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Washington
Aqueduct
The
Washington Aqueduct is the District of Columbia's first public water
system.
Built by the Army Corps of Engineers from 1853 to 1863, it is a
monumental achievement and a tribute to the brilliance of its designer
and developer, Montgomery C. Meigs. In 1852 the ever-growing population
of Washington, and the memory of two devastating fires, forced the
U.S. Congress to acknowledge that the nation's capital required
more than the wells and springs that were its current sources of
water.
In November
of 1853 ground was broken at Great Falls, Maryland for a public
water system for Washington. Meig's plan was to divert the water
from the Potomac River (12 miles upstream) into a brick conduit.
Gravity and pumping stations would direct water through the conduit
to retaining reservoirs where it could then be pumped to the city's
pipelines.
To accomplish
this feat the Army Corps of Engineers constructioned a masonry dam
across the Potomac, a control gatehouse at Great Falls, a 12 mile
conduit, 11 tunnels, 6 bridges, pump stations, pipelines, and 2
reservoirs! Supplies like cast iron, sand, concrete,brick and Seneca
sandstone were brought to the construction site by wagon or by boat
on the C&O Canal. The aqueduct's dam was originally built only
halfway across the river. It was extended to the Virginia side between
1884 and 1885 to meet the District's ever-increasing demand for
water. Built of cut stone, the dam was anchored to the river floor,
not to block its flow but to divert it.
In the mid-1920's
a second conduit was added to increase the capacity of the system,
and the intake was enlarged and modernized. The most recent expansion
in the 1970's produced the building and observation deck that stand
on the original location today. Four "gates" allow water
diverted behind the dam to enter the two conduits by gravity flow.
A small portion of the original sandstone intake is still visible
on the shoreline.
The first gatehouse,
although no longer in service, stands next to the Great Falls Tavern.
The red sandstone used as the building material was quarried just
eight miles west in Seneca, Maryland. Inside was a system of 20
small cast iron slide gates. They were operated by threaded hand
wrenches and filtered the largest debris from the water.
The conduit
is the largest structure of the water system. It stretches almost
12 miles downriver from the intake at Great Falls to the Georgetown
Reservoir. The circular tube, built of brick, stone and mortar,
is 9 feet in diameter. It was constructed by tunneling and by deep
rock cuts. A road was built parallel to the conduit to facilitate
cleaning repairs and inspections. The road was originally named
Conduit Road, today it is MacArthur Boulevard.
Six bridges
were built as part of the original Washington Aqueduct water system.
They carried the conduit over streams and creeks. Only three: Bridge
#3, the old Cabin John bridge ( also called Union Arch bridge) and
Rock Creek bridge remain in full view today. The latter two enjoyed
much acclaim when they were constructed. Cabin John, built of timber,
granite and sandstone held the record as the world's longest masonry
arch-220 feet-for 40 years. Rock Creek used cast iron pipes not
only to transport water but also to support a span for vehicular
traffic. Today its 200-foot arch is still one of the longest unsupported
metal pipe arches in the world.
Aqueduct water
spilled into 2 reservoirs, Dalecarlia Reservoir at the District
line and the Georgetown Reservoir two miles downriver. It was hoped
that by allowing the murky river water to remain in these reservoirs
the material carried in suspension would settle to the bottom before
it was distributed to the city. Such was not the case. Washington
City's public water had a muddy yellowish color until rapid-sand
filtration was adopted in 1928. Today Dalecarlia has been completely
modernized, and the Georgetown Reservoir is a sedimentation basin
with filtration completed at another location.
Amazingly the
Washington Aqueduct, constructed over 140 years ago, is still supplying
the nation's capital with public water. Over the decades its capacity
has been expanded many times, modern filtration has been implemented
and fluoride added. The Aqueduct produces 300 million gallons of
filtered water per day, has a storage capacity of 44 million gallons
and serves 1.1 million customers. The Aqueduct provides public water
for all of Washington, Arlington County, and Falls Church; 50 square
miles of Fairfax County; and all federal installations including
the Pentagon, Fort Meyer, Andrews Airforce Base, the Defense Mapping
Agency, and National Airport.
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