Research

Scope and Content Note

This series consists of "check rolls" (summaries of payrolls), other vouchers, and summary abstracts of expenditures assembled by canal superintendents of repairs and submitted to the Canal Commissioner for approval, and by that officer to the Comptroller for audit. The workers whose time and pay were recorded in these records were state employees who maintained, repaired, and operated the Erie Canal and the branch canals. Most of those workers were seasonal laborers who worked in the warmer months of the year. The series contains no information on workers employed by private contractors whom the state engaged to construct or enlarge canal sections or structures.

The superintendent of repairs on each section of the Erie Canal and branch canals prepared monthly or bi-monthly abstracts of expenditures and submitted them with original vouchers to the Canal Commissioners. The principal voucher is called the "check roll," made out by the foreman in charge of a particular repair work. The check roll lists the name of each laborer employed, his pay voucher number, number of days worked in past month, rate of pay per day, and amount of pay due. The check roll also contains a brief description of the work done under that foreman (e.g. repairing tow path, breaking stone, etc.). At the bottom of the roll is the signed affidavit of the foreman that the information is correct. Accompanying the check roll are vouchers for materials (lumber, stone, gravel, etc.) and extra labor (e.g. teams for hauling). The check roll is itself a voucher and is numbered in a series along with the other simpler vouchers.

All the vouchers are entered in numerical order in the abstract of expenditures prepared by the superintendent of repairs. The abstract gives for each voucher the name of payee, nature of expenditure, amount of payment in various categories (check rolls, lock tending, labor, materials, merchants' and mechanics' bills, miscellaneous). At the end are totals and balances of the figures, the superintendent's affidavit attesting to the accuracy of the report, and the Canal Commissioner's certificate that the expenditures were "proper and reasonable." On the dorso of the abstract are written the name of the superintendent, the period of time covered in the abstract, the total amounts of money disbursed by him and due him for his salary, and dates of receipt and audit by the Comptroller's office.

Sometimes all the abstracts, check rolls, and vouchers of a particular superintendent for a whole year are bundled together. More often they are contained in two or more bundles, labeled "No. 1," "No. 2," etc. The original wrapper, when present, has written on it the superintendent's name, canal, and period of time. The content and format of the records in this series changed very little over the span of fifty years.

Abstracts, check rolls, and vouchers are available for the following canals and time periods: Erie, 1828-1878; Champlain, 1828-1878; Oswego, 1827-1877; Cayuga and Seneca, 1829-1876; Chemung, 1832-1877; Crooked Lake, 1839-1875; Chenango, 1836-1877; Genesee Valley, 1839-1876; and Black River, 1851-1877. In the last box are ten small time books for labor, various dates, presented to the Comptroller for audit as part or in place of a check roll.

A0013-95: The bulk of the accretion consists of vouchers maintained by various superintendents of the Crooked Lake Canal. Also included is a small amount of estimates for contract work on the canal. Under canal law statements of necessary expenditures were required to be filed with commissioners of the canal fund by the canal commissioner. Vouchers (1834-1849 with gaps) are grouped under the superintendents' names. Estimates by various superintendents are dated throughout the 1840s and include itemized statements of costs and materials for construction work.