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Additional information on this topic provided below.

Thanks for tuning into Watershed Weekly! We're straying from our previously scheduled program to offer an encore presentation of last year's adventure on the Delaware River Sojourn.

As you may know, the Delaware is the River of the year for 2002, and our own Alex Djordevic, who produced last year's feature on this mighty river, has gone back out to the Delaware this year to cover it for Watershed Weekly. Alex's new adventure about the Delaware River will air in the upcoming weeks, so be sure to tune in.

In celebration of Rivers Month, Watershed Weekly is traveling around the state throughout the month of June to paddle along on several sojourns. We'll be featuring the Delaware, the Swattie, the Schuylkill, the Lehigh, and the Susquehanna— so be sure to tune in throughout June and July to experience these wet adventures.


The Delaware: A National Treasure

he Delaware, the longest un-dammed river east of the Mississippi, is as steeped in history as it is diverse in nature. It serves as a major source of water for big cities and heavy industry, yet supports a world-class trout fishery. Seventeen million people rely on the Delaware River system for water, but the river itself is small, draining only four-tenths of one percent of the total continental U.S. land area. Over 170 miles of the 282-mile long river have been included in the National Wild and Scenic Rivers System, a testament to the remarkable improvement in its water quality.

ar has visited the river and so have literary giants. Walt Whitman discovered poetry in its commerce, describing the steam tugs that plied it as "saucy little bullpups of the current." Zane Grey wrote about the river before heading west. William Penn signed a treaty with the Indians on its banks. George Washington and his troops rowed across it, en route to a decisive victory over the British Crown. During the Civil War, more than 12,000 Confederate soldiers were imprisoned on Pea Patch Island, just down river of New Castle, Del. In 1915, to meet the war demand, the world's largest shipyard was built on Hog Island, offshore of Philadelphia. Upstream the river flows beneath the Delaware Aqueduct, built by engineer John Roebling who designed the fabled Brooklyn Bridge. The aqueduct served as a watery passage for mule-pulled canal boats. The river empties into the Delaware Bay, which washes by old whaling towns.

harles Kuralt may have had the Delaware in mind when he wrote "I started out thinking of America as highways and state lines. As I got to know it better I began to think of it as rivers. America is a great story, and there is a river on every page of it." But it was U.S. Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes who perhaps best captured the river's essence. In a 1931 decision involving the sharing of the Delaware's waters he wrote, "A river is more than an amenity, it is a treasure."

The information on this page was received from the Delaware River Basin Commission's website at: http://www.state.nj.us/drbc/ contact them for more information on the Delaware, or contact the Delaware River Greenway Partnership at (908) 996-0230.

Greenworks Sojourn Spotlight:
http://www.greenworks.tv/sojourn/delaware.htm




Contact Producer of Watersheds.tv,
Kelly Meinhart.

 




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