网爆门

Unearthing Stories for the Erie Canal鈥檚 200th Anniversary

Students at 网爆门 explore the canal鈥檚 cultural legacy through multimedia storytelling and field reporting.
Madelyn Geyer Sept. 27, 2025

Two sprawling multimedia projects dig into the impact of the Erie Canal on the lives of upstate New Yorkers, just in time for the historic waterway鈥檚 200th anniversary.

Newhouse School students spent a year working on stories, photos and podcasts for the canal鈥檚 bicentennial year, a milestone being celebrated across New York state in 2025, including the held in Buffalo Sept. 21-25.

The goal of the award-winning projects was to add depth to the public鈥檚 understanding of what the Erie Canalway National Heritage Corridor describes as the 鈥渓ongest artificial waterway and the greatest public works project in North America.鈥

鈥淭he Erie Canal is something that many [upstate New York] residents are accustomed to seeing regularly,鈥 says , executive editor at the Newhouse School and professor of practice of (MND). 鈥淲e thought these projects would be a great way to introduce our students to the stories that relate to this canal and the impact it鈥檚 had on the state of New York.鈥

Or the rest of the country, for that matter.

About lives within 25 miles of the Erie Canal system. Completion of the Erie Canal in the 19th century dramatically cut down on travel time across the state and revolutionized American commerce. New religious groups such as the Seventh Day Adventists and what would become known as Latter-Day Saints started in canal communities, with followers .

The projects launched following an idea by , associate dean of academic affairs at Newhouse and an MND professor. Her suggestion of using the canal鈥檚 200th anniversary as the subject of reporting projects seemed like a natural fit, Glass says.

Two individuals wearing headphones record a podcast in a studio
鈥淐anal Keepers鈥 host Gloria Rivera (right) records an episode with Lauren Bavis. (Photo by Jess Van)

The idea turned into two distinct reporting projects, 鈥淯nlocking New York鈥 and 鈥淐anal Keepers,鈥 that were eventually united under one banner devoted to Erie Canal storytelling. Through these experiences, students broadened their creativity, reported in the field and produced resum茅-building multimedia content.

What the faculty and students didn鈥檛 want was a history lesson on the 200 years of the canal, but a deeply personal narrative on the lives and livelihoods of the people surrounding it.

鈥淭he Erie Canal is not this historic landmark that鈥檚 not functioning. It鈥檚 adding to New York鈥檚 economy and creating jobs,鈥 says , an MND professor of practice.

Canal Keepers

A six-part podcast, 鈥溾 began in January 2024 as a senior capstone project in the MND Multimedia Projects course taught by Bavis and , an associate professor. Students worked on their episodes up until the launch in late June 2024, even after many of them had graduated.

Each 10-minute episode highlights, among other subjects, the paranormal, invasive animal species, folk music and marginalized voices of the canal.

鈥淵ou have students that are just dedicated when they know something is important and is going to shine on their resum茅s, but also help their peers too,鈥 says Bavis, whose professional background is in podcasting.

Isabel Bekele 鈥24 cowrote and reported on the episode 鈥淭he Erie Canal Beyond History Class,鈥 which focuses on the displacement of Black and Indigenous people during the canal鈥檚 construction. Through her reporting, the magazine, news and digital journalism alumna dug into what she called the 鈥渉idden history鈥 of the canal.

鈥淭here鈥檚 this thing that existed and made a huge impact on the infrastructure of upstate New York,鈥 Bekele says. 鈥淏ut who had to suffer in order to make that happen? Who was displaced in order to make that happen?鈥

She conducted research and interviewed subjects onsite, retrieving sound bites to add to the episode, which strengthened her creative muscles. Some students traveled as far as Buffalo to report in-person and record sound.

鈥淭he episodes were supposed to be satisfying and interesting on an audio level,鈥 Bekele says. 鈥淭hat forced us to get more creative with our reporting.鈥

Unlocking New York

鈥淐anal Keepers鈥 helped to pave the way for 鈥Unlocking New York,鈥 鈥檚 multimedia project. The student-run news platform has conducted comprehensive reporting projects annually over the last six years, covering topics including marijuana legalization and disinformation.

Students began reporting for Unlocking New York in summer 2024 with the project launching a year later in June. 听More than 30 stories spanned five sections on the project site: , , , and . Students, under the guidance of Newhouse faculty, oversaw writing, editing, photography, designing, scheduling and more.

Nate Harrington 鈥24 was the longest tenured student on the project, working as the content director and managing students, stories, copyediting and pitching for over a year. Harrington, who majored in magazine, news and digital journalism, says he honed his skills as a data journalist, something he wasn鈥檛 interested in before the project.

Finding his niche in data allowed Harrington to open up career prospects and attend the student research conference in March 2025; he was the only journalism student there.

鈥淚 got to present about the Erie Canal and how we were collecting a ton of different stories to more holistically tell the history in ways that likely haven鈥檛 been told before,鈥 Harrington says.

The projects have drawn national recognition. 鈥淯nlocking New York鈥 won the multimedia category in the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication Magazine Media Division Student Magazine Contest, while 鈥淐anal Keepers鈥 is a finalist in this year鈥檚

鈥淚t really shows how creative and how persistent Newhouse students are and that they want to try new things,鈥 Bavis added. 鈥淭hey want to get better at everything.鈥