Frank D. Comerford Dam Explained

Frank D. Comerford Dam
Name Official:Frank D. Comerford Dam
Location:Monroe, New Hampshire
Barnet, Vermont
Country:United States
Purpose:P
Status:O
Owner:Hydro-Québec
Dam Type:G
Dam Crosses:Connecticut River
Spillway Count:1
Res Name:Comerford Reservoir
Construction Began:1928
Opening:1930
Coordinates:44.3253°N -72.0008°W
Extra:140 Megawatts capacity at 13,300 cfs discharge

Frank D. Comerford Dam is an International Style concrete dam in the Fifteen Mile Falls of the Connecticut River, on the border between the U.S. states of New Hampshire and Vermont.[1] The dam is near Monroe, New Hampshire and Barnet, Vermont. Construction began in 1928 and was completed in 1931. The dam and the power plant were acquired by a subsidiary of Hydro-Québec from Great River Hydro, LLC, in October 2022.[2] Comerford Reservoir is the reservoir created behind the dam, named after Frank D. Comerford, president of the Connecticut River Power Company and the New England Power Company.

Hydroelectric power plants have the ability to vary the amount of power generated, depending on the demand. Steam turbine power plants are not as easily "throttled" because of the amount of thermodynamic inertia contained in their systems.

Geology

In what would become the Connecticut River, running water wore out a rocky gorge 40feet to 100feet deep in pre-glacial days. The result was a gentle gradient, 10feet to the 1miles. The drop is 320feet over 15miles. The area was called "Fifteen Mile Falls."

History

On September 30, 1930, President Herbert Hoover remotely initiated the generation of electricity from Comerford Dam, then New England's largest single hydroelectric development. This was the first in a series, harnessing hydroelectric power in the United States in the 1930s. The power was sent 126miles for use in Massachusetts.[3] At the time of its construction, it was the largest "retaining wall" in the United States, representing more than 90000cuyd of concrete.[4]

In 2005, USGen New England sold the dam to TransCanada Hydro Northeast Inc.[5] The dam and the power plant were acquired by Great River Hydro, LLC, in April 2017[6] and by Hydro-Québec in October 2022.[2]

Construction

A camp was constructed in East Barnet, Vermont, in 1928 for 1,500 workers. The camp contained its own housing, commissary, theater (which substituted as a church on Sunday), and a hospital. It had its own hockey and basketball teams. 120 people prepared and served meals. 1,300 men worked the day shift from 7:00 to 6:00 with one hour off for lunch. 300 men worked the night shift.[7]

Construction materials were supplied on a special 31NaN1 railroad track built to the site.

Major structures

The reservoir has a capacity of 32,270 acre feet and has a full supply level of above mean sea level. The gravity dam is long and made of concrete and earth. Four steel penstocks feed water to the powerhouse, where four Francis turbines rated 54,200 horsepower each produce a combined capacity of 140 megawatts at a combined discharge flow of 13,300 cubic feet per second. The remaining structure is an 850adj=midNaNadj=mid spillway which is used to discharge water excess to generating requirements.[8]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Plymouth State News . https://archive.today/20110521150720/http://www.plymouth.edu/thirdtier/fullstory.phtml?number=5042 . dead . 2011-05-21 . plymouth.edu .
  2. News: CBC News . Hydro-Québec buying U.S. company Great River Hydro for $2B US . CBC . October 12, 2022 . October 12, 2022.
  3. Web site: Vermont Folklore, Myths, Legends, Ghost Stories & More - Vermont holds strange secrets and we have them all here!. Vermont Folklore, Myths, Legends, Ghost Stories & More. 2007-11-20. https://web.archive.org/web/20071030221144/http://www.vermonter.com/nek/concord2.asp. 2007-10-30. dead.
  4. Book: Frances Ann Johnson . The History of Monroe, New Hampshire . Courier Printing Company . 1955., p. 110
  5. http://www.state.vt.us/psb/orders/2005/files/7038fnl.pdf State of Vermont Public Service Board
  6. Web site: Hydroelectric Relicensing Projects. Great River Hydro, LLC. August 10, 2018.
  7. Book: Fisher, Harriet F. . A Picnic by the Dam Site . The Kingdom Historical . June 2003.
  8. Web site: LIHI Certificate #39 – 15-Mile Falls Project, Vermont and New Hampshire. April 12, 2018. April 3, 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170403142208/http://lowimpacthydro.org/lihi-certificate-39-15-mile-falls-project-new-hampshire-ferc-2077/. dead.