Wangumbaug Lake Explained

Wangumbaug Lake
Other Name:Coventry Lake
Location:Connecticut, US
Depth:35feet
Pushpin Map:USA
Length:1.8miles
Area:0.59sqmi
Shore:5miles

Wangumbaug Lake, also known as Coventry Lake, is a natural lake located in Coventry, Connecticut. It covers 378acres and is about 35feet deep and 1.8miles long with a circumference of 5miles.[1] Its watershed is 1992acres, around 40% of which is residential and the rest farms and forest. The lake holds 2.7 billion gallons (10,220,000 m³) of water. It is fed by springs and has one natural outlet, Coventry Lake Brook, which flows southeast into the Willimantic River. Melt from a retreating glacier formed the lake 13,000 years ago.[2]

Wangumbaug means "Crooked Pond" in Algonquian. It was likely named by the Nipmuc, who settled the area before European contact.

The lake has been a popular summer vacation destination for boaters and bathers. Artists flocked to the summer cottages along the shores. In the early twentieth century, a trolley line connected the towns of Coventry and Willimantic, and Wangumbaug Lake became known as "Willimantic's summer resort." A pavilion known as the Lakeside Casino was a popular dance hall.[3] [4] Wangumbaug Lake is currently the home of the UConn Huskies rowing team, which shares its boathouse with the Edwin O. Smith High School crew team from nearby Mansfield.

A two-acre lake island, Underwood Island, is located 100 yards from Wangumbaug's shoreline. The village and census-designated place of Coventry Lake includes the lake and surrounding residential areas. The regional climate is hemiboreal.[5]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Decisions on Geographic Names in the United States. Board on Geographic Names, United States Department of the Interior. 1982. Washington, D.C.. 8. 2021-04-11. Google Books.
  2. Web site: Lake History & Facts Coventry, CT - Official Website. 2021-04-11. www.coventryct.org.
  3. Book: Jobbagy, Bill. A History of Lakeside Park, South Coventry, Connecticut. 2018. 2021-04-11.
  4. Book: Stave, Bruce. Mills and Meadows: A Pictorial History of Northeast Connecticut. Donning Co. Publishers. 1991. Virginia Beach. 141–42.
  5. Peel. M C. Finlayson. B L. Updated world map of the Köppen-Geiger climate classification. Hydrology and Earth System Sciences. 2007. 11. 5. 1633–1644. 10.5194/hess-11-1633-2007. 30 January 2016. free.