Huff Run Explained

Huff Run
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:United States
Subdivision Type2:State
Subdivision Name2:Ohio
Length:9.9miles[1]
Discharge1 Location:near mouth
[2]
Discharge1 Min:4.2cuft/s
Discharge1 Max:80cuft/s
Source1 Location:Rose Township, Carroll County
Source1 Coordinates:40.6469°N -81.215°W[3]
Source1 Elevation:1066feet
Mouth:Conotton Creek
Mouth Location:Sandy Township, Tuscarawas County
Mouth Coordinates:40.5883°N -81.3764°W
Mouth Elevation:875feet
Basin Size:13.9sqmi

Huff Run is a 9.9 mile (15.9 km) long tributary of the Conotton Creek in eastern Ohio within Sandy Township (Tuscarawas County) and Rose Township (Carroll County). Conotton Creek is a tributary of the Ohio River via the Tuscarawas River and the Muskingum River. Mineral City is the only incorporated town within the Huff Run Watershed.

The mouth of the stream is at 875 feet altitude.Dover Dam ,[4] downstream on the Tuscarawas River, is normally dry, but can inundate this waterway to a pool elevation of 916 feet for downstream flood control by the Corps of Engineers.[5] This can cause flooding and closure of Route 800 south of Mineral City and other roads out of the village. The stream gauge south of Mineral City is at 886.98 feet,[2] and is rendered inoperable when reservoir elevation exceeds that.

History

The first recognized settler of Sandy Township was Godfrey Huff, who Huff Run was named after. Records show that he was from Bedford County, Pennsylvania. In May 1805 he purchased a tract of 1,000 acres (4 km²) in the southwest corner of the third quarter of Township 10, Range 1, or the southwest corner of Sandy Township, embracing also the corner of Lawrence across the river from Godfrey Haga, for $1,062.50. Old settlers have assigned the year 1803 as the date of his emigration to this tract, but historical societies have found evidence that he was here in 1801. Mr. Huff was a man of large frame, and wore the broad-brimmed hat and the garb of the Dunkard Brethren church, of which he was a member. He is said to have raised many hogs on the river bottoms, driven them to Detroit, Michigan for sale, and used the proceeds to pay for his land. He had five sons—Michael, Henry, Samuel, Frederick and Andrew. Most of the boys subsequently emigrated to Iowa. Godfrey Huff died in Sandy Township about 1825.

See Native American History and additional early settlement history at the Tuscarawas County Wikipedia entry.

Pollution

Huff Run has been badly affected by acid mine drainage (AMD) as well as illegal open dumping, raw sewage entering the stream due to improperly maintained septic systems and sewer systems, poor riparian buffer zones, some poor agriculture land management practices and over extraction of oil and gas within the watershed.

The Huff Run Watershed Restoration Partnership http://www.huffrun.org, sponsored by Rural Action http://ruralaction.org, has been working since 1996 to address water quality issues in the Huff Run watershed. As of 2009, the partnership had received and spent about 6.2 million dollars in state and federal grant money to reduce the impact of acid mine drainage on the watershed. They currently oversee the development and management of over 16 major acid mine drainage reclamation projects.

See also

References

  1. Web site: GAZETTEER_OF_OHIO_STREAMS. 2010-01-07 . Ohio Department of Natural Resources.
  2. http://waterdata.usgs.gov/nwis/uv?03121850 USGS Huff Run Real Time Flow
  3. Web site: [{{Gnis3|1066759}} Geographic Names Information System entry for Huff Run]. 2010-01-07.
  4. http://geonames.usgs.gov/pls/gnispublic/f?p=gnispq:3:::NO::P3_FID:1077627 GNIS Entry Dover Dam
  5. http://www.mwcd.org/levels MWCD Lake Levels

External links