Broken Down Dam (formerly the Fergus Falls Hydro Dam[1] or Fergus Falls City Light Station[2]) was a concrete hydroelectric gravity dam on the Otter Tail River in Otter Tail County, Minnesota in the United States. Constructed in 1908 to supply power to the nearby town of Fergus Falls, the dam suddenly failed on September 24, 1909. Collapse of the dam caused the failure of four others downstream as well as significant property damage. There were no deaths. City officials left the damaged structure in place and today its ruins lie along the recreational Otter Tail River State Water Trail at Broken Down Dam Park. The only flood recorded in the history of Fergus Falls was due to this disaster.[3]

Broken Down Dam
Broken Down Dam ruins in the Otter Tail River, 2021
Broken Down Dam is located in Minnesota
Broken Down Dam
Location of Broken Down Dam in Minnesota
Official nameFergus Falls City Light Station
LocationOtter Tail County, Minnesota, United States
Coordinates46°17′26.7″N 96°01′23.9″W / 46.290750°N 96.023306°W / 46.290750; -96.023306
PurposePower
StatusDecommissioned
Construction began1907
Opening date1908
Demolition date1909
Owner(s)City of Fergus Falls
Dam and spillways
Type of damGravity dam
ImpoundsOtter Tail River
Spillway typeuncontrolled overflow
Power Station
Turbines1

Construction

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In 1907, the growing city of Fergus Falls began enhancing a dam on the Otter Tail River about two miles upstream at Page Mill to satisfy its electricity needs. The mill had burned several years earlier and the city used the small dam as a power plant. At the same time, the city began constructing a much larger dam about three miles above the city as a permanent replacement. The new dam began generating power in 1908.[4] Engineers had unknowingly built the dam on top of a spring without having done proper site evaluations. By the following year the concrete foundations had been undermined by the spring flows.[3]

Collapse

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At 4:20 a.m. on September 24, 1909, dam attendants discovered the electric lights fading and water flowing over the powerhouse floor. They quickly fled along a railway embankment just as the 10-ton generator was swept into the river.[5] They reached a farm, procured a team of horses, and headed towards Fergus Falls to raise alarm. En route they met the city electrical superintendent travelling towards the dam to find out why power had failed and why the station crew had not answered the telephone.[6]

The dam broke in the center and the resulting flood first destroyed the Kirk Dam, which furnished power for the city water works. The water then destroyed the Mount Faith Avenue Bridge.[5] One block further downstream the Red River Mill Dam and Woolen Mill Dam were swept away. Damage to the two mills totaled over $15,000 (equivalent to $509,000 in 2023). The Central Dam in the city also failed. While there was additional flooding to homes and farms, there was no loss of life.[6]

Dayton Hollow Dam, 5 miles (8.0 km) to the southwest, was saved from destruction. Its owner, president of the Otter Tail Power Company Vernon Wright, received enough advance warning to reach his dam by 6:15 a.m. and open the flood gates.[6] Following the disaster, Otter Tail Power was engaged by the city to build their transmission lines into town. This helped spawn a local rumor, fueled by radical newspaper editor Haldor E. Boen, that Wright had deliberately destroyed City Dam by secretly distributing quicksilver from a rowboat to undermine it.[4] Later it was determined natural springs under its foundation made the dam's failure inevitable.[7]

Site today

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Broken Down Dam Park, established in 1949,[8] is adjacent to the dam and is 11 acres (4.5 ha) in size. The dam itself forms "odd and engaging" ruins at mile 52 along the Otter Tail River State Water Trail, managed by the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources.[9] During high river flows, water rushes between concrete blocks of the old structure creating Class III rapids.[5]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Dam Failures, Dam Incidents (Near Failures), Association of State Dam Safety Officials, . Retrieved March 26, 2017.
  2. ^ Otter Tail County Historical Society
  3. ^ a b Engstrom 2016.
  4. ^ a b Mason 1916, pp. 512–513.
  5. ^ a b c Diebel 2005, pp. 90–91.
  6. ^ a b c Hintgen 2009.
  7. ^ Wrede, Erik. Tales of Water Trails: Otter Tail River State Water Trail. Minnesota Department of Natural Resources podcasts. May 26, 2009. Retrieved March 26, 2017.
  8. ^ "GNIS Detail". Broken Down Dam Park. January 2, 1949. Retrieved April 2, 2017.
  9. ^ Huhti 2004, p. 91.

References

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