Echoes of Erie

Reform flowed with the waters

More than a trade route, the Erie Canal was a conduit for change, inspiring new ideas and connecting activists.

In January 2017, Melina Carnicelli stood among 10,000 people in Seneca Falls, New York, at the Women’s March she helped organize. On streets where Elizabeth Cady Stanton once fought for equality, Carnicelli saw a connection: the same soil that nurtured the women’s suffrage movement was still inspiring activists nearly two centuries later.

“I call it sacred ground,” said Carnicelli, the first female mayor of Auburn, New York. “Because that kind of fervor, that kind of passion, that kind of impetus toward civil rights, human rights, women’s rights, personal rights, has been part of this soil forever. Forever, really.”

As the Erie Canal approaches its 200th anniversary, its legacy as more than a trade route comes into focus. Along its waters, abolitionists and suffragists launched movements that reshaped the nation. Today, in places like Seneca Falls, Auburn and Syracuse, modern activists continue to draw inspiration from the Canal’s history.

“The Erie Canal is crucial,” said Coline Jenkins, the great-great-granddaughter of Stanton, “and really important for ideas, for travel of goods, for transportation of humans.”

Conduit for reform, spreading ideas

The Erie Canal reshaped 19th-century transportation, connecting towns and cities across New York with a reliable route, historian Judith Wellman said. The Canal replaced winding rivers and inefficient roads, providing a vital network for moving goods.

It contributed to the development of towns like Seneca Falls, Syracuse and Rochester as centers of commerce. 

“People came to Seneca Falls because it was a bustling Canal city,” Wellman said. 

The Canal’s design allowed for the quick movement of ideas, too. Newspapers, pamphlets and books could be transported at a speed and scale previously unheard of. Frederick Douglass’s The North Star, printed in Rochester, could reach Albany within a day, spreading abolitionist messages to a wider audience. The same networks of communication helped suffragists, who drew heavily from abolitionist strategies, to further their own movement.

“News just began to travel much quicker and much more efficiently along the space,” said S. Brent Rodriguez-Plate, a professor of religious studies at Hamilton College. 

These towns attracted reformers, where movements such as abolition, temperance and women’s suffrage began to take shape, supported by the flow of ideas along the Canal’s route, Wellman said.

Abolition, suffrage and temperance dominated the discourse of the early 19th century. Rodriguez-Plate said these groups were mutually supportive, “mingling with each other” in ways that were not seen anywhere else.

“It’s sort of the inner-mixing of all these groups that really makes things move, that inspires people,” Rodriguez-Plate said.

The women’s rights movement grew from abolitionism, as activists like Stanton and Susan B. Anthony saw parallels between enslaved people’s oppression and the societal restrictions of women, said Derrick Pratt, a museum educator at the Erie Canal Museum.

For Stanton, the overlap between abolition and suffrage was not only practical but deeply personal. Her abolitionist work in Seneca Falls shaped her suffrage efforts, preparing her with the essential skills and connections to lead the women’s suffrage movement, Jenkins said. 

“A lot of these women … take their skills that they learn in (abolition) and then go forward and apply it to the suffragist movement,” said Steph Adams, interpretations director at the Erie Canal Museum.

Canal provides opportunities for activists

The intersection of movements went beyond shared ideas — the Canal served as a literal and symbolic path to freedom. Freedom seekers traveled its waters on the Underground Railroad, supported by abolitionist networks in towns like Utica, Syracuse and Rochester. In Utica, Black residents of Post Street — just blocks from the Canal — offered shelter and guidance to those escaping slavery, said Jan DeAmicis, co-chair of the Oneida County Freedom Trail Commission

The Canal linked people and opportunities. Mixed-race neighborhoods like Post Street became centers for both refuge and economic activity, DeAmicis said. While Black residents offered shelter to freedom seekers, they also found work in Canal-related businesses such as hotels, restaurants and stables, supporting its thriving economy. 

