This photo depicts where water enters into the Delaware Canal from the Lehigh River at the top of the Easton Dam. A small bridge stretches across the top.
Notices informing that the property is privately owned and that trespassing, fishing, and motorized vehicles are strictly forbidden. A warning of legal consequences is given if any of the stated rules are broken.
The Chairman of the National Heritage Corridor Commission wrote to Senator Reibman in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania to inform her of the past accomplishments and future plans for projects on the Lehigh Canal. There is a larger focus on past accomplishments and efforts to include the community in the process.
A project report that includes a brief history of the natural resources and archaeology in the Lehigh Canal as well as plans for future nature trails. Its purpose was to develop recommendations for the Lehigh Canal and propose steps to accomplishing those potential goals.
Mrs. Lawrence Silver originally wrote a letter to Congresswoman Helen Meyner about her concerns of the Tocks Island Project, to which Robert Meyner, husband to the congresswoman responded.
The photo album shows viewers the difference in landscape, infrastructure, and the area surrounding the Delaware River in general between 1900s and 1966.
The thesis discussing the health of the Delaware River during the early 1900s. It also describes how human interaction has affected the health, as well.
In the Tocks Island Dam scrapbook, this newspaper clipping from Richard Harpster of the Newark News was present and addressed the concerns of residents as well as critiqued the developers involved.
An image showing the change of the flow of the Bushkill Creek, compared to the flow of the water by the highway overpass and entrance to the Arts Trail.