Wilbur Dam

Wilbur Dam
Location Carter County, Tennessee, United States
Coordinates 36°20′28″N 82°07′34″W / 36.34106°N 82.12624°W / 36.34106; -82.12624Coordinates: 36°20′28″N 82°07′34″W / 36.34106°N 82.12624°W / 36.34106; -82.12624
Opening date 1912
Dam and spillways
Impounds Watauga River
Height 77 feet (23 m)
Length 375 feet (114 m)
Power station
Installed capacity 10,700 kilowatts

Wilbur Dam is a hydroelectric dam on the Watauga River in Carter County, in the U.S. state of Tennessee.[1] It is one of two dams on the river owned and operated by the Tennessee Valley Authority. The dam impounds Wilbur Lake, which extends for about 3 miles (4.8 km) up the Watauga to the base of Watauga Dam.[2] Completed by 1912 the Ocoee Dam No. 1 is the only Hydroelectric dam that is older, Wilbur Dam was one of the first major hydroelectric projects in Tennessee, and remains one of the oldest dams in the TVA system.[3]

Wilbur Dam is a concrete gravity overflow dam 77 feet (23 m) high and 375 feet (114 m) long, and has a generating capacity of 10,700 kilowatts.[4][5] The dam's spillway has four radial gates with a combined discharge of 34,000 cubic feet per second (960 m3/s).[6] The dam is located at just over 34 miles (55 km) above the mouth of the Watauga, a few miles upstream from Elizabethton, Tennessee.

In 1907, the Doe River Light & Power Company began purchasing land rights for construction of Wilbur Dam, although the company struggled with finances and sold the project to the Watauga Power Company in 1910. Watauga Power completed the dam in just two years, and found a ready market for the dam's electricity at nearby Elizabethton. In 1927, the dam was purchased by the Tennessee Central Service Company, which changed its name to East Tennessee Light & Power Company two years later. The flood of August 1940 overtopped the dam and destroyed its powerhouse, and five years later, East Tennessee Light & Power sold its assets, including Wilbur Dam, to the Tennessee Valley Authority.[2]

Wilbur Dam was originally equipped with a flashboard-controlled spillway (similar to nearby Nolichucky Dam). In 1947, TVA outfitted the dam with a new gate-controlled spillway and raised it 5 feet (1.5 m) to accommodate the tailwaters of Watauga Dam, which was then nearing completion.[5]

References

  1. http://www.tva.gov/sites/wilbur.htm
  2. 1 2 Tennessee Valley Authority, The Upper Holston Projects: Watauga, South Holston, Boone, and Fort Patrick Henry; a Comprehensive Report on the Planning, Design, Construction, Initial Operations, and Costs of Four Hydro Projects in the Holston Basin at the Eastern Tip of Tennessee, Technical Report No. 14 (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1958), pp. 1141-1143.
  3. http://focus.nps.gov/pdfhost/docs/NRHP/Text/64500614.pdf "Pre-TVA Hydroelectric Development in Tennessee" National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet Section number E, page 12. U.S. Department of Interior.
  4. Tennessee Valley Authority, Wilbur Reservoir. Retrieved: 2 February 2009.
  5. 1 2 Tennessee Valley Authority, Design of TVA Projects Volume 3: Mechanical Design of Hydro Plants, Technical Report No. 24 (Washington, D.C.: Tennessee Valley Authority, 1952), pp. 220-221.
  6. Tennessee Valley Authority, The Nickajack Project: A Report on the Planning, Design, Construction, Initial Operations, and Costs, Technical Report No. 16 (Knoxville, Tenn.: Tennessee Valley Authority, 1972), pp. 10-11.
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