“This is part of where the American dream comes from, this land of opportunity,” Rodriguez-Plate said. “The Erie Canal really makes … opportunity for, of course, those white Europeans traveling across voluntarily, but also gave opportunity to former enslaved people.”

The Canal provided the infrastructure for these movements to grow, holding key conventions such as the first meeting of the New York Anti-Slavery Society in Utica in 1835. It allowed reformers from across the region to gather, strategize and spread their ideas. Leaders like Harriet Tubman in Auburn, Jermain Loguen in Syracuse and Frederick Douglass in Rochester relied on the Canal. 

Although the communities along the Canal have a strong history of resistance, they were not exempt from the national support for slavery, a system that fueled much of the state’s economy. 

Pratt emphasized that companies operating along the Canal still profited off enslaved labor through cotton textiles, much like cotton mills in the South.

“While we often present this kind of the abolitionist side of the story, there’s also a firm pro-slavery sentiment throughout New York as well, which was kind of surprising,” Pratt said.

The early efforts of the abolitionist movement had shaped Stanton’s approach to activism by the time she organized the Seneca Falls Convention in 1848. These principles, Jenkins said, reinforced her belief that equality, namely for women, was more than a moral argument — it was a fight for legal rights. 

“Elizabeth Cady Stanton is an unbelievable person that does not come out of spontaneous combustion,” Jenkins said. “She connects women and law. It was not a moral argument to do the right thing, be nice to women, give them the vote. No, no, no. She said these are legal rights and inalienable rights.”

The convention was the beginning of a suffrage movement that spread quickly along the Canal. Within weeks, Wellman said similar conventions took place in Rochester and Syracuse, with the Canal helping to spread early activism throughout the state and beyond. 

“The world connected to Seneca Falls and Seneca Falls connected to the world,” Jenkins said. 

Erie Canal legacy still provides inspiration

Modern activists continue to draw on this intertwined legacy. Carnicelli founded First Amendment, First Vote in 2017 to empower young women to see themselves as future leaders. The program connects their activism to that of the women’s rights movement, using the past as a framework for the present, she said.

Carnicelli said she sees today’s women’s movement as the next phase of activism, continuing the work of those who have fought for gender equality for generations. 

Yet despite the progress made, obstacles persist. 

Carnicelli acknowledged that “the general population still isn’t ready for an effective, qualified woman to lead the country.” But she said she remains optimistic, encouraged by the drive of young women in her program. 

“These are girls that have fire in the belly already around social justice,” Carnicelli said. “They are self-motivated to make a difference. They accept the challenge.”

Jenkins shared a similar hope, inspired by the growing number of women in leadership roles. 

“On my tombstone, I’m going to engrave, ‘I saw the first female president,’” Jenkins said. 

The tangible reminders of these movements remain vital, said Erie Canalway National Heritage Corridor education program manager Patrick Stenshorn. Sites like Wesleyan Chapel in Seneca Falls, now part of the Women’s Rights National Historical Park, and Post Street in Utica, designated by the National Park Service as an Underground Railroad location, offer physical connections to history. 

“When you’re trying to inspire a current or future generation, being able to connect that to a tangible story, a tangible site, is powerful and motivating,” Stenshorn said. 

As the Erie Canal reaches its bicentennial anniversary, its legacy continues to resonate. From abolition to suffrage to today’s struggles for equality, the Canal remains a symbol of progress, Carnicelli said.

But still, even 200 years later, Black residents in central New York continue to fight for equal rights. In June 2020, about 2,000 demonstrators marched in a Black Lives Matter rally to protest the death of George Floyd — nearly one block from the Erie Canal Museum in Syracuse. 

Mary Hayes-Gordon, co-chair of the Oneida Freedom Trail Commission, imagines that the lessons learned from the Canal are still playing into activism today. 

“People have been fighting against certain structures for a long time,” Hayes-Gordon said. “I would say (the Canal) continued lessons that humankind have been putting forth and building on for millennia, of how to do the work, make the change.”

As the former Auburn Mayor Melina Carnicelli said, “Elizabeth Cady Stanton and her girlfriends would challenge us to keep on keeping on,” she said. “Don’t ever stop making progress, even if it’s inch by inch.”

