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Cross Florida Barge Canal

(Redirected from Cross-Florida Barge Canal)
One of the two completed sections of the Barge Canal, looking west from the SR 19 bridge south of Palatka.
A map of the Cross Florida Barge Canal as planned and built.
Construction on the canal in the 1950s.

The Cross Florida Barge Canal was a canal project to connect the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean across Florida for barge traffic. Two sections were built, but the project was cancelled for mainly environmental reasons. It is now a protected green belt corridor, one mile (1.6 km) wide in most places, known as the Marjorie Harris Carr Cross Florida Greenway.

Table of contents

Route

The planned route of the canal followed the St. Johns River from the Atlantic coast to Palatka, the valley of the Ocklawaha River to the coastal divide, and the Withlacoochee River to the Gulf of Mexico. About 28% of the 107-mile project was built. Namely, the cross-country section from the St. Johns River to the Oklawaha River, and part of the route along the Oklawaha, was built, as was the last bit to the Gulf of Mexico.

Bridges

All the bridges over the St. Johns River north of the canal are high enough for ships, or have movable sections. High bridges were built over the canal, as well as several over the Ocklawaha River where it was not widened to the canal. The following major roads, railroads, and locks and dams cross the path of the canal:

  • Buckman Lock (formerly St. Johns Lock)
  • SR 19 (high bridge)
  • Rodman Dam (south of the canal on the Ocklawaha River, forming Ocklawaha Lake along the canal)
  • Eureka Dam (unfinished)
  • CR 316 (high bridge)
  • SR 40 (high bridge)
  • CR 314 (no bridge)
  • SR 35 (no bridge)
  • SR 464 (no bridge)
  • Florida Northern Railroad (no bridge)
  • CSX S-Line (no bridge)
  • US 27/US 301/US 441 (SR 25/SR 500) (no bridge, but several unused supports in the median)
  • CR 475 (no bridge)
  • I-75 (SR 93) (no bridge; recently built land bridge over I-75 for trail users)
  • SW 49th Avenue (no bridge; recently built underpass for trail users)
  • CR 484 (no bridge)
  • SR 200 (no bridge)
  • CSX line (low bridge)
  • US 41 (SR 45) (low bridge)
  • Inglis Lock (Inglis Dam is south of the canal on the Withlacoochee River, forming Lake Rousseau along the canal)
  • US 19 (SR 55) (high bridge)

History

The idea of such a canal was first proposed by Philip II of Spain in 1567. It was repeatedly considered over the years but found to be economically unviable. The Florida Railroad, finished on March 1, 1861, served a similar purpose, connecting the Atlantic Ocean at Fernandina to the Gulf of Mexico at Cedar Key.

In the 1930s, regional politicians lobbied the federal government to fund canal construction as an economic recovery program, and president Franklin D. Roosevelt allocated emergency funds on 1935. Local opponents of the canal protested that the canal would deplete Florida's aquifers, and work was stopped a year later. It was reauthorized in 1942 as a national defense project, with dams and locks to protect the underground water supply. Support for the project from Washington was sporadic; the project was inactive by 1958, but construction resumed in 1964 with support from president John F. Kennedy. Opponents subsequently campaigned against the canal on environmental concerns, and the project stopped again in January 1971. It was officially cancelled in 1991. The right-of-way was turned over to the state and became the Marjorie Harris Carr Cross Florida Greenway, named in honor of the woman who led opposition to the canal.

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