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Nooksack Falls Hydroelectric Plant, Route 542, Glacier, Whatcom County, WA

description

Summary

Significance: With a generating capacity of 1,500 kilowatts, the Nooksack plant is the second oldest operating hydroelectric facility in western Washington (only the Snoqualmie Falls plant (1899) is earlier the Electron plant, although completed in 1903, was rebuilt in 1939 after a landslide completely destroyed the power station). Some modifications have been made to this facility through the years (most notably the replacement of the turbine in 1910 and the installation of a new dam and water conveyance system in 1931); but much of the Nooksack plant has remained unchanged for the eighty years of its existence. Importantly, the power plant retains its original Westinghouse generator and the Pelton wheels installed in 1910.

Unprocessed Field note material exists for this structure: N4

Survey number: HAER WA-18

Building/structure dates: 1906 Initial Construction

Building/structure dates: 1910 Subsequent Work

Building/structure dates: 1931 Subsequent Work

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Tags

hydroelectric power plants glacier nooksack falls nooksack falls whatcom whatcom county washington state energy generation bellingham bay improvement company pierre b cornwall historic american engineering record kimberly jones charles stone edwin webster photo nooksack falls hydroelectric plant ultra high resolution high resolution power plants power generator library of congress electric power
date_range

Date

1969 - 1980
person

Contributors

Historic American Engineering Record, creator
Cornwall, Pierre B
Bellingham Bay Improvement Company
Stone, Charles
Webster, Edwin
Jones, Kimberly, transmitter
place

Location

create

Source

Library of Congress
link

Link

http://www.loc.gov/
copyright

Copyright info

No known restrictions on images made by the U.S. Government; images copied from other sources may be restricted. http://www.loc.gov/rr/print/res/114_habs.html

label_outline Explore Nooksack, Nooksack Falls, Bellingham Bay Improvement Company

Portland General Electric Company, Station "L", 1841 Southeast Water Street, Portland, Multnomah County, OR

Workmen dig into the ground to install a new boundary security system around a Pave Paws radar site. The $2.2 million military construction project is about 25 percent complete and includes anti-tunneling protection, improved lighting systems with a back-up power generator, upgraded entry control points and a new security alarm room inside the site

Skagit Power Development, Gorge Powerhouse, On Skagit River, 0.4 mile upstream from Newhalem, Newhalem, Whatcom County, WA

Skagit Power Development, Ross Powerhouse, On Skagit River, 10.7 miles upstream from Newhalem, Newhalem, Whatcom County, WA

Generating equipment lies beneath a section of collapsed roof in the base power plant. The roof collapsed under the weight of the volcanic ash that fell during the eruption of Mount Pinatubo

Huber Coal Breaker, Power Plant, 101 South Main Street, Ashley, Luzerne County, PA

Tennessee Valley Authority. Watts Bar Dam hydroelectric plant. One of four tube-generating units which produce electric power at TVA's Watts Bar steam plant. This plant will supplement the big hydroelectric installations at Watts Bar Dam, which has an authorized output of 90,000 kilowatts, and a possible ultimate of 150,000 kilowatts. Each of the four big turbo-generators in the steam plant is rated at 60,000 kilowatts

Telluride Power Company, Olmsted Hydroelectric Plant, mouth of Provo River Canyon West of U.S. Route 189, Orem, Utah County, UT

Public Service of New Jersey, Burlington, New Jersey. Turbine generators IV

Fort Knox. Power line construction. This husky member of a construction crew, building a new 33,000 volt electric power line into Fort Knox, Kentucky, is performing an important war service. Thousands of soldiers are in training at Fort Knox, and the new line from a hydroelectric plant at Louisville is needed to supplement the existing power supply

Battle Creek Hydroelectric System, Battle Creek & Tributaries, Red Bluff, Tehama County, CA

Republiek: Dolok Simoembah, Prapat, Bidamanik, oost van Pematang Siantar; zuiveringsacties aan de Oostkust van Sumatra

Topics

hydroelectric power plants glacier nooksack falls nooksack falls whatcom whatcom county washington state energy generation bellingham bay improvement company pierre b cornwall historic american engineering record kimberly jones charles stone edwin webster photo nooksack falls hydroelectric plant ultra high resolution high resolution power plants power generator library of congress electric power