Moments & milestones

March 31, 1817

Slavery ends in New York

New York legislature passes law to abolish slavery, becoming the first state in the country to create a law for the total abolition.

1817-1825

Erie Canal construction and opening

Starting in Rome and working westward to Rochester, thousands of laborers built the Canal’s initial passageway that would span Albany to Buffalo. On Oct. 26, 1825, New York Governor DeWitt Clinton boarded the Seneca Chief for a nine-day journey on the Canal that concluded in New York City’s harbor.

A photo of the Erie Canal

Courtesy of Library of Congress

Erie Canal at Little Falls.

July 4, 1827

New York’s Emancipation Day

Over 4,600 men and women became free within the state.

October 21-22, 1835

New York State Anti-Slavery Society

After a mob disrupts its meeting in Utica, the organization forms in Peterboro, New York. The town is now home to the National Abolition Hall of Fame and Museum.

First annual report of the proceedings of the New York state anti-slavery society (Courtesy of Library of Congress)

Courtesy of Library of Congress

First annual report of the proceedings of the New York state anti-slavery society.

May 9-12, 1837

First National Female Anti-Slavery Society Convention

About 175 women from 10 states convene in New York City to discuss their role in the abolition movement.

July 19-20, 1848

Seneca Falls Convention

Recognized at the first women’s rights convention, Wesleyan Chapel hosted the two-day event. The convention gained attention and inspired a series of women’s rights conventions around the country.

Courtesy of Library of Congress.

Title page of the 1848 Seneca Falls Convention report, featuring the Declaration of Sentiments — America’s first formal demand for women’s rights. 

December 6, 1865

13 Amendment ratified

 Senate passes amendment abolishing slavery nationwide.

May 10, 1866

American Equal Rights Association

Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony form the American Equal Rights Association for people of all races and both genders to join in support of universal suffrage.

February 3, 1870

15th Amendment ratified

Twenty-nine of the 37 states ratify the Fifteenth Amendment, granting voting rights to all men without regard to race and color, including former slaves.

Courtesy of Library of Congress

Print shows a parade surrounded by portraits and vignettes of Black life, illustrating rights granted by the 15th Amendment.

November 6, 1917

Women receive the right to vote in New York

New York voters passed an amendment to the New York State Constitution granting women full suffrage.

August 18, 1920

19th Amendment Ratified

Tennessee becomes the necessary 36th state to approve the 19th Amendment that would protect all women’s right to vote.

Courtesy of Library of Congress.

Three suffragists casting their votes in New York City in 1917, following the state’s historic amendment granting women full suffrage rights.

July 2, 1964

The Civil Rights Act

The Civil Rights Act is signed into law, banning discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex or national origin.

Courtesy of Library of Congress

A group of men stood in front of the U.S. Capitol in March 1960, likely supporting the Civil Rights Act.

January 22, 2017

Women’s March in Seneca Falls

In solidarity with the Women’s March in Washington D.C., between 8,000-10,000 people organized at the Women’s Rights National Historical Park in Seneca Falls.

Courtesy of Melina Carnicelli

Women rally along the Erie Canal in Seneca Falls, NY, on January 20, 2017.

June 7, 2020

Black Lives Matter rally in Syracuse

More than 2,000 people gather in downtown Syracuse to protest police brutality sparked by the murder of George Floyd in Minnesota.

More Echoes of Erie

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As upstate New York boomed in the decades after the Canal opened, it attracted a peculiar industry: prisons.

One of the original editions of the Book of Mormon is kept on display in the Grandin Building.

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Using the Erie Canal, Joseph Smith Jr. spread his new gospel and paved his way into religious canon.

Lifesize statues recognize notable contributors to the women's suffrage movement at the Women's Rights National Historical Park in Seneca Falls, New York.

Story by Kendall Luther

More than a trade route, the Erie Canal was a conduit for change, inspiring new ideas and connecting activists.