Smith Canal
by Terry Davis
Title
Smith Canal
Artist
Terry Davis
Medium
Digital Art - Photo Painting
Description
The Smith Canal is a former barge canal in Stockton, California, United States. It currently runs approximately 2.4 miles east-northeast from the San Joaquin River, although it previously ran about 0.65 miles further. It was built to carry agricultural produce to the Stockton State Hospital. Today the canal is lined with docks for pleasure boats.
HISTORY
When the crew of the British Euphemia heard of gold deposits in the Sierra foothills, they abandoned ship in San Francisco Bay. During the War of 1812 it was seized by the US, who used it as a cargo vessel in the China trade before it was again abandoned. The City of San Francisco bought the ship in October 1849 for $3,000 in and turned it into a floating prison, and later as an asylum for the mentally ill.
When the Stockton State Hospital became the Insane Asylum of the State of California in 1853, the Euphemia was shipped up the San Joaquin. Its patients unloaded and transferred to the hospital, a short distance to the north. The ship returned to San Francisco and was once again abandoned. Its hulk was discovered in 1921 during excavations near Battery and Sacramento streets during construction of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco.[2]
As the number of inmates at the hospital grew, it strained the local road network's ability to carry food and other supplies. Farmer Charles Smith owned a number of fields around the area, and dredged his irrigation canal deep enough for barges. It ran to a point just north of the hospital. It was used for some time before train tracks behind the hospital and upgrades to local roads made it superfluous. Over the years, the eastern end was repeatedly backfilled until it reached its current end at what is known as Yosemite Lake.
Uploaded
January 9th, 2017
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