LAKE OUACHITA
On
Highway 270, about 13 miles east of Mount Ida and a mile or
so west of the border separating Montgomery and Garland
counties, is a road heading north up Hickory Nut Mountain to
the Lake Ouachita Vista. At the very top of the mountain,
about four miles, the panorama before you is Lake Ouachita,
so named for an ancient Indian tribe living along the
Ouachita River. Following is the story behind that vast
expanse of water.
The Problem
In the late 1800s the Ouachita River wound around and down
through the mountains to Blakely Mountain, from where it ran
a distance of 75 miles, falling 228 feet, to Arkadelphia.
From Arkadelphia to Camden, 6.5 miles, it fell only 82.5
feet before continuing on to the Black River on even more
level terrain. The variation in stream flow caused
significant flooding downstream.
Before
the turn of the 20th century, the U.S. Congress authorized
the first of what became many public and private surveys of
the river to determine what could be done about the
flooding. Recommendations for a series of dams brought a
new question. Who should pay for them?
Finally, in 1910 the power generation potential of a dam was
recognized, and in the early 1920s Arkansas Power and Light
(now known as Entergy) began buying land for a lake
reservoir.
In 1923 AP&L began work on Remmel Dam which created Lake
Catherine, followed by Carpenter Dam creating Lake Hamilton
in Hot Springs. But economics were still an issue, and they
doubted the time was right for Blakely Dam.
Ultimately, in 1939 AP&L
requested an economic delay on the construction of Blakely
Mountain Dam which was to create Lake Ouachita. In 1941
AP&L's permit to construct was terminated, an authorization
that was passed on to the Army Corps of Engineers via a
Senate flood control bill in 1944.
Preparation
Between 1947 and 1952
the Ouachita River Valley was cleared for the reservoir.
Owners of farms and residences did not always agree with the
government appraised value of their property. As little as
$27 per acre was paid. Owners could keep their timber if
they got it cut immediately. As many as 18 to 29
sawmills were set up in the reservoir site to harvest the
timber. Haulers were paid approximately $21 per cord
to cut, load, and haul timber on their own trucks.
After the good timber was
cut, clearing crews finished by cutting brush, which was
either burned or left for fish cover and spawning grounds,
and by topping trees that extended above 535 feet. A
fish-finder can see the trees still standing on the lake
bottom; the tops of some may rise above the surface during
low water periods.
County and state roads,
including short portions of State Highway 27 and U.S.
Highway 270 were rerouted. Cemeteries within the reservoir
were moved to new locations during the summer of 1952. Due
to the acidic soil, few actual remains were found in the
1200 or so graves exhumed, but personal items found in
burial sites included a man's watch, a celluloid collar and
cuffs, and a mustache cup of ancient vintage.
Concealed under the water are
a few small towns and roads, the places where some folks
were born, and the land that produced a 14-pound sweet
potato, a ribbon winner at the state fair.
Construction
A 200-foot-wide
emergency spillway was built between 1947 and 1948.
Next was the two-year construction of a flood control tunnel
and power tunnel which were used to redirect the river while
the dam was being built.
Construction of the dam
itself, along with the concrete intake structures, began on
March 29, 1950. In 1952 a 251-foot-high, 1100-foot-wide dam
of almost four million cubic yards of rolled earth was
completed. The flood gates were closed, water began to back
up, and Lake Ouachita was born. Construction of the power
plant began in 1952, and hydroelectric power was first
produced and sold under contract to AP&L in 1955. On July 4,
1956, the Army Corps of Engineers formally turned over the
use of the dam and lake to Arkansas. Final cost of the
Blakely Mountain Dam was over $30,000,000 and represented
more than nine years of actual construction.
Lake Ouachita Today
At the optimum lake
level of 578 feet above sea level, the lake covers 40,000
plus acres, contains over 419 billion gallons of water, has
over 690 miles of shoreline, and harbors many islands. The
lake level must reach 592 feet to enter the emergency
spillway. While the water has never overflowed, there
was a close call in January of 1983 when the level was only
.8 of a foot short.
The Corps of Engineers
oversees about 66,000 acres of lake and shoreline. The
shore and the surrounding Ouachita National Forest are
limited to a minimal development of resorts, marinas, and
campgrounds provided by the Army Corps of Engineers, the
U.S. Forest Service, and private individuals.
The economics are now
different. Since the gates closed and the final flood
created Lake Ouachita, the Blakely Dam powerhouse has
generated multiple millions of dollars more than the cost of
construction, supplanting the need for oil, and generating
enough power to supply 38,000 homes with electricity.
In 1954, not long after the
lake came to be, an estimated 220,000 people visited the
Lake Ouachita area. Today the number of annual visitors
exceeds eight million, benefiting local businesses along
with fishermen and vacationers enjoying the variety of
recreational opportunities that only a clean, clear lake and
a scenic mountain setting can provide.
This article was
created for the Montgomery County History Trail by the Mount
Ida Area Chamber of Commerce. Statistics and information
included were gleaned from publications of the Arkansas
Department of Parks and Tourism, the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers, The Arkansas Democrat Gazette, and Montgomery
County - Our Heritage, published by the Montgomery County
Historical Society.