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Harriman_Dam Latitude and Longitude:

42°47′37″N 72°54′53″W / 42.79360°N 72.91460°W / 42.79360; -72.91460
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Harriman Dam is a hydroelectric dam in Windham County, Vermont in the town of Whitingham. The water from the dam flows through a penstock to a power generation plant in the adjacent town of Readsboro.

The dam was built in 1923 by the New England Power Company. [1] Some 215 feet (66 m) high and 1,250 feet (380 m) long as its crest, it is one of ten hydroelectric dams impounding the Deerfield River. [2] It was purchased from the TransCanada Corporation in 2017 by Great River Hydro LLC, which currently operates the facility. [3] It is an earthen dam with a relatively unusual concrete "glory hole" (freestanding conical drain) spillway, similar to another example at Monticello Dam in California. [4]

Harriman Reservoir

Harriman Reservoir has a water surface area of 2,039 acres (825 ha), a maximum depth of 180 feet (55 m), and a gross storage capacity of 117,300 acre-feet (144.7 million cubic metres). [2]

The dam and reservoir were named in recognition of utility executive Henry I. Harriman, a former president of the New England Power Company.

References

  1. ^ "Molly Stark Byway Project". Mollystarkbyway.org. Retrieved 11 April 2018.
  2. ^ a b http://www.lowimpacthydro.org/assets/files/Deerfield%2520documents/Attachment%2520C% [ dead link]
  3. ^ "Our History".
  4. ^ "Harriman Station".

42°47′37″N 72°54′53″W / 42.79360°N 72.91460°W / 42.79360; -72.91460