Silver Lake (Woodridge, New York) Explained

Silver Lake
Location:Sullivan County, New York
Coords:41.705°N -74.5544°W
Type:Artificial
Inflow:Sandburg Creek
Outflow:Sandburg Creek
Basin Countries:United States
Length:3500feet
Width:1000feet
Area:85acres
Elevation:1060feet
Cities:Woodridge
Dam Name:Silver Lake Dam
Pushpin Map:New York#USA
Pushpin Map Alt:Location of Silver Lake in New York, USA.

Silver Lake, one of three by that name in Sullivan County, New York, United States, is located just southeast of the village of Woodridge. It was created in the 1840s when Sandburg Creek was dammed to provide reliable water for the "summit", or highest-elevation, section of the Delaware and Hudson Canal, between Wurtsboro and Napanoch. After the canal closed, the 85acres lake that had been created, initially called Woods Lake, became an attraction for guests at the Jewish summer resort communities in that area of the Catskill Mountains.[1]

The lake is irregularly shaped, along a northwest-southeasterly axis roughly two-thirds of a mile long, 85acres in surface area when full. One bay on the south side is crossed by the former right-of-way of the Orange & Western Railroad; a stone culvert underneath connects it with the main lake. The northwest end lies in the village of Woodridge, which has built a small park along the lake around a beach that established itself in the early resort days. Another beach developed at the opposite end, just north of the dam. There are some houses and businesses with lake frontage, but other than that its shores remain undeveloped.

In 1999, water undermined some sections of the original dam and caused a breach, draining the lake to merely one-quarter its size.[2] The village sought and received state and federal grants to repair the dam and restore the lake, whose near-absence had hurt local business. However, the state Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC), the Conservation Commission's successor as regulator of dams, held up repairs while it considered whether to reclassify the dam as higher risk in case of failure, which could have raised the cost and forced a redesign.[3] After eventually getting approval from DEC and putting the project out for bid, a redesign of the dam that preserved its historic character, the village suffered another setback when the lowest bid came back at $1.5 million, almost twice what the project had been budgeted for.[4]

The village is in the process of building a wastewater treatment plant that will discharge into the lake along the south side just past its park.[5] In 2006, the state Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) had obtained a consent decree requiring that the village address the sewage spills that frequently occurred in heavy rains. It had been using a Town of Fallsburg plant some distance from the village, but that hadn't been enough.[6]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Larson. Neil. National Register of Historic Places nomination, Silver Lake Dam. New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. August 25, 1999. April 26, 2009. May 24, 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20120524184002/http://www.oprhp.state.ny.us/hpimaging/hp_view.asp?GroupView=9228. dead.
  2. News: Szaniszlo. Marie. Memory of lake may spur repairs. Ottaway Community Newspapers. Times-Herald Record. February 15, 2000. April 27, 2009.
  3. News: Stone. Adam. Silver Lake dam tied up in tangle of red tape. Ottaway Community Newspapers. Times-Herald Record. June 8, 2002. April 27, 2009.
  4. News: Yakin. Heather. Cost delays dam repair. Ottaway Community Newspapers. Times-Herald Record. February 6, 2006. April 27, 2009.
  5. Web site: Village of Woodridge Wastewater Treatment Plant . 29 January 2013 ., Environmental Protection Agency; January 30, 2009.
  6. News: Yakin. Heather. Sewage fixes move forward. Ottaway Community Newspapers. Times-Herald Record. March 1, 2006. April 27, 2009.