It was an ordinary day. Traveled with our friends from State College, Jerry and Just Sue, to the Chesapeake Inn in Chesapeake City, Maryland, along the C&D Canal, for lunch recently. The weather was beautiful and we were hoping for a few large ships to travel on the canal. The canal is 14 miles long and crosses from the Delaware River to the Chesapeake Bay through Chesapeake City. The canal provides a shortcut of about 300 miles for ship traffic between the Port of Baltimore and the northeastern US cities and Europe. It is the only major commercial canal in the US that is still in use, among those which were built during the heyday of canal building in the early 1800s. It opened for business in 1829 with 10 feet of water and four locks and was purchased by the US Government in 1919 and in 1920 was excavated and deepened to create a sea-lever facility with a channel 12 feet deep and 90 feet wide. From 1935 to 1938 it was deepened to 27 feet and widened to 250 feet. We have seen ships of all sizes in the canal from cargo ships to automobile carriers to cruise ships. We enjoy the Chesapeake Inn since it is one of two restaurants that has a good view of the canal as you eat your lunch. I always call ahead for reservations and ask for seats in front of one of their windows overlooking the canal. They always tell me they can't reserve specific tables, but over the past few years they always come through for me. I think they know my voice by now, since most greet me with Mr. LDub when they hear my voice. For lunch today Jerry
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