Eau Claire Dam
CountryUnited States
LocationEau Claire County, Wisconsin
StatusOperational
Opening dateAugust 12, 1937

Eau Claire Dam is a dam in Eau Claire County, Wisconsin, United States.

The concrete gravity dam was dedicated on August 12, 1937, as the result of the largest Depression-era Works Progress Administration project in the entire state. Also known as the Eau Claire River 2WP224 Dam or the Augusta Dam (it stands about six miles north of Augusta, Wisconsin), the dam was developed on the site of the previous "Main River Dam" as a 24-foot-high, 251-foot-long structure impounding the Eau Claire River.[1]

The reservoir it creates, Eau Claire Lake, has a normal surface area of 1.7 square miles, with a maximum capacity of 17,000 acre-feet and normal storage of 7200 acre-feet.[2] Recreation includes fishing (for musky and walleyed pike), boating and swimming. The county operates two units of its Lake Eau Claire County Park north and south of the lake itself.[3]

The dam is one of several in the Eau Claire – Chippewa Falls metropolitan area on the Eau Claire and Chippewa Rivers. As of 2010 the possibility of developing hydroelectric power at this dam was being investigated.[4]

References

  1. "Augusta Wisconsin History as written in 1956".
  2. "Find Lakes". Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2012-08-20.
  3. "EAU Claire County". Archived from the original on 2012-07-09. Retrieved 2012-08-20.
  4. "Eau Claire committee takes up decades old deal for dams". WAOW. October 12, 2010. Archived from the original on March 3, 2016.

44°45′24″N 91°08′30″W / 44.756663°N 91.141706°W / 44.756663; -91.141706

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