Lockington Locks

Piqua, OH 45356
Lockington Locks Lockington Locks is one of the popular Park located in ,Piqua listed under Historical Place in Piqua , Landmark in Piqua , Local business in Piqua , Professional service in Piqua ,

Contact Details & Working Hours

More about Lockington Locks

The Lockington Locks are a group of canal locks on the former Miami and Erie Canal in Lockington, Ohio, United States. Built beginning in 1833, the locks opened for regular use in 1845. The system consists of seven locks: six together at one end, and a seventh at the southern end. Along with features such as basins to allow canal boats to turn around, the locks stretch for between Lockington in far southern Shelby County and Washington Township in far northern Miami County.ConstructionAs constructed, the locks were at the southern end of the Loramie Summit, which stretches from Lockington north to New Bremen. Lockington was a leading point on the canal: besides its locks, the village is the site of the junction of the canal with Loramie Creek, which it originally spanned with an aqueduct, and the village lay at the end of a feeder line that brought large amounts of water from the Lewistown Reservoir near Ohio's highest point in nearby Logan County. This small canal was designed to meet the main line at Lockington because the Summit included the canal's highest elevation of above sea level. As canal boats came north to Lockington, they were lifted by : Lock 48, ; Lock 49, ; Lock 50, ; Lock 51, ; Lock 52, ; and Lock 53,. Boats would typically take several hours to pass through the locks; as a result, the village of Lockington (originally named "Locksport") was founded to provide services to idle boatsmen and passengers. The individual locks at Lockington were constructed of large limestone blocks weighing as much as ; their floors were wooden, and their gates were made of the wood of the white oak.

Map of Lockington Locks