Conestoga River

The Conestoga River, also referred to as Conestoga Creek, is a 61.6-mile-long (99.1 km)[4] tributary of the Susquehanna River flowing through the center of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, United States.

Conestoga River
The Conestoga River as seen from the inside of Hunsecker's Mill Covered Bridge in Lancaster County
Physical characteristics
Source 
  locationState Game Lands 52, Lancaster and Berks County, Pennsylvania
  coordinates40°10′47″N 75°56′32″W[1]
  elevation800 ft (240 m)[2]
Mouth 
  location
Susquehanna River, Safe Harbor, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania
  coordinates
39°55′31″N 76°23′3″W
  elevation
170 ft (52 m)[3]
Length61.6 miles (99.1 km)
Basin size491 square miles (1,270 km2)
Discharge 
  average670 cubic feet per second (19 m3/s)
Basin features
Tributaries 
  leftGroff Creek, Mill Creek
  rightMuddy Creek, Cocalico Creek, Lititz Run, Little Conestoga Creek

Geography

Its headwaters rise mostly in southern Berks County and northeastern Lancaster County, in an area known as "Bortz's Swamp" or "Penngall Field" (a small area rises in Chester County). The East Branch and West Branch of the Conestoga join to form the main river just north of Morgantown, and the stream flows from northeast to southwest for more than 60 miles (97 km), passing close to the center of Lancaster and ending at Safe Harbor along the Susquehanna River, approximately 16 miles (26 km) north of the Pennsylvania-Maryland state line.

The principal tributaries of the Conestoga River are Cocalico Creek, Mill Creek, and Little Conestoga Creek; they drain into the Conestoga River watershed in the order listed. The Conestoga River and its principal tributaries comprise approximately 114 stream miles, and they drain a watershed area of approximately 217 square miles (560 km2) if the main stream is alone considered, rising to 491 square miles (1,270 km2) when the Cocalico, Mill, and Little Conestoga Creek watersheds are also included.

History

The stream was named after a small tribe of the indigenous Iroquoian-speaking Susquehannock people, called the Susquehannocks by the English of Maryland and Virginia (an Algonquian name, Sasquesahanough, meaning "people of the muddy river") and the Conestoga by the English of Pennsylvania (from Kanastoge, meaning "place of the immersed pole", the name of their village in Pennsylvania[5]). The village of Conestoga was reported to have 2,000 inhabitants in the 17th century, and up to 7,000 people or more may have then lived in the watershed of the Conestoga River. By the early 18th century most of the Conestoga-Susquehannock were compelled to move to the Ohio area, where they gradually lost their distinctiveness as a nation. In 1763 the remaining Susquehannocks at Conestoga were attacked by the Paxton Boys, a group of anti-Indian vigilantes, who killed six of them at their village of Conestoga, and, two weeks later, despite official protection, killed fourteen of the remaining sixteen at the Lancaster workhouse. The two surviving Conestoga-Susquehannock worked as servants on a local farm until they died and were buried there.

The first steamboat in America floated on the Conestoga in 1763. In the 19th century the name of the river gained wider recognition with the spread of the Conestoga wagon, first built in and named after this valley. The wagon assisted the transportation of freight throughout the East, and later was adapted to help transport goods to the western frontier of the United States. So many cigars were made in the watershed in the late 19th century that a local cigar named the Conestoga became known as the "stogie" throughout the US. In the early nineteenth century, it was possible to travel by boat to Lancaster city from Chesapeake Bay through a system of locks.[6] Though the Conestoga is smaller than most streams generally designated a river, local boosterism in the late 19th century insisted that any stream holding scheduled commercial transport should be so called; steamboat service to a local amusement park along its banks (Rocky Springs Amusement Park in Lancaster) barely qualified, but the designation caught on. The name "Conestoga" has also been applied to the Conestoga Rocket, a rocket produced from Minuteman I parts and launched from Matagorda Island, the ship Conestoga, which is a popular diving wreck in the Thousand Islands, the C-93 Conestoga cargo aircraft, and, in Star Trek, the name of the starship used in the failed first attempt at deep space colonization.

Watershed

Land use along the stream has been traditionally agricultural, though spreading urbanization has affected the stream with erosion problems. Though scenic, the Conestoga River is impaired from nitrogen and phosphorus pollution, mostly runoff from animal waste and excessive commercial fertilizer. Other pollution sources are sediments from intense cropping, development, and urban runoff. The stream flows through a pastoral landscape farmed extensively by Pennsylvania German farmers and along the eastern and southern outskirts of the city of Lancaster. Many covered bridges span its banks. Northeast of Lancaster city are many Old Order Amish and Old Order Mennonite farms; horse and carriage traffic frequents local roads. Many small dams impound its waters, most of them built long ago to power mills or generate electricity. Most dams are in disrepair and have been abandoned, though there is an active movement to remove as many as possible. Seven were removed between 1996 and 1999.

Crossings

Hunsecker's Mill Covered Bridge
Covered bridges
Other

See also

References

  1. Crable, Ad. "A journey to find the source of Lancaster County's Conestoga River". LancasterOnline. LNP. Retrieved 7 May 2020.
  2. United States Geological Survey (1999). Morgantown, PA (PDF) (Topographic map). 1:24,000. 7.5 Minute Series. Reston, VA: United States Geological Survey. Retrieved May 7, 2020.
  3. United States Geological Survey (1995). Safe Harbor, PA (PDF) (Topographic map). 1:24,000. 7.5 Minute Series. Reston, VA: United States Geological Survey. Retrieved May 7, 2020.
  4. U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline data. The National Map Archived 2016-06-30 at the Wayback Machine, accessed August 8, 2011
  5. "Indian Names Data Chart" (PDF). Susquehanna River Basin Commission. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-09-21. Retrieved 2006-09-04.
  6. Crable, Ad. "A retrospective of the Conestoga River". LancasterOnline. LNP. Retrieved 7 May 2020.

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