Dale Dike Reservoir

Source From Wikipedia English.

Dale Dike Reservoir or Dale Dyke Reservoir (grid reference SK240913) is a reservoir in the north-east Peak District, in the City of Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England, a mile (1.6 km) west of Bradfield and eight miles (13 km) from the centre of Sheffield, on the Dale Dike, a tributary of the River Loxley.

Dale Dike Reservoir
A lake in a valley surrounded by steep slopes
Dale Dike Reservoir (dam)
Relief map of Sheefield, South Yorkshire
Relief map of Sheefield, South Yorkshire
Dale Dike Reservoir
LocationSheffield
Coordinates53°25′4″N 1°38′28″W / 53.41778°N 1.64111°W / 53.41778; -1.64111
TypeReservoir
Primary inflowsDale Dike
Primary outflowsDale Dike
Catchment area4,010 acres (1,623 ha)
Basin countriesUnited Kingdom
Surface area58 acres (23.4 ha)
Average depth29 ft (8.8 m)
References

Along with three other reservoirs around the village of Bradfield – Agden, Damflask and Strines – it was constructed between 1859 and 1864 by the Sheffield Waterworks Company to guarantee a supply of water to power the mills downstream and to supply drinking water to the growing population of Sheffield. The architect was John Gunson.

Great Sheffield Flood

 
Remains of the Dale Dyke Dam after the flood

The original dam was constructed to a height of 95 feet (29 m) by John Towlerton Leather, and was completed by April 1863. The dam head had a puddle clay core and had a max volume of 114 million cubic feet (3.240 million cubic metres). Filling took place soon after, and by 10 March 1864, the water level was 2 feet 4 inches (0.7 m) below the crest of the dam.

At 23:30 on 11 March 1864, the day after the reservoir was finally full, the newly built dam failed. Over 690 million imperial gallons (3.1 Gl) of water cascaded down the valley causing the Great Sheffield Flood, which caused massive damage downstream along the Loxley and Don and through the centre of Sheffield, destroying over 5,000 properties and killing 244 people.

The new dam

The dam was rebuilt in 1875, some 980 feet (300 m) upstream of the previous dam head, and is still in use, holding 72,860,000 cubic feet (2,063,200 m3) of water, now used exclusively for domestic purposes. It is owned by Yorkshire Water, part of the Kelda Group.

See also

References

Sources

  • Charles, Andrew; Tedd, Paul; Warren, Alan (August 2011). Lessons from historical dam incidents (Report). Bristol: Environment Agency. ISBN 978-1-84911-232-1.

External links