Persistence created ‘miracle’ waterway
Someone once called the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway a “thousand-mile miracle,” but there was nothing miraculous about getting it built. The miracle was that the idea for the canal came from west Texas, not south Louisiana.
The idea of using inland waterways had been around well before Louisiana became a state. U.S. Treasury Secretary Albert Gallatin formally urged Congress to consider it in 1808. The War of 1812 crimped funding for his scheme, but it also reinforced his idea that waterways were needed for military transport as well as everyday commerce.