History & Culture · Capital Region
Glens Falls' Feeder Canal Still Carries Local Memory
Glens Falls' canal identity includes the Feeder Canal, towpath, boat basins, paper and lumber shipments, and a working link to Champlain Canal history.
Published July 5, 2026 · Last verified July 5, 2026
Glens Falls has a canal layer that helps explain its industrial past. The original Champlain Canal opened in 1822, and the Feeder Canal was widened and deepened in 1832 so it could carry boat traffic.
That work turned a narrow corridor into a busy route. Thirteen masonry locks helped handle the drop east of Sandy Hill, now Hudson Falls, including a run of five locks in a row. Mills and factories lined the banks, and six boat basins handled loading, unloading, and repairs.
The freight list tells the story better than a slogan could. North Country lumber, lime, marble, paper, clay, apples, and potatoes moved out from Queensbury, Glens Falls, Hudson Falls, and Kingsbury toward southern markets. Coal and other cargo moved back in. The Feeder Canal enjoyed roughly a century of prosperity before newer transportation routes took over.
The towpath keeps that story walkable now. People can follow the old corridor at a human pace, with water, banks, bridge crossings, and industrial memory close enough to notice. For Glens Falls, the canal is more than a recreational path. It is a working-memory corridor: locks, boat basins, mill traffic, farm goods, stone, paper, and the old water route that helps explain why so much local work gathered here.