Did you know that the White House had christened the
last several days “Infrastructure Week”? No?
Don’t feel bad. It wasn’t only that adverse media
coverage about a former FBI Director’s riveting Capitol Hill testimony left the
White House press office too Comey-tose to press their agenda, but that the
President had done nothing, really, to advance what purports to be his plan: a
$200 billion boost in federal spending that is supposed to trigger $800 billion
in private financing through public-private partnerships. Nothing, that is,
except toss to the ground thick binders of what he said were unnecessary and burdensome environmental reviews holding up a highway project.
Once, American leaders did more than
offer cheap theatrics over infrastructure. They proposed detailed, carefully
reasoned plans that not only created jobs, but that helped knit together the
youthful but unruly and disparate regions of a sprawling nation.
Including in our nation’s capital, as I discovered
in the fleeting but fascinating glimpse of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal that I photographed from a bus while on
vacation three and a half years ago. I was on my way down to Foggy Bottom when,
looking out the right side of the bus window, I saw this towpath—a sight
far different from what you’re likely to encounter in the glass and marble structures
that line today’s Washington.
As I write this, the Georgetown Chesapeake and Ohio Canal
is closed for renovation. As soon as it’s completed, though, I advise you to
take it in, and marvel at what people once did once they set their minds
to it.
The seeds of the Chesapeake and Ohio were planted by
George Washington, who with other entrepreneur formed the Potomac Company to
improve navigation on the Potomac. Logistics stymied construction of that, but
the building of the Erie Canal starting July 4, 1817 altered the views of
lawmakers across the nation. (Let the record show that the effort to spearhead
it was led by a New Yorker, DeWitt Clinton—who, as a lawyer and longtime legislator, knew how to educate and
persuade people to his point of view—all without insulting tweets. Imagine!)
For the next decade or so, federal assistance to
“internal improvements”—not just canals, but also roads and bridges—seemed the
wave of the future. That came to an end when the President that Donald Trump
likened himself incessantly to, Andrew Jackson, vetoed a major roads bill.
But in the meantime, the Chesapeake and Ohio Company
was chartered in 1825 to build a shipping canal connecting two rivers: the
Potomac’s tidewater in DC with the headwaters of the Ohio in western
Pennsylvania. President John Quincy
Adams broke ground for the canal in ceremonies at Little Falls, Maryland, on
July 4, 1828. The construction effort survived even more dangers than the red
tape that President Trump complained about, including recession, labor
shortages, landowner fights concerning right-of-way, and a five-year
construction shutdown. At last, it opened in 1850.
The canal’s heyday was relatively brief—only a
generation or so after its midcentury opening—but it enabled engineers to
surmount future challenges because of the solutions supplied here: dams, hundreds
of culverts, and a 3,117-foot tunnel through a large shale rock formation.
Today’s challenges may be different, but are hardly insurmountable if approached
with a spirit not just of ingenuity, but of intelligence and persuasiveness—qualities
in desperately short supply at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue these days.
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