Finally
we made it across the Mississippi River from Illinois to Keokuk Iowa. A long day of driving still lay ahead of us
but I had noted many historic places and landmarks that I wanted to check out
along our route.
I had
listed 12 places from the National Register of Historic Places in Keokuk alone…
As it turned out, we only had time to take a look at 4 of them. The others will have to wait for us to make
another family visit to Omaha.
This is
a statue of Samuel R. Curtis. We didn’t
have time to look for his former home in Keokuk so this was the next best
thing. Curtis was one of the first
Republicans elected to Congress. He was
most famous for his role as a Union Army general in the Trans-Mississippi
Theater of the American Civil War…especially for his victories at the Battles
of Pea Ridge in 1862 and Westport in 1864.
Curtis
was a West Point Graduate who’d resigned his commission in 1832. However, during the Mexican-American War, he
was appointed as a colonel and he served as the military governor of several
occupied cities. After the war, he moved
to Iowa and became the mayor of Keokuk in 1856. In 1856 he was elected to represent Iowa's 1st
congressional district in the United States House of Representatives, where he
served 3 terms.
The George
M. Verity is a historic towboat on display as museum ship on the Mississippi
riverfront in Keokuk. Built in 1927 as
SS Thorpe, she is nationally significant for being one of only three surviving
steam-powered towboats still in existence in the United States.
As the SS
Thorpe, she was one of four towboats that inaugurated barge service on the
upper Mississippi River. She was the
first to move barges from St. Louis Missouri north to St. Paul Minnesota. She is 162.5 feet long with a beam of 40.5
feet. Her second owner was the Armco Steel
Company and they renamed her after their founder. After 33 years of service on the Mississippi
and Ohio Rivers, she was retired and given to the city of Keokuk Iowa to serve
as the George M. Verity River Museum. If
you’re interested in visiting this towboat, you can go to http://www.geomverity.org/.
This is
a photo of the railroad swing bridge over the channel leading to Keokuk lock
and dam #19 on the Mississippi River.
This swing segment connects with the stable portion of the Keokuk
railway bridge, at the upper right in the photo, whenever a train is crossing
the river.
Construction
of the dam began in 1910 and was completed in 1913. The main portion of the dam is 4,620 feet
long. At the time the dam was completed
it was second in length only to the Aswan Low Dam on the Nile River. River traffic’s drop through the lock from
the upper pool to the lower pool is 38 feet…
Notes:
· If you look carefully, you’ll see that the
railroad bridge is a double deck affair.
That’s because, prior to the new highway bridge completion in 1985, the
upper deck of the old bridge was a 2-lane roadway.
· The old eleven-span, double-deck steel
superstructure was built in 1915-1916 on piers retained from an earlier (1869-1871)
bridge. It still serves as the railway
bridge!
I
borrowed this aerial view of the Keokuk Lock and Dam from Wikipedia. It shows the new (1957) 1,200 foot long lock
at the left. The dewatered drydock and the
original 1913 lock are at the upper right.
The current US Hwy. 136 bridge is at the very bottom and the old dual
level railroad/highway bridge is just above the current highway bridge.
Lock
and Dam No. 19 Historic District encompasses 1,605 acres, 7 buildings and 12
structures. The lock itself is owned and
operated by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The dam is owned and operated by
Ameren, a Missouri power company. This
lock and dam eliminated the Des Moines Rapids, a natural barrier to Mississippi
River traffic. In that area prior to dam
construction, the river was only about 2.5 feet deep.
Various
attempts to make the river navigable actually started in 1837 when a channel
was blasted through the rapids by a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers team led by
Robert E. Lee. A canal was built around
the rapids 1877. That canal has now been
obliterated by Lock and Dam No. 19.
Anyone
who follows my blog knows that I like restaurants, food, history, airplanes,
automobiles, railroad related items or property and ships. While taking photos of Lock and Dam #19, a
river barge and tow boat came down river after passing through the lock… In
this photo, the nose of the first barge is peeking out of the lower lock area.
There
were 3 or 4 fishermen working the channel looking for a bit of excitement…or
perhaps dinner.
