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Voyage Commemorating the Erie Canal in Cayuga County

Voyage Commemorating the
Erie Canal in Cayuga County

Welcome Seneca Chief

Cheryl Longyear, Montezuma Town Historian and Vice President of the Old Mentz Heritage Center

For years, critics had mocked Gov. DeWitt Clinton’s canal plan as “Clinton’s Folly” and “Clinton’s Ditch.” Workers had spent eight years building the canal at a cost of $7 million. The canal would cut shipping costs from $100 per ton by wagon to just $10 per ton by boat. Imagine the elation and excitement Clinton felt on Oct. 25, 1825, as he boarded his boat at the Buffalo Harbor. Crowds from Buffalo and nearby villages joined the parade as cannons fired. The entire town turned out for what many saw as New York’s most important day.

Drawing of a Canal Boat

A boat named Seneca Chief led a parade of decorated boats as they headed east on their 363-mile waterway route to Albany on the Hudson River. On board was a barrel of Lake Erie water held to perform the Wedding of the Waters ceremony at their final destination in New York City.

Wedding Of Waters on the Erie Canal

An Account of the Original Welcome

The Seneca Chief was accompanied by Noah’s Ark, a boat carrying living symbols of American wilderness: a bear, two eagles, two fawns and several fish, and two Native American young men representing the original inhabitants of the lands the canal passed through. Passing through forests and greeted by small settlements as they headed eastward, the following is a written account of their welcome in Montezuma and Port Byron by Cadwallader D. Colden in a published memoir, “Celebration of the Completion of New York Canals” (1825):

Voyage Commemorating the Erie Canal in Cayuga County

Join in the Celebration

On the morning of Wednesday, Sept. 24, the Buffalo Maritime Center’s replica of the Seneca Chief will embark on its own bicentennial voyage, commemorating Clinton’s historic 1825 journey from Buffalo to New York Harbor, with stops at many communities along the way. At each stop, the crew will plant an eastern white pine to honor the Haudenosaunee for their enduring connection to the land and reinforcing our shared commitment to sustainability. Unfortunately, due to the bridge work in Weedsport on Route 34, the Cayuga County stop was canceled. The Seneca Chief will make stops in Clyde on Oct. 2 and Baldwinsville on Friday the 3rd. Although not a stop, Lock 25 at Mays Point will be a great place to see the boat up close. As it enters Cayuga County in Montezuma on the morning of Oct. 3, greeters standing on the Richmond Aqueduct will do their best to honor the past while envisioning the future.

After we welcome the Seneca Chief and watch it pass by Montezuma, the Old Mentz Heritage Center Friends of the Park will plant an eastern white pine tree in Montezuma Heritage Park. Everyone is welcome to come watch with us.

To stay up to date on the tour, follow the Buffalo Maritime Museum’s social media or track the trip using the MarineTraffic app.

Click here to learn more about the Erie Canal Bicentennial in Cayuga County and start planning you visit with our Explore’s Guide.