Leiper Canal
Early in the 19th century, the Leiper Canal ran about 3 miles (5 km) along Crum Creek in Delaware County, Pennsylvania. George Leiper, who financed the canal, used it between 1829 and 1852 to haul stone in flat-bottomed boats from his quarry near Springfield to the navigable Delaware River at Eddystone. The system, which had three locks, replaced an industrial tramway. Crum Creek's mouth is at 39°51′28″N 75°19′14″W / 39.85778°N 75.32056°W.
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Leiper Canal
Early in the 19th century, the Leiper Canal ran about 3 miles (5 km) along Crum Creek in Delaware County, Pennsylvania. George Leiper, who financed the canal, used it between 1829 and 1852 to haul stone in flat-bottomed boats from his quarry near Springfield to the navigable Delaware River at Eddystone. The system, which had three locks, replaced an industrial tramway. Crum Creek's mouth is at 39°51′28″N 75°19′14″W / 39.85778°N 75.32056°W.
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Early in the 19th century, the ...... public museum in Wallingford.
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Wikipage page ID
14,204,648
Wikipage revision ID
618,608,902
Alt
A network of east-west canals ...... ranklin to the larger network.
Caption
Map of historic Pennsylvania canals and connecting railroads
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date closed
date comp
status
Historic, abandoned
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39.85777777777778 -75.32055555555556
comment
Early in the 19th century, the ...... 4″W / 39.85778°N 75.32056°W.
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label
Leiper Canal
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lat
3.985777777777778e+1
long
-7.532055555555556e+1
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Leiper Canal
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