Starved Rock Lock and Dam explained

Starved Rock Lock and Dam
Name Official:Lock and Dam No. 6
Dam Crosses:Illinois River
Location:LaSalle County/Utica, Illinois (Starved Rock State Park), United States
Operator:United States Army Corps of Engineers
Dam Length:1310feet
Dam Height:34feet
Dam Width Base:33feet
Construction Began:1926
Opening:1933
Coordinates:41.3225°N -88.9856°W
Status:o
Dam Type:G
Spillway Type:Controlled

Starved Rock Lock and Dam, also known as Lock and Dam No. 6, is a lock and dam facility managed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers along the Illinois River, near Starved Rock. It is part of the Illinois Waterway and was constructed between 1926 and 1933. The lock and dam was added to the National Register of Historic Places as the Starved Rock Lock and Dam Historic District in 2004.

Location

Along the original Illinois Waterway, Starved Rock Lock and Dam is the southernmost facility. The lock and dam are located along the Illinois River near the north central Illinois village of Utica. The lock and dam is at river mile 231 just upstream from Plum Island.[1] The facility is presently operated by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

History

The Starved Rock Lock and Dam was constructed between 1926 and 1933 as an element of the Illinois Waterway. The Waterway was a project designed to provide a navigable channel from the Great Lakes to the Gulf of Mexico via the Mississippi River.[2] The contract for construction of the lock and dam was originally awarded in 1923 but fell through when the contractor failed to show up for the contract signing. Following a period of time during which land litigation issues were cleared, a second contract was awarded in 1926. The lock and dam was about 95 percent complete when the state of Illinois fell upon financial difficulty and the project was turned over to the federal government for completion. Under the authority of the Rivers and Harbors Act of 1930 the federal government oversaw the completion of Starved Rock Lock and Dam in 1933. Construction of the facility cost US$4,462,737; of that amount, $3,577,419 was provided by the state and $885,318 was federal money.[3]

Design

Starved Rock Lock and Dam features a straight-crested, reinforced concrete gravity dam 1310feet long. The dam consists of a head gate of 518feet and a controlled spillway of 714feet.[4] The dam is 33feet wide at its base, 22inchesft3inchesin (ftin) wide at the crest of the head gate and 50inchesft6inchesin (ftin) wide at the crest of the spillway.[4] The dam's height above the riverbed varies from 21to.[4]

The lock at Starved Rock Lock and Dam is an Ohio River Standard navigational lock of 110feetby600feetft (byft).[4] The lock has a drop/lift of about 18feet.[1] [5] The chamber of the lock is formed by two parallel gravity section walls 38feet tall on the north and south.[4] These are framed horizontally by two miter gates at the east and west ends of the lock.[4]

Walter Mickle Smith was hired as Chief Design Engineer for the Illinois Waterway Project by Mortimer Grant Barnes, Illinois Governor Frank O. Lowden's appointee to oversee the Waterway Project. Thus, Mickle designed the facilities at Starved Rock Lock and Dam.[6] Legislation which codified the construction of the Waterway only stipulated the general design and location of the locks and dams along the Illinois River; the details were left to Barnes, Smith and other engineers.[6] Barnes had 20 years' experience as a civil engineer and had worked as an assistant to the engineer in charge of the construction of the Panama Canal locks when Lowden tapped him to head the project.[7] Smith worked with Barnes on the Panama Canal project; they had both resigned in 1907 to go to work for the New York Board of Water Supply.[7] Together the two men also formed a general hydraulic and construction engineering firm.[7]

Hydroelectric power plant

A hydroelectric power station generates a peak of 7,600 kW of electricity, and is operated by the city of Peru, Illinois. The power plant has experienced two fires since its construction.

Historic district

Starved Rock Lock and Dam Historic District
Nrhp Type:hd
Nocat:yes
Nearest City:Ottawa, Illinois
Built:1933
Architect:Walter Mickle Smith
Added:March 10, 2004
Mpsub:Illinois Waterway Navigation System Facilities MPS
Refnum:04000166

On March 10, 2004, the Starved Rock Lock and Dam was listed on the National Register of Historic Places as the Starved Rock Lock and Dam Historic District. It was listed as part of the Illinois Waterway Navigation System Facilities Multiple Property Submission.[8] Starved Rock was deemed eligible for the listing when the rest of the Illinois Waterway was also determined eligible; the day Starved Rock Lock and Dam was listed the other 7 lock and dam sites on the Waterway were also listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[8]

The district has significance in three areas. According to the National Register of Historic Places' criteria, those are: engineering, transportation and maritime history.[9] The historic district consists of five total buildings and structures. One building and two structures are contributing members to the historic district and two buildings are considered non-contributing members.[9] Starved Rock Lock and Dam Historic District covers 27.95acres.[9]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Hay, Jerry M. Illinois Waterway Guidebook, (Google Books link), Inland Waterways Books, 2009, pp. 64–67, .
  2. Barta, Nancy Hill. Starved Rock State Park, (Google Books link), Arcadia Publishing, 2007, pp. 7–8, .
  3. "Upper Mississippi River – Illinois Waterway System Locks & Dams ", United States Army Corps of Engineers – Mississippi Valley Division, September 2009, p. 71, accessed June 16, 2011.
  4. "Starved Rock Lock and Dam ", Historic American Engineering Record, p. 2-3.
  5. Rhodes, Rick. Cruising Guide from Lake Michigan to Kentucky Lake: The Heartland Rivers Route, (Google Books link), Pelican Publishing, 2002 p. 92, .
  6. "Starved Rock Lock and Dam ", Historic American Engineering Record, pp. 20–27
  7. "Starved Rock Lock and Dam ", Historic American Engineering Record, p. 20-21.
  8. "Weekly List of Actions Taken on Properties: 4/30/07 Through 5/4/07", National Register of Historic Places via National Park Service, May 11, 2007, accessed June 15, 2011.
  9. "Starved Rock Lock and Dam Historic District ", Property Information Report, HAARGIS Database via Illinois Historic Preservation Agency, accessed June 16, 2011.