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East Branch Reservoir

Coordinates: 41°23′49″N 73°35′28″W / 41.397039°N 73.591238°W / 41.397039; -73.591238
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East Branch Reservoir
Location of East Branch Reservoir in New York, USA.
Location of East Branch Reservoir in New York, USA.
East Branch Reservoir
Location of East Branch Reservoir in New York, USA.
Location of East Branch Reservoir in New York, USA.
East Branch Reservoir
LocationPutnam County, New York
Coordinates41°23′49″N 73°35′28″W / 41.397039°N 73.591238°W / 41.397039; -73.591238
Typereservoir
Primary inflowsEast branch of the Croton River
Catchment area75 sq mi (190 km2)
Basin countriesUnited States
Surface area525 acres (2.12 km2)
Average depth32 ft (9.8 m)
Surface elevation417 ft (127 m)[1]

East Branch Reservoir, is a reservoir in the town of Southeast, New York, near the village of Brewster. Part of the New York City water supply system, it was formed by impounding the East Branch of the Croton River. Forming part of the Croton Watershed, it was placed into service in 1891, and lies some 35 miles (56 km) north of the city, in the southeast corner of Putnam County.

History

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The East Branch Reservoir has a surface area of 525 acres (2.12 km2), reaches a mean depth of 32 feet (9.8 m), and holds 5.2 billion US gal (20 million m3) at full capacity. It drains a 75-square-mile (190 km2) area that includes Bog Brook Reservoir. Its water flows back into the East Branch of the Croton River south of the dam, then into The Diverting Reservoir, then via the Croton River to the Muscoot and the New Croton reservoirs, into the New Croton Aqueduct. Water from the aqueduct flows into the Jerome Park Reservoir in the Bronx for daily distribution.

One of two double reservoirs in NYC's system, it is connected to the Bog Brook impoundment via a 1,778-foot (542 m) tunnel. When the two were being built, the project's name was "Double Reservoir I". The second double reservoir project ("Double Reservoir II") would create the Croton Falls and Diverting reservoirs.

The village of Southeast Center, named for the town of Southeast, was leveled and flooded to create the reservoir. Parts of the village remain, including Sodom Road, at the foot of the Sodom Dam, which holds the reservoir back.

Spillway

Construction of the reservoir also flooded part of the village of Milltown in the northeastern corner of Southeast, near present-day Deforest Corners. Many of the village's original buildings were moved to higher ground, onto present-day Milltown Road, one of Southeast's longest roads running from New Fairfield, Connecticut, to Route 22 in Southeast. The village of Milltown's one-room schoolhouse still stands today as a private residence. Foundations, rock walls and roadbeds for both villages can still be seen during droughts.

See also

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References

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