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The 75-foot (23 m)-high dam was built in 1910 by H.M. Byllesby & Company to impound the Cannon River for hydroelectric power. Its nameplate capacity is 1.8 MW. [1] [2] Byllesby, a former employee of both Edison and Westinghouse, formed what would become Northern States Power in 1909. [3]
The New River is a river which flows through the U.S. states of North Carolina, Virginia, ... by Byllesby Dam, and by Buck Dam. Continuing north, ...
Lake Byllesby is a 1,432-acre (580 ha) artificial lake on the Cannon River in Dakota and Goodhue counties, in the U.S. State of Minnesota.The lake was formed as a result of construction of the Byllesby Dam by the H.M. Byllesby & Company, which would later become Northern States Power Company for hydroelectric power generation. [1]
Hawks Nest Dam: Hawks Nest: CSX New River Subdivision (#1 Main) New River Gorge Bridge US 19: Fayetteville–Lansing: 1977 [20: Tunney Hunsaker Bridge CR 82 1997 [20] CSX New River Subdivision (#2 Main [26]) CR 25 2 (Thurmond Road) / R.J. Corman Railroad West Virginia Line Thurmond
The new dam will be built in three phases and is expected to take two years. Once the new stepped dam is completed the old one will be demolished. ... This photo shows the Muskingum River Lock and ...
Broken Down Dam, Fergus Falls, Minnesota – Otter Tail River (built 1908, collapsed 1909 - ruins remain in the river for recreation) [15] Flandrau Dam, New Ulm, Minnesota – Cottonwood River (built 1930, removed 1995 after repeated damage from floods) [14] Hanover Dam, Hanover, Minnesota – Crow River (removed after failure 1984) [14]
The 124-foot tall hydroelectric dam, which is on the Broad River, about 25 miles from Asheville, is operated by the town of Lake Lure, according to the National Inventory of Dams. Its maximum ...
The dam at Lake Byllesby does not affect water levels and canoeing downstream, because it maintains instantaneous flow-through. From Faribault, Minnesota to its mouth, the Cannon, a designated Minnesota Wild and Scenic River falls 280 feet (85 m), an average of 4.8 feet/mile (1 m/km).