The D & H Heritage Corridor contains Parts of the
D & H Canal and the O & W Railroad. Both of these enterprises
opened up the Rondout Valley to Commerce and Development. The D & H
Canal was constructed to carry coal from Honesdale, PA to Kingston, NY
for the New York City and Albany Markets. The O & W Railroad on the
other hand was the improvement in transportation and bought up the Canal
Company's right of way.
The O & W Railroad followed most of the Canal
from Summitville to Accord where it veered of to the west and went to
uptown Kingston as it was not confined to the same gradients as the
Canal was.
The D & H Canal was the brain child of the Wurts
brothers who owned coal bearing land in the Carbondale area of PA. In
May of 1823, Benjamin Wright agreed to survey a route for the D & H
, to which he assigned two junior engineers. Construction began July
13,1825 and was essentially completed in November 1927. Four Aqueduct
bridges were built by John Roebling, for the Canal, who later designed
and built the Brooklyn Bridge. The first barges traversed from Eddyville
to Honesdale and started transporting Coal to Market.
The Railroad started with a 8 mile section from Summitville to
Ellenville In 1871 as the Ellenville-Kingston R.R. Company. And was soon
leased to the O & W. The Rails were extended to Kingston and opened
for business in 1901. The O & W Railroad ended in 1957 with
bankruptcy and the removal of tracks.
In the early 1800's, a period of immense growth in the United States,
a means of cheap mass transportation was needed for transporting goods.
Canals were the answer. The first million dollar private
enterprise in the U.S. was the Delaware and Hudson Canal, from
Honesdale, PA to Kingston, NY. It's primary purpose was to transport
coal from the mines of Pennsylvania to New York City, without going
through the port of Philadelphia. The most economical transport route
was to use existing waterways north of Port Jervis to Kingston, the
Rondout Creek.
Kingston, a busy port on the Hudson River and only 90 miles from NYC,
was a deep water port where the coal could then be transferred to large
ships. Completed in 1828, there were 108 locks on the canals' 108 mile
length. Most of the canal was eventually abandoned in 1898 in
favor of the more modern steam locomotive.
As a testimony to the clever engineering of it's day, the use of
simple natural materials, and the untold thousands of man hours of
construction, much of the canal remains today. Built "by hand"
- the ribbon remains between the communities - a bucolic reminder of
days past. The New York Ontario and Western Railway was one of the
first of the long distance railroads in New York State.
Abandoned in 1957, its mainline ran from Weehawken, NJ to Oswego, NY.
It also had many branch routes, one of which was from Port Jervis, NY to
Kingston, NY. The Kingston Branch followed the abandoned D&H
tow paths along the Rondout Creek on its way between many of the D&H
hamlets and Kingston.
This waterway is home to a multitude of wildlife, including great
blue heron, kingfisher, mink, muskrat, and occasionally osprey. Small
mouth bass, trout, and panfish provide excellent fishing. Dramatic
ledges of limestone, which dot its shoreline, provide scenic vistas for
both flat-water and quick-water canoeing and kayaking.