Pennyfield Lock


The Pennyfield Lock and lockhouse are part of the 184.5-mile Chesapeake and Ohio Canal that operated in the United States along the Potomac River from the 1830s until 1924. The lock, located at towpath mile-marker 19.7, is near River Road in Montgomery County, Maryland. The original lock house was built in 1830, and its lock was completed in 1831.
The name "Pennyfield" is a misspelling of the family name of long-time lock keepers George and Charles Pennifield. George, and then his son Charlie, operated the lock from the 1880s until it closed in 1924. George was an avid fisherman, and once hosted President Grover Cleveland for several days of fishing near the lock.
Today, the lock and restored lock house are part of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historical Park. The area is a favorite of bird watchers, and the Pennyfield Lock Neighborhood Conservation Area and Dierssen Wildlife Management Area are both accessible using the lock's towpath.

Background

Ground was broken for construction of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal on July 4, 1828. One of the early plans was for the canal to be a way to connect the Chesapeake Bay with the Ohio River—hence the name Chesapeake and Ohio Canal. The canal has several types of locks, including 74 lift locks necessary to handle a 608-foot difference in elevation between the two canal ends—an average of about 8 feet per lock. From Georgetown to Harpers Ferry, the canal is wide at the surface, and at the bottom. Including walls, lift locks are long and wide—usable lockage is less.
Portions of the canal began operating in the 1830s, and construction ended in 1850 without reaching the intended Ohio River termination. The canal ran from Georgetown to Cumberland, Maryland. Because portions of the Potomac can be shallow and rocky as well as subject to low water at times and floods, the river could not serve for reliable navigation and a continuous canal on land was necessary. The canal opened the region to important markets and lowered shipping costs. By 1859, about 83 boats per week were using the canal to transport coal, grain, flour, and farm products to Washington and Georgetown.
The canal faced competition from other modes of transportation, especially the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. Starting in Baltimore and adding line westward, the B&O Railroad eventually reached the Ohio River and beyond. In 1889, a flood damaged the C&O Canal and caused the C&O Canal Company to enter bankruptcy. Operations stopped for about two years. Trustees nominated by the B&O Railroad took over receivership of the canal and began operating it under court supervision, but canal use had already peaked in the 1870s. More damage from flooding and continued competition from railroads and trucks caused the C&O Canal to close permanently in 1924.

History

Work on Lock 22 began in April 1829 and was completed May 1831 at a cost of $7,969.29. Construction of the lock house began in October 1829, and was finished April 1830 at a cost of $853.20. On August 7, 1830, an individual listed only as "Wright" was recommended and approved as lock keeper with the additional benefit of the right to use the canal company’s land between the canal and the Potomac River below a creek known as the Muddy Branch.
By June 1832, a 22-mile section of the canal was operating between Georgetown and Seneca, which includes Lock 22. Another early keeper for Lock 22 was M. F. Harris, who was lock keeper on July 1, 1839, according to records. John Fields is listed as lock keeper on July 1, 1841.
Another locktender, R. Selby, is listed for 1865. A map of Montgomery County, Maryland, shows Selby as the "L.K." and a nearby wharf owned by John L. DuFief. DuFief built a mill around 1850 on the Muddy Branch, and it had a road that connected to Lock 22. His mill had the capacity to manufacture 10–12,000 barrels of flour per year, and a network of roads grew that enabled farmers to get their crops to the mill and canal. The same 1865 map shows a lock keeper named G. W. Pennifield for a lock west of Selby's Lock 22—probably Lock 23. In 1875, the Lock 22 keeper, unnamed in the report, was dismissed after he drunkenly "opened the lower gate paddles before the boat was in place", causing the boat to break apart and sink with its 113-ton cargo.
George Washington Pennifield became lock keeper for Lock 22 sometime during the 1880s. Pennifield became well known in Montgomery County, especially among fishermen. Grover Cleveland, while President, spent several days at Pennifield's Lock for a fishing trip—staying at Pennifield's home. Pennifield's son, Charles, eventually replaced him as lock keeper although the elder Pennifield continued to live at the lock. George Pennifield died in 1911 and was buried at the Darnestown Presbyterian Church cemetery.
Charles remained as lock keeper until the canal closed in 1924. He lived with his wife at the lock house for over 50 years. In 1938, they moved to Travilah, Maryland, and Charles died in 1941. Although the Pennyfield Lock house remains, the larger Pennifield house fell into disrepair and was torn down in 2009.
Today's Pennyfield Lock is a misspelling of the Pennifield family name. The lock was described as "Pennifield's Lock" in George Pennifield's 1911 obituary. However, the name was being misspelled as early as 1918.

Today

Today, the Pennyfield Lock and restored lock house are part of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historical Park. The C&O Canal Trust describes the lock as a good example of "the basic types of structures" built along the canal, and the furnishings in the lock house are representative of the mid-1830s to mid-1840s. The Pennyfield Lock house is one of seven restored lock houses on the C&O Canal available to the public.
The Muddy Branch, a tributary to the Potomac River, is less than a half mile walk on the canal towpath. The area has numerous birds and waterfowl and is a favorite of bird watchers. Additional bird watching is available nearby along the towpath at the Pennyfield Lock Neighborhood Conservation Area, a 1.9 acre park with boat ramp maintained by Montgomery County. The 40-acre Dierssen Waterfowl Sanctuary is also adjacent to the canal towpath and a favorite of bird watchers.

Footnotes

Citations