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Harris Station Dam

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Location
  
Somerset County, Maine

Max. length
  
9 mi (14 km)

Surface elevation
  
955 ft (291 m)

Area
  
13.98 km²

Basin countries
  
United States

Surface area
  
3,455 acres (1,398 ha)

Max depth
  
36 m

Harris Station Dam wwwamericanwhitewaterorgphotosarchivemedium4

Water volume
  
64,093 acre·ft (79,058,000 m)

Similar
  
Wyman Dam, Carlton Bridge, Sagadahoc Bridge, Major Reuben Colburn, Spaulding Mountain

Harris Station Dam is a hydroelectric dam in Northeast Somerset, Somerset County, Maine. Also known as the Indian Pond Project, the dam was built from 1952 to 1954 as the largest hydroelectric dam in the state of Maine. It impounds the Kennebec River at the southern end of the natural Indian Pond, about 12 miles downstream from Moosehead Lake.

Map of Harris Dam, West Forks, ME 04985, USA

The concrete gravity structure is 175 feet high and was named for Ford Harris, the chief engineer of original builders Central Maine Power. The dam creates about 86 megawatts of hydroelectric power. It is now owned and operated by Brookfield Renewable.

The Kennebec River valley is flooded upstream of the dam northeasterly through Indian Stream township into Sapling township. Tributaries Bog Brook, Gold Brook, Falls Brook, Coburn Brook, and Brandy Brook enter the west side of the reservoir. East side tributaries are Burnham Brook draining Burnham Pond, and Indian Stream draining Little Indian Bog, Big Indian Pond, Trout Pond, and Moore Bog. The reservoir has good cold water habitat for brook trout, lake trout, and land-locked Atlantic salmon.

References

Harris Station Dam Wikipedia