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Business Review Index

Section A
- Oil City, and Surrounding Areas.

Section B
- Oil and Gas, Coal, Timber, Farming

Section C
- Franklin /  Sugar Creek.

Section D
- Financial, Utilities, Transit and Real Estate.

Section E
- Health.

Section F
- Leisure, Tourism

Section G
- Education.

Section H
- Clarion.

Section I
- Clarion.

Section_F

The Clarion’s comeback: It’s a story of resiliency

The Clarion River flows nearly 100 miles southwest from its headwaters in

McKean County to its confluence with the Allegheny River near Parkers

Landing, Clarion County.

The Clarion River flows nearly 100 miles southwest from its headwaters in

McKean County to its confluence with the Allegheny River near Parkers

Landing, Clarion County.

The Clarion River watershed, with more than 1,100 square miles of land and

water, is among the largest in the Upper Allegheny River Basin, a close

second in size only to French Creek, its biologically diverse neighbor to

the west. A key tributary of the Upper Allegheny River both ecologically

and historically, the Clarion River also is a striking example of nature’s

phenomenal resiliency.

The creeks and rivers of the Upper Allegheny Basin are rich in aquatic

life, particularly mussels, dragonflies and fish. Unfortunately, few

historic records of the Clarion’s aquatic life exist, so our understanding

of the river’s past flora and fauna is thin.

The Clarion’s direct link to the rich Allegheny River likely influenced

the diversity of life in its waters. Aquatic organisms like fish and the

hellbender, a large aquatic salamander, probably moved easily between the

two rivers, a flow of life sustained by clean and connected waters. Perhaps

even certain species of mussles lived in the Clarion, moving along the

river on fish that unwittingly played host to the mussels’ parasitic

larvae.

But the flow of life in the Clarion River began to ebb by the early 1900s.

In 1909, Carnegie Museum biologist Arnold E. Ortmann tagged the Clarion as

“…one of the worst streams in the state” for industrial pollution.

Tanneries, chemical wood plants and a pulp plant dumped their noxious

wastes into the river’s upper reaches. Acid drainage from coal mines

tainted its lower reaches.

Ortmann’s description of the Clarion at the time is graphic: “The water of

the Clarion River…is black like ink and retains its peculiar color…to where

it empties into the Allegheny.” A 1915 sanitary survey of the Clarion River

noted that “fish have been practically exterminated.”

And so it stood until the 1960s, when a multifaceted effort to clean up

the Clarion River took hold. Recognizing the comeback potential of the

river and the scenic recreational value of the islands surrounding it, the

late Roger Latham, WPC board member and outdoors editor of The Pittsburgh

Press, urged the conservancy to focus conservation efforts in the region.

WPC eagerly took up the challenge.

To date, WPC has protected 11,600 acres along what is now a federal Wild

and Scenic River and regional treasure. To aid in recreation and plan for

the river’s future, WPC and partners also completed a water trail map and

the recent Clarion River Greenway Plan.

With a little help, the formerly downtrodden Clarion River is rebounding.

Some mine drainage problems remain in the lower river, but it’s clear that

the phoenix-like comeback of the Clarion River is great news for the water,

land and life of the Upper Allegheny Basin.

(Chuck Williams is the watershed manager for the Western Pennsylvania

Conservancy.)