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The Tuxedo-Ringwood Canal Description, February 3, 2010
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THE TUxEDO-RINGWOOD CANAL anal Society member Jakob Fran- ke, who is a resident of northern 3' Original Bergen County, was very inter- 14 Water Flow ested to hear about the Tuxedo-Ring- 7.5' wood Canal and submitted the following information about this early waterway: Cross Section As measured by Ed Lenik in 1962 Dam The canal was approximately three Left: Map showing the location of the Tuxedo-Ringwood Canal miles long, extended from Tuxedo Lake, and existing cross section of Orange County, NY and connected with Tuxedo the canal at Tuxedo Lake. the Ringwood River in northern Passaic Lake Bottom: Jakob Franke's 2009 County, New Jersey. Reportedly built photo of part of the canal at c.1765 by iron entrepreneur Peter Hasen- the entrance to the Tuxedo clever, the canal was designed to bring ex- New Water Lake community. Flow to tra water to power waterwheels at Hasen- Ringwood clever's ironworks at Ringwood and Tuxedo - perhaps may also have floated logs to the Ringwood Canal works for conversion into charcoal fuel. Hasenclever headed a London syndicate which formed the American Company to establish ironworks at Ringwood, Char- lotteburg, and Long Pond in New Jersey and at Haverstraw and Cortlandt in New Ringwood New York. Shortly after coming to this coun- Furnace try Hasenclever brought in over 500 Ger- mans to build and operate his industrial works which included forges, furnaces, TUXEDO-RINGWOOD dams, houses, stables, bridges, reservoirs, CANAL ponds, and other buildings. Historical accounts indicate that Hasen- noted that the canal was 7.5 feet wide and ent at the entrance to Tuxedo Lake but also clever constructed an 860-foot-long dam three feet deep. photographed them. Jakob was quite sur- from 12 - 22 feet high to impound a reser- His interest piqued, Jakob Franke did prised and pleased to find an historic canal voir about three miles long and one mile his own exploration last spring and not to explore so close to home! wide, called Toxito Pond (now Tuxedo only found the canal remains still pres- Lake). His plan was to store water here, which could be released into the Tuxedo- Ringwood Canal to supplement water flow at times of drought or low water in the Ringwood River. In this manner his ironworks at Ringwood would be idled less frequently by low flow in the Ringwood River. A July 1779 map of the region depicts Hansenclever's dam, the pond and what appears to be the canal leading to the Ringwood River. A memoir written by a member of the Hewitt family at Ringwood in the 1940s mentioned this canal and noted that part of it was still visible near the south gate of Tuxedo Park, a gated community that still exists. Historian Edward J. Lenik searched for remnants of the canal in the 1960s and found that a considerable portion of the waterway was still present then near the entrance to the gated community. Lenik