Cutting Florida in Two: The Cross-Florida Barge Canal

For nearly five hundred years, people have dreamed about creating a canal that would link the Atlantic Ocean in Northeast Florida to the Gulf of Mexico.  As soon as early explorers realized that Florida was a peninsula, they looked for a way to traverse it by ship without sailing around its southern cape.  Over the years, the idea came and went, depending upon the desire of governments to improve commerce and national security.

The 1500’s were a tumultuous time in Florida history.  Spain, France and England were all competing for domination in the new world.  When Spanish forces under the leadership of  Pedro Menendez de Aviles rousted the French stronghold of Fort Caroline at the mouth of the St. Johns River in 1565 it secured Spain’s stronghold on the northern Atlantic coast of Florida.  It also allowed Spain access to the interior of the Florida peninsula for further exploration and conquest.

A French soldier captured during that battle claimed the St. John’s River had two mouths:  one on the Atlantic coast and another on the Gulf of Mexico.  Menendez was keen to verify the existence of this “shortcut” across the peninsula.  Such a passage would create a new and safer shipping route for Spanish ships carrying precious bounty from its colonies in South and Central America to Spain, bypassing the arduous and dangerous trip around the southern tip of Florida.  Although the Spanish explored inland Florida via the river, establishing several forts along the way, they never did find the rumored outlet on the gulf.  Some have suggested that Menendez did not push on because of fear of retribution from the Native Americans who still dominated central Florida.

Despite not being able to verify that there was, indeed, a cross-peninsula water route, most people at the time believed that it did exist.  Several maps drawn by Spanish cartographers showed such a waterway.  This unfounded belief lasted for two hundred years.  When the British took control of Florida in 1763 they conducted a survey to try to determine whether or not the water route existed. 

After the revolutionary war, the United States became interested as well, even though at the time Florida was again a Spanish colony having been ceded by the British with the signing of the Treaty of Paris. The first steps towards fruition began during the Thomas Jefferson administration in 1808.  Jefferson’s Secretary of the Treasury, Albert Gallatin proposed a protected inland waterway from Massachusetts to Georgia (at the time the most southern State.)  This proposal would later lead to the creation of what is now known as the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway, which would not be completed until 1940.  Although Gallatin suggested that an inland waterway through Northern Florida would be desirable, he did not include it as part of the proposal for an obvious reason:  Florida still belonged to Spain.

This Article is Reprinted from the Book

South of the St. Marys River

Stories from the History of Northeast Florida

By the time Spain gave up Florida to the United States in 1821 there was consensus that a natural cross-Florida waterway did not exist.  But, in the eyes of many, that did not negate the need for one.  Everyone from slave traders to legitimate merchants to the United States armed forces were looking for an expeditious and safe route from the Atlantic Coast to the Gulf of Mexico and public support grew.  Several routes were proposed including one that would start at the mouth of the St. Marys River, then travel through the Okefenokee Swamp and finally the Suwannee River.  Another proposed route began at the mouth of the St. Johns River and ended at the Iberville River (now called Bayou Manchac) near Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

Over the ensuing decades the idea remained active.  The United States commissioned several surveys, but there was much debate over the cost of the project.  Although there was a lot of talk, no actual decisions were made and the idea languished.  In the meantime, David Yulee completed his Florida Railroad from Fernandina Beach to Cedar Key in 1860.   Linking the two coasts by rail, it allowed cargo to avoid the journey around the peninsula, partially fulfilling the reasons for the water route. Then the Civil War happened, and all plans were put on hold.

Following the war, interest in a cross-Florida waterway resumed, but as before no concrete action was taken.  Presidents Theodore Roosevelt in 1907 and Calvin Coolidge in 1927 each endorsed the idea.  As before, there were only surveys, proposals, and arguments about funding, but no action was taken.

Following the stock market crash of 1929, the United States entered The Great Depression.  Millions of American citizens lost their life savings and found themselves unemployed and desperate.  Franklin Delano Roosevelt was elected President in 1932 and set about trying to put people back to work through his “New Deal” programs.  Upon hearing of the proposal for a cross-Florida canal, FDR heard just one word – JOBS – and approved five million in funding for the project.  Work would finally begin to make the four hundred year old dream a reality.

