Rapids: (Satellite)
Bridge: (Satellite)
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| Digitally zoomed from the historical marker below |
I found this historical marker while looking for a display of the Leffel mill turbine.
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| hmdb, 2017 photo by Cosmos Mariner |
Since I knew the town had water-powered mills, I recognized the mill pond and its dam in this map.
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| 1911/47 Mason Quad @ 62,500 |
The pond covered even more of the swamp in 1970.
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| 1970/73 Williamston Quad @ 24,000 |
The pond no longer exists because the dam was wiped out by a flood on Apr 18, 1975. "To restore natural fisheries, and other environmental concerns, the state denied efforts to rebuild it. With a grant from the Natural Resources Trust Fund and funding from the sale of bonds by the Downtown Development Authority, an innovative alternative was realized in 1998. Costing less than a dam and fish ladder, the boulder impoundment raises the water level over one mile and provides whitewater recreation and natural wildlife habitat." [hmdb]
This source calls it a canoe rapids.
The 1902 bridge looks like it was pin connected.
The 1931 bridge looks like it had concrete girders.
Today's bridge and canoe rapids. I can't tell what type of girders the 2005 bridge had.
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| Digitally zoomed from the historical marker above |
Today's bridge is decorated with brick, stone and metal railings.
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| Street View, Jul 2025 |
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This is my area. The topo maps don't seem to show the old dam where Putnam Street is now, but east of it. It's really too bad you can't make out much in Google Street Views. Though in the current one, downstream of the bridge you can see trees caught up on something, which I imagine is where the dam was.
ReplyDeleteAh, it seems I saw some other article stating that the dam was where Putnam is, today. That was not the case.
DeleteThere is another local mill in the Lansing area that is scheduled for demolition. The current Elsie (Grist) Mill Pond Dam (built 1912) on the Maple River partially failed in August 2023. And because it'd be too expensive to repair, I think they've finally built up enough funds to demolish the rest of it beginning this year.