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Chicago Sanitary And Ship Canal

Monday, February 11, 2013

From the Archives: Building the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal

Take a glimpse into Lemont’s history courtesy of the Lemont Area Historical Society.

This week, the historical society takes us back to the 1890s in Lemont, during the construction of the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal. Running nearly parallel to the no longer used Illinois and Michigan (I & M) Canal, by its completion in 1900, the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal linked the south branch of the Chicago River with the Des Plaines River just north of Joliet.   In the first photo, a small steam-powered train hauls rock away from the construction site of the ship canal -- a project that was quite an engineering feat for those days. In the second photo, a steam engine powers a looping conveyor to haul rock up to the surface in the final phase of construction of the ship canal near Lemont, circa 1897. - - - - - - - - - - - - - …

Don Mueggenborg

9:10 am on Tuesday, February 12, 2013

There are remnants of the trains used by the narrow gauge rail tracks visible in the river in low water (much to the chagrin of the paddlers)   more ›

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Red Dye to Temporarily Discolor Des Plaines River Near Lemont

U.S. Geological Survey will perform a dye test beginning Aug. 2.

A harmless red dye will temporarily discolor the Des Plaines River near Lemont next week, government officials announced Thursday. Beginning Aug. 2, scientists from the United States Geological Survey will be performing a dye test on the Des Plaines River and Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal between Route 83 and the Lemont area, according to a news release. As a result, the water will have a reddish tint until approximately Aug. 5. The study will determine locations where water from the Des Plaines River may be moving into the canal, and is part of a larger study on the potential of Asian carp eggs and other invasive species to migrate to Lake Michigan, the release states. "By using low, non-hazardous concentrations of dye, we can identify …

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