The 'Portage Lakes' are named after an old
Indian portage path which connected the
Cuyahoga River flowing north to
Lake Erie and the
Tuscarawas River, a tributary of the
Muskingum River, which flows south to the
Ohio River. This proved advantageous for the Indians and early settlers as navigation from Lake Erie to the Ohio was possible with only one eight mile (13 km) portage overland. The
Portage Lakes State Park lies at one of the highest points of the state and on a major watershed divide in Ohio. Some water from the lakes reaches Lake Erie and some flows to the Ohio River. There is an unincorporated community named
Portage Lakes in the same area.
The area became an important trading post for
settlers and Indians. It was a recognized landmark during the
War of 1812, serving as a rendezvous point of American troops. The old Indian portage path was part of the ancient boundary between the
Six Nations and the Western Indians.
The city of
Akron was laid out in
1825 and was first settled by
Irish laborers and others working on the
Ohio and Erie Canal. Once the canal was completed, the town flourished. Several important industries brought prosperity to the area including stoneware potteries,
sewer pipe manufacturing, the
match industry and, most recently, the
tire and
rubber industry. At one time, the
Blue Diamond Match Company in Akron used three million board feet (7,000 m³) of
white pine lumber per year for the manufacture of its matches.
Several of the Portage Lakes were built as feeder
reservoirs for the canals to maintain the required depth of four feet (1.2 m). The lakes were used for this purpose until the canals were abandoned in 1913. The lakes were then used to meet the water needs of the local industries. Some portions of the remnant canals in the Akron area can still be boated.
The
Ohio Department of Public Works maintained the canal lands for recreational purposes until 1949 when the Portage Lakes were transferred to the newly formed
Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Division of Parks and Recreation.