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Only living survivors of Washington's Canal Project see it made a national parkway. Washington, D.C., Feb. 22. The abandoned Chesapeake and Ohio Canal, once running barges from Georgetown, D.C., to Frederick, M.D., a canal first directed by George Washington before Washington was thought of as a city, was today dedicated as a National Parkway under the Interior Department. Assistant Secretary of Interior, Oscar Chapman - center - talked to the only living locktenders of the canal while a barge was run through lock no. 1. Left to Right: 77-year old Charles Stewart, Mr. Chapman, Sylvester Pennyfield, 82 yrs. old, 2-22-39

Only living survivors of Washington's Canal Project see it made a nati...

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Abraham Lincoln papers: Series 1. General Correspondence. 1833-1916: Isaac N. Arnold to Abraham Lincoln, Monday, June 09, 1862 (Canal project)
Isaac N. Arnold to Abraham Lincoln, Monday, June 09, 1862  (Canal project)
Abraham Lincoln papers: Series 1. General Correspondence. 1833-1916: Isaac N. Arnold to Abraham Lincoln, Monday, June 09, 1862 (Canal project)
Isaac N. Arnold to Abraham Lincoln, Monday, June 09, 1862  (Canal project)
Abraham Lincoln papers: Series 1. General Correspondence. 1833-1916: Isaac N. Arnold to Abraham Lincoln, Monday, June 09, 1862 (Canal project)
Isaac N. Arnold to Abraham Lincoln, Monday, June 09, 1862  (Canal project)