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  2. Quabbin Reservoir - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quabbin_Reservoir

    The Quabbin Reservoir is the largest inland body of water in Massachusetts, United States, and was built between 1930 and 1939.Along with the Wachusett Reservoir, it is the primary water supply for Boston, 65 miles (105 km) to the east, and 40 other cities and towns in Greater Boston.

  3. Quabbin–Swift River Valley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quabbin–Swift_River_Valley

    The Quabbin Valley is a region of Massachusetts in the United States. The region consists of the Quabbin Reservoir and accompanying river systems [which?] in Franklin, Hampden, Hampshire, and Worcester counties. The area is sometimes known as the Swift River Valley region, a reference to the Swift River, which was dammed to form the reservoir.

  4. Quabbin Aqueduct - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quabbin_Aqueduct

    Water from the 412-billion-US-gallon (1.56 × 10 9 m 3) capacity Quabbin Reservoir flows through the Quabbin Aqueduct from the northeast side of the Quabbin, up a slope to the Ware River Diversion in South Barre, Massachusetts, down again to the Wachusett Reservoir, and then through a power station near the Oakdale section of West Boylston, Massachusetts.

  5. Ware River Diversion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ware_River_Diversion

    This is typically done when the Wachusett Reservoir water level is increasing due to run-off from its own watershed. If the aqueduct route from the Ware River Diversion to the Wachusett Reservoir is open, diversion of water from the Ware River water into both the Wachusett and the Quabbin Reservoir routes will start the siphon .

  6. Goodnough Dike - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goodnough_Dike

    The Quabbin Reservoir is one of the largest fabricated public water supplies in the United States. Created in the 1930s by the construction of two huge earthen dams, the Winsor Dam, and the Goodnough Dike, the reservoir is fed by the Swift River, and seasonally the Ware River. Four towns were flooded in the Swift River Valley. Construction of ...

  7. Massachusetts Route 21 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Massachusetts_Route_21

    Much of the route south of this intersection lies within the Quabbin Reservoir State Reservation. [2] Into the 1970s, MA-21 started in Forest Park with an intersection with U.S. Route 5 near the South End Bridge. Today Interstate 91 now overtakes that intersection along with MA-83. From there, the route went down Longhill Street until it ...

  8. Ware River - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ware_River

    The arrival in 1931 of the first water from the Ware River by way of this tunnel probably saved the Wachusett Reservoir from drying up, for a prolonged drought had reduced Wachusett’s water supply to less than 20 percent of capacity. In 1933 the Quabbin Aqueduct was completed, ready to transport water from the Quabbin Reservoir under ...

  9. New Salem, Massachusetts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Salem,_Massachusetts

    It is the twenty-first largest of 351 cities and towns in the Commonwealth. New Salem's modern southern town lines are dictated by the former West and Middle Branches of the Swift River, which are now submerged as part of the Quabbin Reservoir. The land of the two forks of the reservoir is now known as the Prescott Peninsula, containing the ...