GPS- 43.064734, -76.217098
Now that the Empire Trail and the Erie Canal meet up once again,
What DOES...
Does this spot have to do with the Erie Canal?
First the name of Geddes is etched into the land, quite literally and figuratively...
...but so does the industry that changed the landscape:
combining salt and rock and making the Solvay Process
a profitable industry for over 100 years.
Lets Start with James Geddes, for without whom, the route, that we know duall as
"Clinton's Ditch" and Erie Canal,
might have taken a different course.
And in case you are wondering, over the years the pronunciation of his name Geddes (pronounced "Ged-dis" today around here) has morphed. In his day it was pronounced like Gettys (think the battlefield Gettysburg). He is related to those Gettys.
Spelling didn't matter much back then, just penmanship.
When the military plots were divvied out,
James Geddes built his house in what is now the town of Camillus.
Even the location around this spot was named for him, Geddesburgh.
The Erie Canal brought commerce to the area and his settling here was worthy of honoring.
Even today a the Town and Geddes, Geddes St, and Geddes Brook still retain his name.
More about James Geddes
And he was quite the successful businessman like Robert Gere
But the canal only tells part of his story, he also started some salt works along the canal. His son carried on the business and others his father had started including his hand in the local salt industry that once surrounded Onondaga Lake
The salt produced here along with the other salt produced around the lake could be then loaded on barges to points west in Lake Erie or east, eventually landing in NYC
The second important commodity of the area was rock, limestone to be specific. Limestone of good quality could be cut nearby at what would become Split Rock to build and enlarge the canal...this aqueduct over Onondaga Creek used Limestone from Split Rock
But how did it get from the hills to the canal...enter Midler, Burnet, Elliott, Putnam (recognize the street names?) and others who built a shortline railroad that ended at the canal in Geddes by Harbor Brook...more about their endeavor...
an early railroad!
https://cnymod.blogspot.com/2013/12/railroad-hauled-stone-for-erie-canal.html?fbclid=IwAR1vKG0qrxwhfEoHFKrezeyAzAJ6cxsS5ExbL0ROJu_eGhinO9DGBOQklWQ
https://cnymod.blogspot.com/2013/12/railroad-hauled-stone-for-erie-canal.html?fbclid=IwAR1vKG0qrxwhfEoHFKrezeyAzAJ6cxsS5ExbL0ROJu_eGhinO9DGBOQklWQ
Then Split Rock became a quarry for a larger endeavor
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Split_Rock,_New_York?fbclid=IwAR16zp_2d35kp40J2q_BAwS0WPQJPsKQMXaOAkG_Cl0cD0C02A74P7T_wrU
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Split_Rock,_New_York?fbclid=IwAR16zp_2d35kp40J2q_BAwS0WPQJPsKQMXaOAkG_Cl0cD0C02A74P7T_wrU
Enter the Solvay Process, which eventually lent its name to the area surrounding the plant...it needed Limestone and Salt and water to make Soda Ash
more about the Solvay Process:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solvay_process?fbclid=IwAR18K9CoDHLbkvvkBAxWyXBHYTmzWvriO79V0nw1Di9CALnr9vdhcvB5cvM
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solvay_process?fbclid=IwAR18K9CoDHLbkvvkBAxWyXBHYTmzWvriO79V0nw1Di9CALnr9vdhcvB5cvM
The Erie Canal went right through the middle of the Solvay Process plant!
It's still visible in the the layout of the compound today.
A biproduct of the Solvay Process was Baking Soda,
produced nearby at Church and Dwight.
This became a staple found in most kitchens under the name
"Arm and Hammer"
Solvay Process and Church and Dwight were steady industries that
provided generations with good paying jobs.
However their legacy is quite murky due to dumping their industrial wasted in such large quantities it formed the hills where the parking lots are for the NY State Fair.
They, along with many other industries, dumped their waste in Onondaga Lake.
When the canal close, they filled in the sections up to the Syracuse city line with industrial waste. They filled in the canal west of the plant with waste.
It has been an ongoing process bringing
this land and its lake back from the brink and restoring the habitat.
With the collaborative work of scientists, engineers, and politicians,
the cleanup work has made Onondaga Lake cleaner
than it has been in over 150 years!
And after many years, the eagles have returned!
While the Erie Canal here can never come back, the land and the lake can!
This are is proof we can learn from our mistakes
and work together to fix them for the next generation.
But we can't linger here much longer, we're just passing through with our load. As we give a nod to the Geddes-man himself, without whom we wouldn't be on this waterway, we press on from here to our next stop...
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