In
2015, a total of 21,273,045 tons of product was ‘locked through’ Lock #19 via
over 19,000 barges and almost 2,000 towboats.
A modern 15 barge tow is the equivalent to 1,050 semi-trucks or 240
railcars…
The
towboat pictured above is the City of Louisville. She has been around for a while. Originally the Mary B, she was built in
Pennsylvania in 1962. Her name was
changed to the Walter Curley in 1966 and then she was given her current name in
1976. She’s had 6 different owners.
The
City of Louisville is 148 feet long with a beam of 34.5 feet. She is a twin screw towboat equipped with two
3,200 horsepower diesel engines.
I don’t
know how long this barge and tow boat combination was but as you can see, it
was sizable! (Perhaps 700 – 750 feet long with the towboat)
Located
just a little downriver from the George M. Verity Towboat Museum and Lock #19
is Keokuk’s old Union Depot. This Romanesque
Revival depot, which was completed in 1891, was designed by the famous Chicago architectural
firm, Burnham and Root. It was one of
the last buildings that Root designed before he died.
Five
railroads banded together to form the Keokuk Union Depot Company and then to
build the depot: Keokuk and Western Railroad; St. Louis, Keokuk and Northwestern Railroad; Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad (Rock Island
line); Toledo, Peoria and Western Railway, and; the Wabash Railroad.
There
is currently a major push to revitalize the old depot with the immediate effort
focused on replacing/refurbishing the roof.
Volunteers spend 3 days a week on the project. There is a solid chance that this beautiful
old depot will be preserved…
After
75 years of service, passenger rail service ended at the depot in 1967. Then it was used by the railroads as a
headquarters for their agents and operators. The Keokuk Junction Railway acquired the local
yard trackage and switching rights from the bankrupt Rock Island lines, and in
1981 they bought all of the shares of the Keokuk Union Depot Company. The depot was used by the KJRY as the base for
their tourist train operations, and its trolley rides across the Mississippi
into Illinois. Shortline Operator Pioneer
Railcorp acquired the Keokuk Junction Railway's assets in 1996. They used the old depot for storage until 2011. At that point they conveyed the depot and the
adjacent land to the City of Keokuk for 99 years.
To
learn more about this railroad depot and to see some photos of it back in the
day when it was still serving as a passenger station, just go to http://www.keokukuniondepot.org/history.html.
This is
the Hotel Iowa at 401 Main Street in Keokuk.
This Chicago Commercial Style structure was completed in 1913 to house
workers working on a big local project…Keokuk Lock and Dam #19. Today, it is a facility designed for
independent living…for seniors who are at least 55 years of age. There are 53 newly renovated 1 or 2 bedroom apartments
in the building. To check out the
amenities offered as well as the costs, just go to http://www.primeapartmentrental.com/Historic_Hotel_Iowa.html. It’s great to see that this handsome building
has been repurposed!
Just
click on any of the photographs to enlarge them…
Thanks
for stopping by to see what we’ve been up to!
Take
Care, Big Daddy Dave
You are a historical encyclopedia David, I am learning so much about the States from you. I regret not having travelled more when I lived in New York, I only travelled around the East Coast, but once I did manage to see the West...Arizona state, loved it. Thank you for the birthday wishes and happy belated birthday to you!
ReplyDeleteYou are a historical encyclopedia David, I am learning so much about the States from you. I regret not having travelled more when I lived in New York, I only travelled around the East Coast, but once I did manage to see the West...Arizona state, loved it. Thank you for the birthday wishes and happy belated birthday to you!
ReplyDeleteInteresting bunch of history, David.... I love the way you two travel--checking out interesting places along the way --to break up the trip... We always seem to be going from here to there as quickly as possible --skipping all of the good stuff in between...
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing.
Hugs,
Betsy
Dear Dave it is nice that you set out with a plan and try to get all the sights along the way and take the time to stop and see them. It is such a beautiful country.
ReplyDeleteI understand that this page has been around a while, however, I found it very interesting. Lived here about 15 years and this is one of the best compendiums of local history I've come across.
ReplyDelete