Franklin D. Roosevelt

The proposed canal route began in Jacksonville at the St. Johns River until Palatka, and then followed the Ocklawaha River, and finally the Withlacoochee River, where it would end at the Gulf of Mexico near Yankeetown.  By relying heavily on existing rivers there would be cost savings but 32 miles of land would need to be dug and two of the rivers would need to be dammed.

Work began near Ocala on September 19, 1935.  President Roosevelt himself set off fifty pounds of dynamite remotely to mark the official ground breaking.  Some 6,000 men were hired to begin digging the canal. They set up a base camp near Ocala called Camp Roosevelt. Simultaneously several thousand more began digging near Yankeetown.  It was backbreaking work performed in the hot Florida weather for just thirty cents per hour.  Given the state of the economy, they were happy for the work.

In 1936 a labor organizer from St. Augustine, George Timmerman, arrived at Camp Roosevelt seeking to unionize the laborers.  He was soon found severely beaten and tied to a tree, crucifixion style, near the camp with his lips sewn shut.  Rather than investigate the incident local authorities ordered Timmerman to leave town.  He apparently complied and no record exists of him after that.

An early casualty of the project was the African American community of Santos, just a few miles south of Ocala.  The waterway was to run directly through town.  Residents were forced out by being forced to sell their property for pennies on the dollar.  The town simply ceased to exist.

Three years had passed since construction began and FDR’s initial five million dollar down payment was exhausted.  Although five thousand acres of forest had already been cleared, portions of the canal dug, and a town wiped off the map continued work would require the authorization of Congress. 

Meanwhile opposition had been steadily growing.  Railroad interests (and their lobbyists) raised environmental concerns.  While such concerns would later prove accurate it is clear that the railroad companies were masking their obvious financial interest in seeing the project fail.  The most serious environmental issue was raised by farmers in the southwestern portion of Florida who argued that the canal would flood the state’s water aquifer with salt water, making it unusable for drinking, let alone irrigating crops.  Northern politicians complained about the cost.  Spurred on by publications of the day, public opinion was also waning, with some even worried that if the cut was completed the southern portion of Florida would simply float away.  In the end, further national funding was not authorized and the canal project was abandoned.

Several years later during World War II German submarines were regularly attacking merchant ships off the coast of Florida’s Atlantic coast.  It is said that people could often hear the explosions from Jacksonville down to Miami.  Interest in the canal was revived but this time it was proposed that instead of a sea level canal it would be a “barge canal” that was not as deep in order to overcome previous environmental concerns.  Some local businessmen supported the project, most notably John H. Perry, who owned the Ocala Star Banner and would personally benefit from the canal’s completion.  However, building the canal was a long term project and Congress had more immediate wartime problems with which to contend.  So, while they authorized the project, they never authorized funding, once again leaving it in limbo.

After World War II, the United States entered into the “cold war” against Russia.  Interest in the canal was renewed as a way for ships to avoid sailing too close to Cuba, a Russian ally.  With the support of President John F. Kennedy, Congress finally authorized funding in 1963.  The next year, President Lyndon Johnson having become President upon Kennedy’s assassination, personally set off explosives signaling groundbreaking, just as President Roosevelt had done almost thirty years earlier.

With funding in place, as well as political and public support, the cross-Florida canal project was finally back on track.  This time, though, instead of thousands of hours of manual labor, modern technology was used for the clearing and digging.  A major tool was “The Crusher” also known as “The Monster.”  Developed by the company of Gregg, Gibson and Gregg, the Crusher was a massive vehicle capable of pushing over trees up to six feet in diameter, strip them of their branches, and crushing the trunk and branches into the mud.  With the Crusher being able to clear forests at the rate of about an acre per hour completion was projected for 1971.

It looked as if the dream of a cross-Florida waterway which lasted through nearly five hundred years and was considered by every administration since George Washington would finally become a reality.  And then, along came Marjorie Harris Carr.

