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The Heritage
Corridor Convention and Visitors Bureau was incorporated in
1984 to service the communities along the Illinois and Michigan
Canal. The Bureau is governed by a Board of Directors comprised
of leaders in the tourism industry from the four areas serviced
by the Bureau. The Bureau covers Chicago Portage/Southern Cook
County, Greater Will County, Grundy County and Starved
Rock/LaSalle County.
The Illinois and
Michigan Canal opened in 1848 to usher people and goods between
the Illinois River and a little lakeside settlement called
Chicago. The twenty-two hour trip was considered state of the
art in speed and comfort compared to a bumpy stagecoach. During
its glory days, canal towns sprung up along the waterway to
provide raw materials and grain that would ultimately reach the
eastern seaboard and the Gulf of Mexico. When the railroads
laid tracks parallel to the canal in 1853, the importance of
the canal as a mode of general passenger and freight
transportation diminished and became obsolete.
The canal remained
unkempt until the 1970s when the Illinois Department of Natural
Resources took over management of the waterway and worked
volunteers to turn it and its adjacent lands into open public
space. In 1984, President Ronald Reagan signed an Act of
Congress which created the 97-mile I&M Canal National Heritage
Corridor - America's first National Linear Park. This
designation would serve as model for future "partnership parks"
in the United States.
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