Bankhead Lake

Bankhead Lake
Bankhead Lock and Dam. Holt Lake is visible directly below the dam (top), while Bankhead Lake is behind the dam (bottom). View is downriver to the west.
Location of Bankhead Lake in Alabama, USA.
Location of Bankhead Lake in Alabama, USA.
Bankhead Lake
Location of Bankhead Lake in Alabama, USA.
Location of Bankhead Lake in Alabama, USA.
Bankhead Lake
LocationJefferson / Tuscaloosa / Walker counties, Alabama, US
Coordinates33°27′40″N 87°21′11″W / 33.461°N 87.353°W / 33.461; -87.353
TypeReservoir
Primary inflowsBlack Warrior River
Primary outflowsHolt Lake
Basin countriesUnited States

Bankhead Lake is a reservoir along the Black Warrior River that begins in Walker County in the state of Alabama. The lake forms the border between Jefferson and Tuscaloosa County, as well as the border dividing Jefferson and Walker County. It eventually empties into Holt Lake.

Bankhead Lock and Dam and its reservoir is a project of the United States Army Corps of Engineers, while Alabama Power Company owns and operates the adjoining hydroelectric generating plant.[1] Both facilities are named for Alabama Senator John H. Bankhead. The reservoir has a capacity of 296,000 acre-feet (370 million cubic meters), with normal storage of 269,215 acre⋅ft (330 million m3).

The original Bankhead Dam was built in 1915 as the last of an entire navigation system of 17 locks and dams between Mobile and Birmingham.[2] Alabama Power's hydropower facility was installed on the right bank in 1963. As of March 1969, Bankhead was the last of those original 17 still in service, but was deemed by the Corps of Engineers structurally unsafe and at risk of collapse.[3] The current lock, 77 feet high and 1,400 feet long at its crest, was completed in 1975. Some of the original dam structure still exists as part of the complex but is not accessible.[4]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Bankhead Lock and Dam - Alabama Power". Archived from the original on 2012-03-21. Retrieved 2012-07-30.
  2. ^ "Black Warrior & Tombigbee Lakes Project Homepage: History". Archived from the original on 2012-05-02.
  3. ^ The Tuscaloosa News, March 7, 1969, page 1
  4. ^ http://cweb2.loc.gov/pnp/habshaer/al/al1200/al1224/data/al1224data.pdf[permanent dead link]
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