Nelson Lake (Wisconsin) Explained

Nelson Lake
Location:Sawyer County, Wisconsin
Coordinates:46.0864°N -91.4942°W
Type:reservoir
Inflow:Totagatic River
Outflow:Totagatic River
Area:2716acres
Max-Depth:33feet
Elevation:1253feet
Pushpin Map:Wisconsin
Pushpin Map Alt:Location of the reservoir in Wisconsin.

Nelson Lake is a reservoir in Sawyer County, Wisconsin formed by a dam across the Totagatic River.[1]

On January 9, 1934, a resolution was brought before the Sawyer County Board by Frank O. Nelson, a board member and a proponent for conservation, to "build a dam across the Totogatic River to create a large flowage or lake from the backwater, suitable for fish and which would furnish a refuge and breeding grounds for all kinds of wildlife." This was to be done with Civil Works Administration funds but this program ended in confusion. The Works Progress Administration followed and made a survey for this project. By October 1935, forty men from the Federal Transient Camp at Hayward were working at the dam.

Mr. Nelson died on November 15, 1935, before he could see the dam completed. After his death the County Board passed a resolution naming the flowage being formed at the big bend of the Totogatic, "Nelson Lake," in his memory, stating that: "this project was primarily proposed and started through the untiring efforts of the late F.O. Nelson."

Notes and References

  1. http://dnr.wi.gov/water/basin/upchip/documents/nelson.pdf Fishery Management Plan for Nelson Lake, Sawyer County, Wisconsin