Port of Huntington Tri-State explained

Port of Huntington Tri-State
Country: United States
Location:Huntington, West Virginia
Opened:November 1, 2000[1]
Owner:Huntington District Waterways Association
Type:Inland
Cargotonnage:58,551,459 (2011)[2]
Website:huntingtonwaterways.com

The Port of Huntington Tri-State, centered on the Ohio River in Huntington, West Virginia, is the second-largest inland port in the United States, and was formerly the largest.[3] It is the largest river port in the state of West Virginia and the 15th-largest in the United States as of 2012. Included in the port's area is 100 miles of the Ohio River from the mouth of the Scioto River in Portsmouth, Ohio to the northern border of Gallia County, Ohio, 9 miles of the Big Sandy River, and 90 miles of the Kanawha River.[1] The United States Army Corps of Engineers' 1953 Ohio River Navigation Modernization Program sited the Greenup Locks and Dam project as an early priority so that its pool could serve the Port of Huntington Tri-State. It exceeded Pittsburgh in 1953 as the busiest port on the waterway.[4] In 2014, it was exceeded by the Port of Cincinnati-Northern Kentucky in annual cargo tonnage, making it the second-largest inland port in the United States.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Huntington District Waterways Association . 2011-11-07 . Huntington District Waterways Association . Huntington District Waterways Association . 2011.
  2. Web site: Waterborne Commerce of the United States: Volume 5 . 2013-12-01 . US Army Corps of Engineers . US Army Corps of Engineers . PDF . 2012 . 5-2 . 2013-12-03 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131203024119/http://www.navigationdatacenter.us/wcsc/pdf/wcusnatl11.pdf . dead .
  3. Web site: Huntington is no longer USA’s largest inland port . AP News . AP News . 21 February 2022.
  4. Web site: Michael C. Robinson: National Waterways Study – U.S. Army Engineer Water Resources Support Center – Institute for Water Resources: History of Navigation in the Ohio River Basin 1983 Page 39.