Book Review: Many Voices: Building the Erie Canal, by Laurie Lawlor (Holiday House, 2025)

Just in time for the 200th anniversary commemorating the completion of this engineering marvel, Many Voices: Building Erie, the Canal that Changed America (Holiday House, August 2025)  investigates the untold stories of men, women, and children from all social classes and national origins who helped create and work on the Erie Canal.

Award-winning author Laurie Lawlor’s full-color narrative nonfiction explores how this monumental, 363-mile canal was built across a daunting upstate New York landscape at a time when America had no trained engineers, no idea how to make water-proof concrete, no modern mechanical tools, and no reliable source of workers.

Many Voices takes a deep dive into how canal construction altered the environment and uprooted the Haudenosaunee from their long-standing homeland in New York.

Linking the Great Lakes and the Atlantic Ocean, the Erie Canal boosted the global economic status of New York City, expanded Westward settlement deep inside America’s farming heartland, and spiked growth in cities as varied as Chicago, Milwaukee, Toledo, Rochester, Duluth, and Toronto.

Just as today’s Internet has created a “superhighway” of purchasing possibilities and an array of political, social, cultural, and religious ideas from around the globe, the Erie Canal propelled nationwide trade and a network of new ideas — everything from abolition of slavery to promoting women’s right to vote .

Many Voices: Building Erie, the Canal that Changed America includes more than ninety photos, maps, and artwork, detailed timeline, suggestions for visiting today’s canal, complete bibliography, endnotes, and index. The book has been listed as aJunior Library Guild Gold Standard Selection.

Erie Canal Learning Hub

The Erie Canal Learning Hub (https://eriecanalway.org/learn/teachers/resources) is a joint initiative of the Erie Canalway National Heritage Corridor and the New York State Canal Corporation, with additional support from the National Park Foundation and the National Park Service. This page contains DBQs, lesson plans, and links to other useful resources and primary source materials. You’ll find useful content for students throughout the LEARN section, including Fast Facts3D Tours of Canal StructuresSocial Reform & Innovation, and Native Americans.

Document Based Questions: Use these worksheets to help students read and interpret images and documents to learn about the Erie Canal.

Seneca Lake Survey (Grades 6-8)

Canal shipwrecks discovered in the deep waters of Seneca Lake provide a fascinating window into history, underwater archeology, bathymetry, invasive species, and water quality. Choose from a set of four lesson plans that combine teacher instructions, original source documents and images, and student worksheets.

Opening the Gates to Change: The Erie Canal and Woman’s Suffrage (Grades 6-12)

This 9-minute video and corresponding lesson plan explore the impacts of the Erie Canal on development of 19th century social reform movements, particularly women’s rights. While it examines the history of the struggle for equality, it also compares past movements to contemporary issues and shows ways that young people are finding their voices in today’s struggle for social justice.

The Erie Canal Adventure: Unlocking the Waterway Wonders (Grades 4-6)

This 40-minute film explores the Erie Canal’s impact on the development of New York and the significance of waterways in connecting communities across the state. Companion lesson plans give students the opportunity to learn about the types of fish that live in Western New York waters and test their design skills by building their own canal boat.

Building the Erie Canal (Grades 4-8)

Lesson plan with pre- and post-visit activities for classes visiting the Albany Institute of History & Art as part of Ticket to Ride. Students will examine the work that went into building the Erie Canal and consider the political and physical barriers that were overcome to accomplish its construction.

Historical Photographs and Documents

Two Hundred Years on the Erie Canal

This online exhibition illustrates the incredible story of the Erie Canal with historical images and primary-source documents. From early concepts and plans to canal construction to its impact and lasting legacy, the exhibition provides a comprehensive visual resource of information for teachers and students.

Consider the Source: New York

Free online community that connects educators across New York State to the valuable primary sources materials found in the churches, museums, historical organizations, libraries, and state and local governments with a series of highly-engaging learning activities designed to guide and encourage students at all grade levels to make discoveries using critical thinking skills. Includes Erie Canal source materials and lessons.

Erie Canal Way Itineraries 

Erie Canalway itineraries make it easy for students and their families to visit the Erie Canal today and learn about its impacts on New York and the Nation. Download and share copies of our itineraries with students or share the link to our itinerary’s web page with students and their families.

The Erie Canal
Devoted to the history of the Erie Canal through images, prints, and traces of past canal structures.

The Erie Canal Museum
Located in downtown Syracuse, NY, the museum engages the public in the story of the canal’s transformative impacts.

The Erie Canal Song
History, lyrics, audio, and notes for guitar and piano of Low Bridge, Everybody Down written by Thomas Allen in 1905.