Back in the early 1700's a French engineer named Vauban suggested that a canal should be built to link the rivers and lakes of New York State. Years later this idea was looked upon repeatedly when the Western Inland Locks Navigation Company established a system of travel by use of canals (Shaw, 59). Although the company was ultimately defeated, the initial idea of canals and locks was soon to be redeveloped. By the mid-1800's, with a lot of hard work, sweat, and tears, the Erie Canal became the foremost route for trade, travel, and immigration to the new western lands.
The Western Inland Locks Navigation Company was the initial cause and creation leading to the construction of the Erie Canal. In the later years of the 1700's the goal of the company was to create an uninterrupted route of transportation from the Hudson River to Lake Ontario for which trading could transpire. …