| Cheesman Dam | |
|---|---|
|  The dam in 1926 | |
|   Location of Cheesman Dam in Colorado | |
| Location | Jefferson County, Colorado, USA | 
| Coordinates | 39°12′27.03″N 105°16′20.05″W / 39.2075083°N 105.2722361°W | 
| Purpose | Water supply | 
| Opening date | 1905 | 
| Operator(s) | Denver Water | 
| Dam and spillways | |
| Type of dam | Masonry, gravity arch | 
| Impounds | South Platte River | 
| Height | 221 feet (67 m) | 
| Length | 735 feet (224 m) | 
| Width (crest) | 18 feet (5.5 m) | 
| Spillway type | Concrete crest weir | 
| Spillway capacity | 22,370 cu ft/s (633 m3/s) | 
| Reservoir | |
| Total capacity | 79,064 acre-feet (0.097524 km3) | 
| Surface area | 877 acres (355 ha) | 
Cheesman Dam is a 211-foot-tall (64 m) masonry curved gravity dam on the South Platte River located in Colorado. It was the tallest of its type in the world when completed in 1905.[1] The primary purpose of the dam is water supply and it was named for Colorado businessman, Walter Scott Cheesman. In 1973 it was designated a Historic Civil Engineering Landmark.[2] The Denver Water Board purchased the reservoir and related facilities in 1918.[3]
External links
- Cheesman Dam at Denver Water
Bibliography
- ↑ "Cheesman Dam". American Society of Civil Engineers. Retrieved 29 January 2022.
- ↑ "Cheesman Reservoir History". Denver Water. Archived from the original on 14 September 2013. Retrieved 12 September 2013.
- ↑ "Cheesman Reservoir | Denver Water". www.denverwater.org. Retrieved 31 July 2018.
- Dams of the United States - Pictorial display of Landmark Dams. Denver, Colorado: US Society on Dams. 2013.
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