The Erie Canal reduced the costs of shipping by 90%.
Increases shipping costs
The Erie Canal made shipping 80% cheaper.
decrease shipping ggoods
The Erie canal allows shipping past Niagara Falls, to the Great Lakes. The Canadian side uses the Welland Canal.
Yes the Erie Canal is still in business today. Much of it is now recreation but there is still commercial traffic such as barges of corn from Canada to be turned into ethanol.https://www.npr.org/2013/06/25/195426326/commercial-shipping-revived-along-erie-canal
The two advantages were that the Erie Canal made the price of shipping lower. Farmers would send corn and flour westward. The other advantage was that immigrants that came from Europe could afford to go to settle the Midwest.
The two advantages were that the Erie Canal made the price of shipping lower. Farmers would send corn and flour westward. The other advantage was that immigrants that came from Europe could afford to go to settle the Midwest.
The Erie Canal made shipping cheaper.
It cost 7 million dollars to build the Erie Canal and it made that much back in two years.
The Erie Canal was built to connect Lake Erie to the Hudson River. The Hudson River empties into the Atlantic Ocean. This allows shipping to the Atlantic Ocean from Lake Erie.
It took a long time for goods to go across the Appalachian Mountains by man on horseback. It was much faster to go by barge pulled by mules on the Erie Canal. The Erie Canal paid for itself in two years and reduced the price of shipping by 90%.