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MOSCOW LANDING

Program
Historic Transportation Canals
Subject
Industry & Commerce, Transportation
Location
5167 River Rd, Leicester, NY 14481, USA
Lat/Long
42.76617, -77.87428
Grant Recipient
Town of Leicester
Historic Marker

MOSCOW LANDING

Inscription

MOSCOW LANDING
CANAL PORT CA. 1846-1878.
STORED & SHIPPED GRAINS, COAL,
APPLES, WATER LIME & SALT ON
GENESEE VALLEY CANAL TO
ROCHESTER AND ERIE CANAL.
WILLIAM G. POMEROY FOUNDATION 2022

While the Genesee Valley Canal is not well known outside of the region, it played a vital role in the economic development of the United States in the mid to late 19th century. It provided access between the Erie Canal near Rochester, NY and the Allegheny River near Olean, NY. The Allegheny River connects to the Ohio River, which meets the Mississippi, and eventually empties into the Gulf of Mexico; however, branch canal construction never reached that far south.

The Genesee Valley Canal opened between Rochester, NY and Mount Morris, NY in September 1840, providing a more efficient alternative to the Genesee River and served as an important link between major transportation routes for moving goods and people. Along this route, the hamlet of Moscow Landing developed into a canal port where local products such as apples, grains, wool, coal, salt, water lime, and wheat were stored in warehouses and shipped to larger markets.

In 1877, New York State passed a law mandating the closure of the canal by September 30, 1878. Following the sale of the land encompassing the canal, canal structures, and water rights in 1881, the Pennsylvania Railroad operated a branch line along this route until February 26, 1963. Although many sections of the former canal were abandoned or repurposed for the railroad, parts of it are still visible today as the Genesee Valley Greenway.