Marjorie Harris was born in Massachusetts on March 26, 1915.  The family relocated to Florida when Marjorie was still a young child.  Her parents were both naturalists who instilled in her a love of the environment, which would remain her passion for life.  She married herpetologist (one who studies reptiles and amphibians) Archie Carr in 1937.  She had previously been denied entrance to graduate programs at Cornel and the University of North Carolina, as they did not admit women.  However, with the help of her husband she was able to attend the University of Florida (then also an all male institution) where she earned a masters degree in Zoology.

Marjorie Harris Carr was always active in the fight for Florida’s environment.  She was a member of the Alachua Audubon Society and the Garden Club of Gainesville.  She founded the Junior Naturalists of Alachua Audubon which brought environmental awareness to schools.  She also served on the board of directors of the Florida Conservation Foundation.

Marjorie Harris Carr

Marjorie became concerned about the impact that the canal would have on many different aspects of the Florida ecosystem when she attended a forum on the project held by state and federal agencies.  She and others raised detailed questions about the project for which the government representatives had no good answers.  She later said, “The audience that had come to the meeting with a completely neutral attitude toward the canal project went away that evening disturbed, uneasy, and determined to find out more about the probable effects of the barge canal on the Florida environment.”

In 1969, Marjorie Harris Carr founded Florida Defenders of the Environment.  The organization sued the Army Corp of Engineers for the potential damage the canal would cause to the Ocklawaha River and its ecosystem.  In seeking an injunction the lawsuit stated, “unless the requested relief is granted irreparable damage will result — notably extensive destruction of unique timber and aquatic life upstream from Eureka Dam as well as in Rodman Reservoir, and almost certain pollution of a considerable portion of the water supply for the State of Florida.”

On January 15, 1971 the court granted a preliminary injunction which barred any further work on the canal project until the matter was fully litigated.  In the meantime, public sentiment had turned against the project because of publicity about the suit.  Just four days later on January 19 President Richard Nixon signed an Executive Order halting any additional construction.  When signing the order Nixon stated, “The step I have taken today will prevent a past mistake from causing permanent damage.”  He later mused broadly, “What a strange creature is man that he fouls his own nest.”

By the time construction was halted some $74 million dollars had already been spent on the project.  Over the ensuing years several attempts were made to codify the canal’s demise but most failed.  Finally a bill passed in 1990 that de-authorized the project and also called for a greenway corridor to be established along the canal route.  On November 28, 1990 President George Bush signed the legislation ending all further attempts to complete the canal.

Some 70,000 acres of land that the federal government had acquired in connection with the project was transferred to the State of Florida.  In 1991 the state created the Cross Florida Greenway State Recreation and Conservation Area.  In 1998, following Ms. Carr’s death, it was renamed the Marjorie Harris Carr Cross Florida Greenway in her honor.  It is managed by The Florida Parks Service.  It spans 110 miles and provides more than 300 miles of trails for all types of outdoor recreation.


Today, nothing remains of the
Cross Florida Barge Canal, except for a few partially completed excavations and bridge trusses.  The one exception is the Rodman Reservoir, located just outside of Palatka.  It was created during the canal project by damming the Ocklawaha River.  It continues to be a source of controversy, with some arguing that the aging dam should be removed for environmental and economic reasons, while others appreciate the opportunities for water activities that it provides.

The story of the Cross Florida Barge Canal is significant to the past, present and future of Florida and the nation.  From the germ of an idea nearly five hundred years ago, through various reasons for and attempts at construction through the centuries, to the recognition of potential harm to our environment it is a reminder of man’s attitude toward his relationship with nature.  It’s most important lesson may be that we must assess the needs of local communities and the impact on them when considering any future projects of such size and scope.

 "I am an optimist.  I also believe that Floridians care about their environment. If they are educated about its perils, if they are never lied to, they will become stewards of the wild places that are left." – Marjorie Harris Carr

This Article is Reprinted from the Book

South of the St. Marys River

Stories from the History of Northeast Florida

 

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