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Brief History The long and
tumultuous story of the development of New York City’s water supply
west of the Hudson River began when the New York State Legislature
passed Chapter 724 of the Laws of 1905, an act allowing the city to
acquire lands and build dams, reservoirs and aqueducts in the
Catskills. The city had
already claimed the Croton River watershed in Putnam and Westchester
Counties east of the Hudson, drawing its water from reservoirs and
lakes in that region since 1842. The city’s growing population sent
it to the Catskills for more water, first from the Esopus Creek, which
was impounded to create the Ashokan Reservoir in Ulster County. The Ashokan was
constructed under the auspices of the New York City Board of Water
Supply (BWS) between 1907 and 1915. Its Olive Bridge Dam backed up
Esopus waters for 12 miles, necessitating the removal of homes, farms,
businesses, churches, schools and other structures throughout the
valley. Two-thousand residents were displaced as four hamlets were flooded and eigth others were relocated. The BWS next
turned to the Schoharie Creek, building a dam at Gilboa to create the Schoharie
Reservoir. This reservoir, built between 1919 and 1927, forced the
removal of 350 residents of the community of Gilboa and neighboring
valley lands. Water from the
Schoharie is sent down the Shandaken Tunnel, an
18-mile-long conduit which leads to the Esopus Creek and then runs
eastward into the Ashokan Reservoir. The blended waters reach the
city’s distribution system through the 92-mile-long Catskill
Aqueduct which consists of deep-rock tunnels, steel pipe
siphons and buried conduits snaking beneath mountains, valleys and
rivers. The aqueduct burrows 1,114 feet beneath the Hudson River
between Storm King and Breakneck Mountains near Cornwall. No sooner had
the Schoharie Reservoir been completed than the BWS began development
of the Delaware River and its tributaries. Receiving state approval in
1928 the city’s plans to build five more reservoirs were held up by
challenges from New Jersey and Pennsylvania which shared the interstate
waters of the Delaware. The dispute went all the way to the U. S.
Supreme Court, which in 1931 allowed New York City to take up to 440
million gallons of water a day from the river system. That required the
city to scale back its plans to just three reservoirs - one on the
Rondout Creek (actually a tributary of the Hudson River); another on
the Neversink River; and a third on the East Branch of the Delaware. The Rondout
Reservoir straddling the Ulster and Sullivan County line was built
between 1937 and 1954 (it was first placed in service in 1951). The Neversink
Reservoir a few miles distant in Sullivan County was constructed
between 1941 and 1953 (in service in 1950). Both projects were
virtually shut down during World War II, but resumed in 1946. The communities
of Eureka, Montela and Lackawack were eliminated to make way for the
Rondout; the hamlets of Neversink and Bittersweet were lost to the
Neversink Reservoir. More than 1,500 people were forced to vacate their
homes, farms and businesses in both valleys. The Pepacton
Reservoir on the East Branch in Delaware County was built between
1947 and 1954. The 2,400-foot-long dam at Downsville impounds the
largest of the city’s reservoirs. Eighteen miles long, it covers nine
square miles, has a 55-mile shoreline and a capacity of 140 billion
gallons. The Pepacton
flooded four communities -- Arena, Pepacton, Shavertown and Union Grove
- displacing 974 people. The city acquired more than 13,000 acres,
including cemeteries from which 2,371 bodies were removed to be
re-interred elsewhere. Faced with
growing water demand, the city then proposed yet another reservoir on
the West Branch of the Delaware River, a plan that prompted a second
Supreme Court battle. The court, in 1954, allowed the city to take
additional water from the Delaware River system, and the BWS
immediately began building the last of its reservoirs, the
Cannonsville, in Delaware County. Constructed
from 1955 to 1967, the Cannonsville Reservoir was first placed
in service in 1965. The Stilesville Dam impounds 95 billion gallons of
water in a reservoir that is 16 miles long. Five more communities were
condemned to make way for this reservoir: Beerston, Cannonsville, Rock
Rift, Rock Royal and Granton. Another 941 people were forced to move. Water from the
Pepacton, Neversink and Cannonsville Reservoirs is sent to the Rondout
Reservoir by gravity via the 25-mile-long East Delaware Tunnel, the
44-mile West Delaware Tunnel and the Neversink Tunnel, which is six
miles long. The combined waters are then sent to the city in the
world’s longest continuous underground tunnel, the Delaware Aqueduct,
which extends 85 miles from the Rondout Reservoir to Hillview Reservoir
in Yonkers. The aqueduct, 1,550 feet below ground at one point, runs
600 feet beneath the Hudson River at Chelsea. For more
information on the city’s water system, which includes 19 reservoirs
and controlled lakes in seven counties east and west of the Hudson
River, visit the NYC Department of Environmental Protection’s web
site at www.nyc.gov/dep/ |








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