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In 1927, the Metropolitan District Commission began to purchase land in the present-day footprint of the dam and reservoir. Construction of the dam commenced in 1936 while land to the north was being stripped of lumber and buildings.
In 1927, the Metropolitan District Commission began to purchase land in the present-day footprint of the dam and reservoir. Construction of the dam commenced in 1936 while land to the north was being stripped of lumber and buildings.


Before the Metropolitan District Commission named the Saville Dam in 1940 in honor of its chief [[engineer]], Caleb Mills, it was referred to as the Bill's Brook Dam after the brook that ran near the site at the time. This was "either Storehouse Brook today, or perhaps there is some other smaller brook there named Bill's Brook."<ref>Correspondence with Paul Hart of the Barkhamsted Historical Society, 2016. http://barkhamstedhistory.org/</ref>
Before the Metropolitan District Commission named the Saville Dam in 1940 in honor of its chief [[engineer]], Caleb Mills Saville, it was referred to as the Bill's Brook Dam after the brook that ran near the site at the time. This was "either Storehouse Brook today, or perhaps there is some other smaller brook there named Bill's Brook."<ref>Correspondence with Paul Hart of the Barkhamsted Historical Society, 2016. http://barkhamstedhistory.org/</ref>


The foundations for "Bill's Brook Dam" and the diversion tunnel for the East Branch of the Farmington River were completed in August 1934. Subsequently, the East Branch was diverted into the concrete conduit at the bottom of the Bill's Brook Dam site. The dam was completed in May 1940, at a total cost for dam and reservoir of $10M.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Water for Hartford|last=Murphy|first=Kevin|publisher=Wesleyan University Press|year=2010|isbn=978-0-8195-7080-2|location=|pages=234-237}}</ref>
The foundations for "Bill's Brook Dam" and the diversion tunnel for the East Branch of the Farmington River were completed in August 1934. Subsequently, the East Branch was diverted into the concrete conduit at the bottom of the Bill's Brook Dam site. The dam was completed in May 1940, at a total cost for dam and reservoir of $10M.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Water for Hartford|last=Murphy|first=Kevin|publisher=Wesleyan University Press|year=2010|isbn=978-0-8195-7080-2|location=|pages=234-237}}</ref>

Revision as of 13:43, 20 May 2016

Saville Dam
Barkhamsted Reservoir, Saville Dam
Saville Dam is located in Connecticut
Saville Dam
Location of Saville Dam in Connecticut
LocationBarkhamsted, Connecticut
Opening date1948
Operator(s)Metropolitan District Commission
Dam and spillways
ImpoundsFarmington River (Eastern branch)
Height135 feet (41 m)
Length1,950 feet (590 m)
Reservoir
CreatesBarkhamsted Reservoir
Total capacity36.8 billion US gallons (139,000,000 m3)
Catchment area53.8 square miles (139 km2)
Surface area4.2 square miles (11 km2)

Saville Dam is an earthen embankment dam with masonry work on the eastern branch of the Farmington River in southwestern Barkhamsted, Connecticut. The dam is 135 ft. (41 m) tall and 1,950 ft. (590 m) long and has an uncontrolled spillway on its western portion. It creates the Barkhamsted Reservoir which has a volume of 36.8 billion US gallons (139,000,000 m3) and is the primary water source for Hartford, Connecticut.

View from Saville Dam

In 1927, the Metropolitan District Commission began to purchase land in the present-day footprint of the dam and reservoir. Construction of the dam commenced in 1936 while land to the north was being stripped of lumber and buildings.

Before the Metropolitan District Commission named the Saville Dam in 1940 in honor of its chief engineer, Caleb Mills Saville, it was referred to as the Bill's Brook Dam after the brook that ran near the site at the time. This was "either Storehouse Brook today, or perhaps there is some other smaller brook there named Bill's Brook."[1]

The foundations for "Bill's Brook Dam" and the diversion tunnel for the East Branch of the Farmington River were completed in August 1934. Subsequently, the East Branch was diverted into the concrete conduit at the bottom of the Bill's Brook Dam site. The dam was completed in May 1940, at a total cost for dam and reservoir of $10M.[2]

Although the Saville Dam was completed in 1940, it wasn't until 1948 that the Barkhamsted Reservoir finally filled to capacity. The Farmington River East Branch is impounded for nearly 8 miles (13 km) behind the dam, with the northernmost open waters of Barkhamsted Reservoir terminating in Hartland, Connecticut just south of the Massachusetts border.[3][4]

The reservoir flooded many buildings and farms of Barkhamsted, including the village of Barkhamsted Hollow.[5] The village of Barkhamsted Center, partially flooded, lies just to the west of the reservoir. Its remaining buildings are part of the Barkhamsted Center Historic District, listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

See also

References

  1. ^ Correspondence with Paul Hart of the Barkhamsted Historical Society, 2016. http://barkhamstedhistory.org/
  2. ^ Murphy, Kevin (2010). Water for Hartford. Wesleyan University Press. pp. 234–237. ISBN 978-0-8195-7080-2.
  3. ^ Saville Dam - Findlakes.com
  4. ^ Barkhamsted Historical Society - Barkhamsted, Connecticut
  5. ^ Barkhamstead from the Air, 1934 and 2004