The dam is behind the Military Bridge.
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Iowa Road Trip posted
Hale Bridge in Anamosa, Iowa Hale Bridge is a historic bowstring through-arch truss bridge. The bridge was completed in 1879, and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1998. In 2006, the bridge was flown by a chinook helicopter from its original location to Anamosa, Iowa. Today it serves as a pedestrian-only bridge located south of the Wapsipinicon State Park on Shaw Road in Anamosa, Iowa. Brian Abeling / Iowa Road Trip |
The height of the dam is 19' (5.8m). [
LansingStateJournal]
May 2024:
Carol Thumma
posted four photos with the comment: "It's been a long time since I've seen the Wapsipinicon flowing like this over the Dam in Anamosa. Thanking God for the needed rain!"
Steve Chapman: Last year there was no water coming over it . People were walking on it and fishing off of it .
Thank God for the rain.
[The dam is owned by an electric company, but I could not find its megawatt capacity.]
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krcproject, photo by Mike Roeder Built 1912. This source specifies a height of 8' (2.4m). Two swimmers drowned in 1974. |
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HAER IOWA,53-ANAM,1--15 (CT) GENERAL VIEW OF EAST SIDE LOOKING WEST, ROLLER DAM AND RURAL ELECTRICAL FACILITY IN FOREGROUND AND CURRENT HIGHWAY 151 BRIDGE IN BACKGROUND. - Wapsipinicon River Bridge, Spanning Wapsipinicon River at former State Highway 151, Anamosa, Jones County, IA |
"Significance: Unaltered example of a metal Pratt
through truss, unusual lattice vertical
posts which may be unique to the
Milwaukee Bridge and Iron Co." [
HAER_data_military]
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HAER IOWA,53-ANAM,1--7 OBLIQUE VIEW OF THE WEB SYSTEM LOOKING NORTHEAST, SHOWING ROLLER DAM AND ELECTRIC COMPANY IN BACKGROUND. - Wapsipinicon River Bridge, Spanning Wapsipinicon River at former State Highway 151, Anamosa, Jones County, IA |
"Significance: The three-span Hale Bridge is a
striking, and extremely rare, example of
what was once a common bridge form: the
bowstring arch-truss. In the 1860s and
1870s bowstring arch-trusses were used
extensively because of their great
structural efficiency and relatively low
construction costs. The Hale Bridge is
an excellent example of the work of the
King Iron Bridge and Manufacturing
Company, a major bridge fabricator who
erected great number of this type of
bridge throughout the nation, including
many in Iowa." [
HAER_data_hale]
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HAER IOWA,53-OXFJ.V,1--8 8. BARREL VIEW FROM SOUTH - Hale Bridge, Spanning Wapsipinicon River, Oxford Junction, Jones County, IA |
"Approximately 20-25 personnel and two CH-47 “Chinook” helicopters airlifted three separate, rehabilitated trusses of the historic Hale Bridge from the Olin/Hale area to their new home at the Wapsipinicon State Park in Anamosa.....Bowstring types like this one with their distinctive arched or curved trusses largely replaced wooden bridges over major streams and crossings in Iowa in the 1870s and 1880s. While there were literally hundreds of bowstring arch bridges in Iowa by the end of the 19th century, only 21 now remain scattered across the state in Allamakee, Bremer, Crawford, Dubuque, Johnson, Jones, Montgomery, Poweshiek, and Winnishiek counties." [
IowaHistory]
It was not a tandem lift for the smaller spans. I wonder if it was a tandem lift for the longer span. They would have to fly side-by-side, one at each end of the span. A tandem lift would be a very challenging training session for the Iowa Army National Guard.