Wolf Creek Dam
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| Wolf Creek Dam | |
|---|---|
| Location | Russell County, Kentucky |
| Coordinates | 36°52′06″N 85°08′51″W / 36.8683°N 85.1475°W |
| Construction began | 1941 |
| Opening date | 1951 |
| Operator | U.S. Army Corps of Engineers |
| Dam and spillways | |
| Impounds | Cumberland River |
| Height | 258 ft (79 m)[1] |
| Length | 5,736 ft (1,748 m)[1] |
| Dam volume | 11,396,500 yd3 (8,713,200 m3)[1] |
| Reservoir | |
| Creates | Lake Cumberland |
| Total capacity | 6,089,000 acre⋅ft (7,511,000 dam3)[1] |
| Catchment area | 5,789 mi2 (14,990 km2)[1] |
| Surface area | 50,250 acres (20,340 ha)[1] |
| Power Station | |
| Turbines | 6x 45.0 MW |
| Installed capacity | 270 MW |
The Wolf Creek Dam is a multi-purpose dam on the Cumberland River in the western part of Russell County, Kentucky, United States. The dam serves at once four distinct purposes: it generates hydroelectricity; it regulates and limits flooding; it releases stored water to permit year-round navigation on the Cumberland River; and it creates Lake Cumberland for recreation, the largest man-made lake by volume east of the Mississippi river. The Lake has become a popular tourist attraction.U.S. Route 127 runs across the top of the dam but is being relocated downstream.
Electricity from the dam is marketed by the Southeastern Power Administration.[2]
The dam was originally proposed as a private power project in 1926 near the mouth of Wolf Creek in Russell County.[3] The federal government adopted the project in the Flood Control Act of 1938 and further in the Rivers and Harbors Act of 1946 as part of a comprehensive plan to develop the Cumberland River Basin. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers moved the site 14 miles downstream, creating a much larger lake than the private plan had called for.[4] Construction began in 1941 but because of World War II and other factors, construction was not completed until 1951.[5] Congress named the impoundment Lake Cumberland in 1952. It is one of four major flood control reservoirs for the Cumberland; the others being J. Percy Priest Dam, Dale Hollow Dam, and Center Hill Dam.[6] The last of the power generators was installed in 1952.
While several small towns were adversely affected by the construction of the dam, such as nearby Creelsboro (downstream) and Burnside (upstream), the dam is credited with preventing several hundred million dollars in flood damage.
Characteristics


The Wolf Creek Dam is a 5,736 ft (1,748 m) long and 258 ft (79 m) high dam with a combined earthen and concrete structure. The concrete section of the Wolf Creek Dam consists of 37 gravity monoliths that comprise 1,794.62 ft (547.00 m) of the dam's length, across the old river channel. The spillway section contains ten 49.2126 ft × 36.0892 ft (15.0000 m × 11.0000 m) tainter gates and six 3.937 ft × 5.9055 ft (1.2000 m × 1.8000 m) low level sluice gates. The power intake section contains the penstocks that feed the six 45 MW turbines. The embankment section extends from the end of the concrete gravity portion 3,937.008 ft (1,200.000 m) across the valley to the right abutment. It has a maximum height of 213.2546 ft (65.0000 m) above the top of rock. The non-zoned embankment is composed of well-compacted, low plasticity clays, from the valley alluvium.[8]