Riverboats and Keelboats
- Date
1958
- Summary
-
Early use of rivers is described, form the Indian canoe of hollowed log to the flatboats and keelboats of the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers. Bash tells of the importance of water transportation, of families building flatboats and traveling down the currents with even their cows and chickens aboard, and she shows the ways the keelboats were propelled upstream by sweeps and by men with tow ropes walking along the banks. Cargoes of wheat, corn, animal skins and log rafts are related in their importance to the lives of the people. Songs include “Sewanee River,” “Shenandoah,” and “Old Woman.”
- Contributors
KQED, San Francisco; Bash Kennett; Kathleen Rawlings; Richard Moore
- Publishers
National Educational Television; Indiana University Audio-Visual Center
- Genres
Educational; Children's; Historical; Music
- Subjects
Inland water transportation; United States--History
- Collection
National Educational Television
- Unit
IUL Moving Image Archive
- Language
English
- Rights Statement
- No Copyright - United States
- Physical Description
1 film reel (15 min.) sound,black and white/monochrome; 16 mm
- Other Identifiers
Catalog Key: 7835158; Other: GR00466448; MDPI Barcode: 40000003114073
Access Restrictions
This item is accessible by: the public.