Saturday, April 4, 2026

Erie Canal Aqueduct over Moyer Creek in Frankfort, NY

(Satellite, in this town, Canal Street replaced the canal.)


Yvonne Wall posted 10 images with the comment: "Frankfort, Aquaduct over Moyer Creek and a view of the bridge from near the canal. Dean D'Amelio did a post on the old canal and we are good friends and I asked him to help me describe it. Next it is 1914 and the New York Barge article from my newspaper collection."
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1898/98 Utica Quad @ 62,500

Erie Canal Locks #60,#61 and Barge Canal Lock #30 at Macedon, NY

Erie #60: (Satellite)
Erie #61: (Satellite)
Barge: (Satellite)

Erie Canal Lock #60 (Lower Macedon Double Lock)


ErieCanal_60
"Enlarged Erie Canal Lock No. 60 (also called the Lower Macedon lock) is located a mile east of the village of Macedon, NY on the north side of the existing Erie Canal, which parallels NY Route 31 at this point. It was built in 1841 as a single chamber lock with a 10 foot [3m] lift, replacing the original 1822 Clinton's Ditch lock. It was doubled in 1874, and the north chamber was lengthened at the foot (eastern) end in 1888. The towpath was on the south side. It was in use until 1914."
"Enlarged Erie Canal Lock No. 60 -- North (lengthened) chamber
 looking east towards Albany from within the canal prism"

B Gray, Sep 2024

Erie Canal Lock #61 (Upper Macedon Double Lock)


Lock #61 had a lift of 6' (1.8m). [ErieCanal]

Street View, Jun 2024

Gary Prodrick posted
Yesterday in Macedon NY.
[I have no idea where this marker is, but the topo map allowed me to find the remnants of the lock.]

1900/99 Macedon Quad @ 62,500

Barge Canal Lock #30


Street View, Oct 2021

Street View, Jun 2024

nycanalmap

Friday, April 3, 2026

1909 Austin Dam on Freeman Run upstream of Austin, PA, failed on Sep 30, 1911,

Dam: (Satellite)
Paper Mill Ruins: (Satellite)

This was the upstream face. We are seeing the edge of the segment on the left side of the photo because the water turned it,
Street View, Jul 2024

This satellite image better shows how that segment got turned.
Satellite

Toni Sterling, Mar 2022

The downstream side.
Christine G, Oct 2024

Frugal Livin', Jun 2024

Christine G, Oct 2024

Facebook Reel

The above reel includes scenes of the ruins of the Bayless Pulp and Paper Co. that was destroyed by the flood.
Same Reel

Troy Feldbauer, Jun 2025

Christine G, Oct 2024

1930+2009 US-90 and 1902+1925 L&N Rigolets Bridges near Slidel, LA

2009 US-90: (Satellite)
1902 L&N: (Bridge Hunter)

1930 US-90 Bridge


2009 photo by Bob Davis via BridgeHunter_1930

2009 US-90 Bridge


Street View, Feb 2023

Massman
"This Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development project consists of a 5,400-foot post-tensioned, precast concrete girder bridge with more than a mile of roadway approaches. The bridge is a high rise structure with 63 bents. The cast-in-place concrete deck rises more than 70 feet above the water at the center of the pass. Thirty-four bents are constructed on land and 29 bents on the water."

Massman

This is the best photo I saw of the ringer crane.
Massman

1902 L&N Bridge


BridgeHunter_1902
"Replaced by a new bridge after a hurricane"

1925 CSX/L&N Bridge


Photo by Irene Kato via BridgeHunter_1925, cropped

HistoricBridges, cropped

David Wilkinson posted two photos with the comment: "I took these pictures riding an L&N caboose headed to Gentilly,La yard in 1978. The name of the bridge is Rigolets. I was 24 years old. 😄"
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Thursday, April 2, 2026

1910 Little Falls and 1915 100/88mw Long Lake Dams on Spokane River near Long Lake, WA

Little Falls: (HAERSatellite)
Long Lake: (HAERSatellite)

Little Falls Dam


schnabel
"The Spillway Dam is a 59-foot[18m]-high, 597-foot[182m]-long cyclopean concrete gravity overflow spillway dam. Its 37-foot[11.3m]-high and 73-foot[22.3m]-long concrete gated spillway section has two 20-foot[9m]-wide by 24-foot[7.3m]-high Tainter [Parkergates."

The powerhouse takes advantage of a rock outcrop so that it is further downstream from the Spillway Dam. Thus it is at the foot of a rapids and has more head.
Satellite

Street View, Jun 2023

Street View, Jun 2023

Street View, Jun 2023

Facebook Reel

BigBendRailroadHistory, Credit: Clayton photo collection held by the Reardan Memorial Library
"Washington Water Power Co (now Avista) built Little Falls Dam between 1907 and 1910. Every part of the dam was shipped to Reardan and then carted by wagon to Little Falls. This includes the cement, turbines, penstocks, generators, transformers, and wiring. The dam had four turbines which each weighed 750 tons. These were the largest in the world at the time."

