Warren County OHGenWeb site remain the property of the contributors, who retain publication rights in accordance with US Copyright Laws and Regulations. These documents may be used by anyone for their personal research. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material, must obtain the written consent of the submitter, or their legal representative, and contact the listed Warren County OHGenWeb coordinator with proof of this consent.
This page created 30 August 2004 and last updated 
  28 September, 2008
  
  © 2004 Arne H Trelvik 
   All rights reserved