Front:
PHOTO BY FRANK H. NOWELL
XXXX
70
CANAL LOCKS SECOND TO PANAMA, SEATTLE, WASHINGTON
5 A-H2653
Back:
Seattle, Warh June 9, 36
9.
DHP
29
FRANKLIN
C. P. JOHNSTON CO., SEATTLE, WASHINGTON
CANAL LOCKS SECOND TO PANAMA
The Canal is about eight miles long from Puget
Sound to Lake Washington. It adds more than
ninety miles to Seattle's water frontage and gives
access for ocean shipping to the nonotidalfiresho wafer
harbors of Lake Union, in the heart of the City,
and Lake Washington, twenty-five mileso lony and
four wide, on the east boundary of Seattle!" The
right-of-way is 300 feet wide, the channel 100
, the depth The locks
capable of lifting larger vessels than any government -
locks outside the Panama Canal. They are at the in
Puget Sound entrance of the canal and form the
only barrier between the fresh water lakes, nine
feet above Puget Sound at high tide, and salt water.
The concrete walls are 55 feet high, 50 feet wide
at the base, and 8 feet at the top. The major
chamber is 825 feet long, 80 feet wide, and holds
a depth of 50 feet of water. The minor chamber
is 150 feet long and 30 feet wide. Ocean-going
craft go through the larger chamber in twenty
minutes
and small craft through the smaller
chamber in five to ten minutes. The total cost of
the canal, including right-of-way, excavation, locks
and other features, was $5,000,000 borne by the
government, state, county and
mas Mary
Mary Beland
651 North Gakwood Ave,
Lake Forest, Illinois
83-27
to chicago to sel
school.
ta summa
Prill tryt
Brandy
zel
to Vancouver
National Park
+ Stran
to Chicage June 13 Flosence Clarke
theme