"It boasted having the largest turbines in the world, matching the size of the Niagara Falls turbines." [odessarecord]

 HAER WASH,33-WELPI.V,1--8
8. VIEW OF SOUTHEAST ELEVATION OF LITTLE FALLS TIE LINE TOWER NO. 185. LOOKING NORTHWEST. - Little Falls Tie Line Towers, Near Little Dam Falls on Spokane River, Wellpinit, Stevens County, WA

"Significance: The Little Falls Tie Line Towers are significant as components of one of the trans-Mississippian West's earliest steel tower transmission lines. This system distributed electrical power from The Washington Water Power Company's Little Falls Dam (a National Register of Historic Places property, 12/15/88) to the Spokane vicinity of eastern Washington, beginning in the early twentieth century. Its construction pioneered the use of steel towers for electrical transmission by utilizing modular units adapted from existing technologies of the U.S. windmill industry. In terms of engineering, the towers are unique as examples of the evolution in long distance transmission lines from wooden poles to metal structures, which facilitated regional hydroelectric development and resulted in wide-scale distribution of electrical power at affordable rates to urban Spokane and its outlying rural geographical region." [HAER_data]

These towers are a significant advance over the towers used in the Chicagoland area in 1907, including the voltage.
20140820 0236 via Dennis DeBruler

Long Lake Dam


HAER WASH,33-FORD.V,4--1
1. Contextual view of four operating houses, control gates, penstock and power plant, looking east of the spillway dam - Long Lake Hydroelectric Plant, Spanning Spokane River, Ford, Stevens County, WA

"Significance: The Long Lake hydroelectric facility is significant as one of the earliest and, for many years, largest hydroelectric generating facilities in The Washington Water Power Company's electrical power generating network. It is the largest hydroelectric facility on the Spokane River. Its construction played a vital role in facilitating the urban, industrial, and agricultural development of eastern Washington and northern Idaho. The Long Lake Dam possesses engineering significance as a reflection of advanced hydroelectric technology of the early twentieth century. It is architecturally important for the imposing Romanesque Revival style of its power house. The Long Lake Hydroelectric Plant and its setting have remained largely unaltered since original construction of the facility in 1915. The historic property was nominated to the National Register of Historic Places in 1988. Constituent elements include the spillway dam, control dam (intake), cut-off (arch dam), and the four brick operating houses situated on top of the spillway dam." [HAER_data]
lll
“Spokane -- Washington Water Power Company (#04),” Spokane Public Library, accessed April 2, 2026, https://lange.spokanelibrary.org/items/show/2005.
"WWP's Long Lake Dam is still an impressive structure more than 75 years after its construction. The project which would have spillways 170 feet [52m] high- the highest in the world at the time- and the largest turbines then in operation, was a mammoth undertaking. To ship the 100,000 tons of materials required, a railroad spur was run 19 miles from the Great Northern Railroad main line at Springfield to the river, where a bridge - with a 172-foot span- was constructed to cross the river to the construction site."


RenewableEnergyWorld
"More than 100 years ago, the 88 MW Long Lake hydro plant was completed on the Spokane River in Washington State, U.S. The plant, owned by Avista, was built to serve rural communities and provide power for mining operations. The dam stands 213 feet [65m] high and is located where the river makes a horseshoe bend and passes through a canyon with tall granite walls. When it was built, it was the world’s highest spillway dam with the largest turbines then in use. Because of its historic significance, the property was nominated to the National Register of Historic Places in 1988."
"Beginning in 2016, Avista, working with the Department of Ecology, Spokane Tribe, and many other stakeholders, began examining ways of improving river conditions at the dam for the benefit of the fish living downstream. Water testing below the dam showed elevated levels of dissolved gases in the river during times the dam spills a lot of water. Supersaturation of dissolved gas can cause bubble trauma in fish, resulting in injury or mortality. Production of total dissolved gas is a complex process but is affected by the amount of air entrained in the spillway and during plunging of spillway flows.
"Avista installed deflectors on the lower face of Long Lake Dam to make the water skim instead of plunge at the dam’s base, and at the same time the depth of the dam’s plunge pool was reduced and rock at a nearby outcropping removed so it would not obstruct the flow of the river. Together, these changes are lowering dissolved gas levels in the water and keep the fish healthy.
"In January 2022, Avista contracted work to rehabilitate and modernize the four generator units at Long Lake, as they were installed in the late 1970s and have a 40-year design life. The project scope includes the complete renewal and supply of the stators, poles, fans and spider/rim designs. The main objective of the refurbishment is to maintain the overall plant equipment reliability for decades to come. When the refurbishment is complete, the facility will have an installed capacity exceeding 100 MW. The first modernized unit is scheduled to go into operation at the end of 2024 and the last one in 2029."

iwac

Note the concrete pump at the toe of the dam.
mcmillen
"McMillen’s team designed and built a solution to reduce excess total dissolved gases (TDG) during overflow spill events at Long Lake Dam. The result is a reduction in fish mortality and ongoing environmental benefits to sensitive riparian and aquatic habitats in the Spokane River."

In 2016, the $11m project "installed deflectors on the lower face of the dam to make the water skim instead of plunge at the dam’s base. They also reduced the depth of the dam’s plunge pool and removed rock at a nearby outcropping so it would not obstruct the flow of the river. Together, these changes should lower dissolved gas levels in the water and keep the fish healthy and happy." [myavista]

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