Packet boats on the Erie Canal were uniquely designed for passenger canal travel. These boats could be anywhere from sixty- to eighty-feet long and fourteen feet wide. The main cabin room was a lounge, kitchen, and dining room by day, and a divided sleeping room (men and women slept separately) at night. The average cost for passenger travel was four cents per mile, including meals and sleeping accommodations. They were pulled by horses walking along the towpath and compact, almost like nineteenth century RVs, carrying passengers both east and west.
People traveled the Erie Canal by packet boat for tourism as well as for business. These boats were relatively plush for their time, featuring good food and sometimes live entertainment. During the day, passengers could sit outside on the deck or on the roof of the boats, though rooftop riders sometimes needed to look out for low bridges. Noteworthy passengers included Nathaniel Hawthorne and Charles Dickens. Once the short railroad lines were consolidated, passengers favored the faster trains for cross-state travel, but packet boats continued to take passengers on local excursions.