J. Christopher Kervick is an instructor of local history at Mitchell College in New London, Connecticut. He recently completed three terms as First Selectman of his hometown of Windsor Locks, Connecticut, and, prior to that, served as a Connecticut Judge of Probate. He has been practicing law for over 36 years. A 1984 graduate of Fordham University, he is a 1987 graduate of Catholic University, Columbus School of Law.His boyhood home was just three hundred yards west of the Windsor Locks Canal (originally known as the Enfield Falls Canal). In 2001, the State of Connecticut hired him to conduct a title search of the entire canal. The title search sparked his fascination with the story behind the canal, especially the plight of the over four hundred unidentified Irish immigrant laborers who built the canal, some of whom lost their lives in the effort.
""Dazzlingly profound, complex, and moving history..."" Inspired by personal curiosity and his own Irish heritage, Kervick has produced a dazzlingly profound, complex, and moving history of the Windsor Locks Canal. Meticulous research and compeling storytelling recreate a forgotten time and bring this narrative to life. Kervick usefully places the building of the canal in the historical contexts of the canal movement in America, the local need for more effective inland transportation, and the dire conditions in Ireland at the dawn of the 19th century. He honors the legacy of the immigrant Irish laborers, naming them individually and telling their stories in detail and with compassion. Outstanding scholarship and empathic narrative combine to make The Windsor Locks Canal a must read addition to any bookshelf, sure to appeal to readers both in the U.S. and Ireland. Rachael Sealy Lynch, PhD. Professor Emerita English, Irish Studies University of Connecticut