Turkey Creek | |
Source1 Location: | Lenexa, Kansas |
Source1 Coordinates: | 38.9678°N -94.7177°W |
Mouth Location: | Kansas River |
Mouth Coordinates: | 39.0772°N -94.6188°W |
Progression: | Kansas—Missouri—Mississippi |
Subdivision Type1: | Country |
Subdivision Name1: | United States |
Subdivision Type2: | Counties |
Subdivision Name2: | Johnson and Wyandotte |
Length: | 10.7miles |
Source1 Elevation: | 1047feet |
Mouth Elevation: | 722feet |
Discharge1 Location: | mouth |
Discharge1 Avg: | 22.49cuft/s (estimate)[1] |
Custom Label: | GNIS |
Custom Data: | 479260 |
Turkey Creek is a stream spanning Johnson and Wyandotte counties in Kansas, within the Kansas City metropolitan area of the United States. It is a tributary of the Kansas River, with its mouth near downtown Kansas City, Kansas.[2] It is not the Turkey Creek in Dickinson County, Kansas.
In 1882, a local newspaper summarized: "Turkey Creek, a live, impetuous stream, meanders at will through the place seemingly priding itself on its independence in designating its own path, regardless of the points on the compass, or the predominating requirements of this expeditious age in economizing time and space by taking air line courses."[3]
In the early 1800s, Turkey Creek was part of French Bottoms, settled by rows of narrow strips of farms owned by French-speaking pioneering settlers of French-Canadian and tribal mixed culture.[4] In 1823, pioneering American surveyor Joseph C. Brown documented the creek's mouth at the Missouri River, about east of Kaw Point, with a watershed west of the Missouri state line and about into the Indian Territory.[5]
The stream has always threatened the area with countless floods through history, sometimes being flooded by the Kansas River[5] or flooding into Indian Creek.[6] Several floods in the early 1900s prompted a 1918-1920 engineering project creating a flood channel to the Kansas River by boring a 28 by 32 foot wide and long tunnel through the bluff called Greystone Heights.
Turkey Creek was part of areawide disasters including the all-time record Great Flood of 1844, which relocated the stream's mouth from the Missouri River westward to the Kaw (Kansas) River and erased all human settlement of the French Bottoms.[5] Another was the Great Flood of 1951. On June 10, 1993, during the Great Flood of 1993, Turkey Creek's tunnel beneath Interstate 35 was capable of diverting only per second but the stream peaked at about per second, flooding Southwest Boulevard. An area flood in 1998 pushed the creek to that same water flow,[7] causing more than in damage.
The creek directly floods several cities in the Upper Turkey Creek Basin, for which the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has developed complicated flood control deployments and ongoing proposals.[8] Affected localities include the Merriam, Kansas drainage district, receiving over in federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act funding in 2022, where one municipal objective is to eliminate the need for downtown businesses to buy flood insurance.[9]
The, multi-decade, Kansas City Levee Project is complemented by the Turkey Creek Flood Damage Reduction Project.[7], the latter had spent about [7] [6] of combined funding from Kansas City, Missouri (KCMO), the local Unified Government, and the federal government. It can handle at least 18,000 to of water per second, equivalent to one normal day of the Missouri River[6] This includes new flood drainage, where the KC Water department of KCMO bored the horizontal tunnels at a rate of per day to install six new storm pipes of 96inch diameter each, delicately beneath the busy railroad, in preparation for construction by the Corps.[10] The key was reportedly to open the channel from 45 feet wide to wide for .[6]
The final 1261feet of the stream runs through a tunnel constructed by the Corps beneath a natural limestone shelf.[11] [12]