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Remains of the South Fork Dam abutment with US-219 downstream in the background as it appeared in 1980 Remains of South Fork Dam showing construction details of the dam as it appeared in 1980 High above the city, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania built the South Fork Dam between 1838 and 1853 as part of a cross-state canal system, the Main Line ...
The Johnstown Flood National Memorial is a unit of the United States National Park Service. [2] [3] Established in 1964 [4] through legislation signed by President Lyndon B. Johnson, [5] [6] it pays tribute to the thousands of victims of the Johnstown Flood, who were injured or killed on May 31, 1889 when the South Fork Dam ruptured.
A modern view of the South Fork Dam. The large gap overlooked by the two wooden terraces pictured is the breach that caused the Johnstown Flood.. The South Fork Dam was an earthenwork dam forming Lake Conemaugh (formerly Western Reservoir, also known as the Old Reservoir and Three Mile Dam, a misnomer), [1] an artificial body of water near South Fork, Pennsylvania, United States.
Nov. 17—SOUTH FORK — When Doug Bosley started working at Johnstown Flood National Memorial, he heard stories about how one day a trail would be built to follow the path of the 1889 Johnstown ...
Jul. 15—Chevron U.S.A. Inc. announced last week it donated $100,000 for South Fork and Salt fires relief and recovery efforts. Chevron said $75,000 of the money will go to the Greatest Need ...
The Sandy Run Dam, a 28-foot-high (8.5 m), 63-year-old earthen dam with a spillway owned by the Highland Water and Sewer Authority, released a little more than 18 million US gallons (68,000 m 3) of water when it failed, with its flood waters entering the Conemaugh between St. Michael and South Fork at Ehrenfeld. The Salix Water Dam on Otto Run ...
EL PASO, Texas (KTSM) — The Office of Broadband Access and Expansion (OBAE) and an Albuquerque non-profit program distributed 40 donated computers to victims of the Salt and South Fork Fires and ...
The disaster became widely known as the Johnstown Flood, and locally known as the "Great Flood". Rumors of the dam's potential for harm, and its likelihood of bursting, had been circulating for years. At least three warnings sent from South Fork to Johnstown by telegram the day of the disaster went virtually unheeded downstream.