This is a list of dams in Alabama that have been removed as physical impediments to free-flowing rivers or streams.
Completed removals
editDam[1] | Height | Year removed | Location | Watercourse | Watershed | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Unnamed dam | 2007 | Hanceville 34°03′20″N 86°45′21″W / 34.0555°N 86.7558°W |
Mud Creek | Black Warrior River | Dam was illegally constructed by Hanceville Water and Sewer to capture raw sewage leaking from a wastewater treatment plant.[2] | |
Old Shadow Lake Dam | 6 ft (1.8 m) | 2013 | Pinson 33°40′58″N 86°38′47″W / 33.6828°N 86.6464°W |
Turkey Creek | Dam built for swimming. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service partnered with the Freshwater Land Trust to remove the dam, which had blocked passage of the endangered vermilion darter.[3][4] | |
Marvel Slab Dam | 6 ft (1.8 m) | 2004 | Montevallo 33°09′56″N 87°01′46″W / 33.1656°N 87.0294°W |
Cahaba River | Cahaba River | Dam consisted of 46 culverts under a bridge that allowed coal and logging trucks and coal mining equipment to cross the river.[5] |
Shades Branch Steel Ford | 2011 | West Blocton 33°13′16″N 87°01′46″W / 33.221°N 87.0295°W |
Shades Branch | |||
Goodwins Mill Dam[6] | 15 ft (4.6 m) | 2013 | St. Clair County 33°49′11″N 86°23′08″W / 33.8197°N 86.3855°W |
Big Canoe Creek | Coosa River | Grist mill dam. |
Unnamed dam | 2022 | Etowah County 34°00′21″N 86°04′08″W / 34.0059°N 86.0688°W |
Big Wills Creek | |||
Eagle & Phenix Dam[7] | 17 ft (5.2 m) | 2012 | Phenix City 32°28′11″N 84°59′51″W / 32.4698°N 84.9976°W |
Chattahoochee River | Chattahoochee River | Dam powered the defunct Eagle and Phenix textile mill. National Inventory of Dams ID GA05180. |
City Mills Dam[7] | 10 ft (3.0 m) | 2013 | Phenix City 32°28′48″N 84°59′40″W / 32.4801°N 84.9944°W |
Hydropower dam. | ||
Unnamed dam | 2010 | Seale 32°21′50″N 85°07′18″W / 32.364°N 85.1216°W |
Uchee Creek | |||
Howle and Turner Dam[8] | 16 ft (4.9 m) | 2019 | Cleburne County 33°33′07″N 85°36′43″W / 33.552°N 85.612°W |
Tallapoosa River | Tallapoosa River | Dam built for a grist mill and cotton gin, owned by Heflin Waterworks and Sewer Board/Tyson Corp. |
Livingston Dam | 2019 | Livingston 32°35′19″N 88°11′51″W / 32.5885°N 88.1975°W |
Sucarnoochee River | Tombigbee River | Water supply dam abandoned by 1994.[9] |
Planned and proposed removals
editDam | Expected year | Location | Watercourse | Watershed | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Langdale Dam | Chambers County 32°48′56″N 85°09′55″W / 32.8156°N 85.1653°W |
Chatahoochee River | Chatahoochee River | In 2018, Georgia Power filed to decommission and remove the outdated hydroelectric dams.[10] | |
Riverview Dam | Chambers County 32°47′34″N 85°08′35″W / 32.7928°N 85.1431°W |
References
edit- ^ Rivers, American (13 February 2023). "American Rivers Dam Removal Database". Figshare. American Rivers. doi:10.6084/m9.figshare.5234068.v10. Retrieved 25 August 2023.
- ^ Williamson, Karen (23 August 2007). "Dam removed". The Cullman Times. Retrieved 26 August 2023.
- ^ Songer, Joe (20 November 2013). "Turkey Creek section restored after dam removal (photos, video and time lapse)". al.com. Retrieved 1 September 2023.
- ^ Pillion, Dennis (16 November 2017). "Endangered Alabama fish confirmed in new area". al.com. Retrieved 1 September 2023.
- ^ Nijhuis, Michelle (August 2009). "The Cahaba: A River of Riches". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved 1 September 2023.
- ^ Pillion, Dennis (27 October 2015). "Big Canoe Creek flowing free after dam removed". al.com. Retrieved 1 September 2023.
- ^ a b Chitwood, Tim; Stevens, Tiffany (12 March 2013). "UPDATE: City Mills dam blast bigger than Eagle & Phenix". Ledger-Enquirer. Retrieved 1 September 2023.
- ^ Wilson, Bill (4 June 2019). "Dam on Tallapoosa River being removed this week". The Anniston Star. Retrieved 1 September 2023.
- ^ Pillion, Dennis (24 April 2019). "Alabama river flows free after dam removal". al.com.
- ^ Trahan, Cole (19 February 2022). "Georgia Power looks to remove dams along the Chattahoochee". Valley Times-News. Retrieved 6 October 2023.
External links
edit- Media related to Removed dams in Alabama at Wikimedia Commons