Inscription
The Zanesville lock, canal, and dam were part of a series of eleven such built on the Muskingum River from Marietta to Ellis, north of Zanesville, from 1836 to 1841. The improvements made the shallow river navigable by steamboats. The State of Ohio funded the project as part of the Ohio Canal System. The locks are approximately 35 feet wide and 160 feet long. The river improvements spurred the development of industry in Zanesville, including pottery manufacture, shipbuilding, and grain milling. From Zanesville, goods could be shipped north to the Ohio Canal and Lake Erie. Products could also be sent south to Marietta and then east to Pittsburgh or southwest to New Orleans. Steamboats brought in manufactured goods, staples, mail, and entertainment. After 1880, competition from railroads caused a gradual decline in the river traffic. Today the locks remain in operation for the enjoyment of pleasure boaters.
[Side B]: Same
Location
Sources
More markers in Muskingum
The Stone Academy
Zanesville, OH
Constructed of sandstone quarried from nearby Putnam Hill, the Stone Academy dates to 1809.
Nelson Mc Coy Pottery Company 1910-1990
Roseville, OH
In 1910, Nelson McCoy Sr. established the Neleson McCoy Sanitary Stoneware Company on Gordon Street in Roseville.
Anti-Slavery Tensions in Muskingum County
Zanesville, OH
In the early 1800s, opposing attitudes existed in the separate communities of Putnam and Zanesville.
The Lett Settlement
Near this location stood the settlement of African American families known as “The Lett Settlement.
Roseville Pottery Company 1890-1954 Linden Avenue Plant
Zanesville, OH
Founded in 1890 in Roseville, Ohio, Roseville Pottery Company was incorporated in 1892 with George Young as general manager.
