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Early Travelers Confront High-Water Isolation

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on

Early-day travelers faced not only roads destroyed by high water, snow and ice, but also bridge collapses or closings that isolated and disconnected communities.
Crossing rain-swollen creeks was tricky. Travelers preferred fording streams, but that could only be done when the water level permitted it. Stage drivers calculated depths by placing measuring sticks at the edge of a stream to see whether the water was rising or falling. They avoided rising water by waiting or by finding another place to cross. The Emigrant and Lockhart ferries over the Pit and Falls rivers were useful, but seasonal.
In late spring, after the last snow had melted and roads dried out, work began on filling potholes, removing debris and leveling the roadway.
The Weekly Shasta Courier of Jan. 26, 1878, reported that the rising river was preventing access to the town of Shasta, Calif. Proponents advocated stringing a suspension bridge at Waugh’s Ferry that would allow crossing from the east side of the river even when water was too high for the ferry to operate.
Source: Colby, W. H. A Century of Transportation n Shasta County 1821-1920: Association for Northern California Records and Research, 1982. 22-27. Print.

Episode
2635
Date
Author
Gail Fiorini-Jenner