Misplaced Pages

Lake Wallenpaupack: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 20:10, 9 September 2006 editBobblewik (talk | contribs)66,026 editsm units, links← Previous edit Revision as of 20:11, 9 September 2006 edit undoBobblewik (talk | contribs)66,026 editsm unitsNext edit →
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Lake Wallenpaupack''' ({{coor dms|41|24|47|N|75|14|25|W}}) is an artificial reservoir in ], ]. It was created in 1927 by ], the Pennsylvania Power & Light Company, for hydroelectric purposes. It is located near ], on the border of ] and ] counties in northeastern ]. '''Lake Wallenpaupack''' ({{coor dms|41|24|47|N|75|14|25|W}}) is an artificial reservoir in ], ]. It was created in 1927 by ], the Pennsylvania Power & Light Company, for hydroelectric purposes. It is located near ], on the border of ] and ] counties in northeastern ].


Information from the reveals that construction started early in 1924 and 2,700 men worked nearly 2 years to complete the project. It included the dam, the power plant, and the giant wooden flow line to carry the water from the Lake to the plant location 3 1/2 miles (6 km) away. The original wooden structure, one of the worlds largest pipelines at that time, was constructed from 5 million board feet (12,000 m³) of douglas fir and transported by ship from the state of Washington.
According to the :
<blockquote>
Construction started early in 1924 and 2,700 men worked nearly 2 years to complete the project. It included the dam, the power plant, and the giant wooden flow line to carry the water from the Lake to the plant location 3 1/2 miles (6 km) away. The original wooden structure, one of the worlds largest pipelines at that time, was constructed from 5 million board feet (12,000 m³) of douglas fir and transported by ship from the state of Washington.


The Wallenpaupack 44 MW power plant was constructed simultaneously with the dam and put into service in 1926. The plant increased PPL's system generating capacity approximately 25% in 1926. It's system-wide generating capacity, when the plant went on line, was only about 225 MW. The Wallenpaupack 44 MW power plant was constructed simultaneously with the dam and put into service in 1926. The plant increased PPL's system generating capacity approximately 25% in 1926. It's system-wide generating capacity, when the plant went on line, was only about 225 MW.
</blockquote>


Lake Wallenpaupack is a center of recreation for the surrounding communities, providing boating and fishing access in the summertime, as well as ice skating and ice fishing in the winter. Lake Wallenpaupack is a center of recreation for the surrounding communities, providing boating and fishing access in the summertime, as well as ice skating and ice fishing in the winter.

Revision as of 20:11, 9 September 2006

Lake Wallenpaupack (41°24′47″N 75°14′25″W / 41.41306°N 75.24028°W / 41.41306; -75.24028) is an artificial reservoir in Pennsylvania, USA. It was created in 1927 by PPL, the Pennsylvania Power & Light Company, for hydroelectric purposes. It is located near Hawley, on the border of Pike and Wayne counties in northeastern Pennsylvania.

Information from the Hawley-Lake Wallenpaupack Chamber of Commerce reveals that construction started early in 1924 and 2,700 men worked nearly 2 years to complete the project. It included the dam, the power plant, and the giant wooden flow line to carry the water from the Lake to the plant location 3 1/2 miles (6 km) away. The original wooden structure, one of the worlds largest pipelines at that time, was constructed from 5 million board feet (12,000 m³) of douglas fir and transported by ship from the state of Washington.

The Wallenpaupack 44 MW power plant was constructed simultaneously with the dam and put into service in 1926. The plant increased PPL's system generating capacity approximately 25% in 1926. It's system-wide generating capacity, when the plant went on line, was only about 225 MW.

Lake Wallenpaupack is a center of recreation for the surrounding communities, providing boating and fishing access in the summertime, as well as ice skating and ice fishing in the winter.

The lake was the subject of "Booze Cruise", a 2006 episode of the NBC sitcom, The Office. In the episode of the show, which is set in nearby Scranton, Pennsylvania, the office crew goes on a "motivational" cruise on the lake. The episode, like the rest of the series, was filmed in California.

Stub icon

This Pennsylvania state location article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: