Rainbow Falls Dam
| Photo Credit |
Above is a picture of Handsome Falls which was later renamed to Rainbow Falls. Lewis and Clark named it the former on their way by back in the early 1800's and sometime later, it was renamed to Rainbow falls by the time my 2nd great aunt Clara ventured there in the early 1900's. In fact, by the time Clara Kuck got there, a newly constructed dam and power house had been completed.
Being a big fan of Lewis and Clark and have read their journals in unedited and edited formats over the years, I have always wished I could have seen it when the Missouri River was still free running. Even with the dam, I've thought that someday I would like to stop by and see what remains of the lower part of the falls, the upper part being covered by the impounded waters of the reservoir behind the dam. These days, according to the Google Earth image down at the bottom of this post, only a trickle of water goes over the lower part of the falls now. But the above picture taken when Clara Kuck was there sometime after her return from Germany in 1912 and before 1915 in which her name first appears in the local directory. The dam was only a few years old at that point and the water is still gushing over the lower portions of the falls below the dam.
Back then, liability wasn't as big an issue as it is now and evidently one could travel across the dam and see the gushing waters up close. I suppose she was on some sort of special train car judging by the tracks on top but perhaps she was walking on the boardwalk.
I was scanning the below modern day aerial view trying to get my bearings and wasn't having much luck so I started searching for the power house on the internet and learned that it was only in recent years razed to the ground. According to the news clip I found sometime around 2024, parts of the structure were salvaged to installed in various places around town. As late as 2020, it was going to be repurposed as a data farm but those plans evidently fell through since it was torn down.
If you would like to watch the news clip, you can do so HERE.
| Clara Kuck circa 1914 |
Oddly, we both posted about dams today — in very different ways, of course.
ReplyDeleteI guess that makes us dam lucky!
DeleteI've visited a number of dams and they're fascinating places. I love Clara's outfit! They knew how to dress in those days.
DeleteShe is well dressed in every single photo which either teachers were compensated more back in the day or she was receiving a stipend from her father.
DeleteWhat a great adventurous lady! Neat old photos!
ReplyDeleteShe certainly was well traveled.
DeleteThat's pretty up close and personal! (and exciting!) Her caption "on the dam top" makes me think of all the banter about the "dam tour" in the Las Vegas Vacation movie.
ReplyDeleteAC and I have been having a good dam time this morning as he wrote a dam post today too.
DeleteAncestry and dams. Doesn't get much better than that.
ReplyDeleteUnfortunately, that is probably my last dam post for awhile.
DeleteI recall visiting a dam when I was very little. The thing that sticks in my memory is how noisy it was. Pretty scary for a little kid.
ReplyDeleteAs a boater, they have always scared the heck out of me because of how deadly they are.
DeleteI'm really admiring her outfit too since it looks very warm. I'm getting nervous about our trip to Hokkaido on Friday. I've been to the Hoover dam and it's pretty awesome to see the power generated.
ReplyDeleteI’ll keep you in my thoughts for a safe journey.
DeleteIt is interesting to look back on history in our regions. There is a Dam good story of our area about the dam that never happened.
ReplyDeleteIt was called The LaFarge Dam Project and was to stop the historic flooding from the Kickapoo River.
I now hike the Kickapoo Valley Reserve which was created after the project ended. You can read about it here:
http://kvr.state.wi.us/About-Us/History/La-Farge-Dam-Project/
The project and land grabbing is still a very sore subject with the those that had family farms in the valley around the river.
In recent times, we are learning that all these dams were not so beneficial to us and starting to unwind some be tearing a few of them down. We are fortunate that a precious few like the one you linked never got built.
Delete"Handsome Falls" does sound a bit awkward, so I can see why they renamed it. The history in your old photos is fascinating -- no doubt even more so to people who know the area.
ReplyDeleteFor sure. Whenever I see an old photo of where I grew up, I am completely captivated.
DeleteInteresting about the Dam...and I love that she had a camera!
ReplyDeleteIt ran in the family. Her nephew took a camera with him on his deployment to France during World War I and his picture album are one of my most treasured possessions.
DeleteIvan Doig was a writer from Montana (I've reviewed a number of his works). While he writes fiction, dams (and the building of dams) play a large role in his stories set in the early 20th Century, which probably shows the importance the played in the popular thought of the day (of course, they were to make things better...)
ReplyDeleteI live along a fairly large river now and it has had it's share of dam building over the years, mostly in the era that Clara visited the Rainbow Falls dam. Unlike that one in Montana, the ones built along the river here mostly lasted just a few years until the next big flood wiped them out again.
Delete