Cornwall Canal


text="Cornwall Canal"
width=300
height=150
zoom=12
latitude=45.00989
longitude=-74.76104/>
The Cornwall Canal was built by the British government of Canada to bypass a troublesome rapids hindering navigation on the St. Lawrence at Cornwall, Ontario begun in 1834 it was completed in 1843.

Description

The canal extends past the Long Sault rapids from Cornwall, Ontario, to Dickinson's Landing. From the head of the Soulanges to the foot of the canal there is a stretch through Lake St. Francis of 32¾ miles. The length of the canal is eleven miles. It has six locks 270 by 45 feet. The total rise or lockage is 48 feet. The depth of water on the sill is 14 feet. It is 100 feet wide at the bottom and 164 at water surface. It closed in 1968, after being functionally replaced by the Wiley-Dondero Canal on the US side of the river.