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To view old
construction photos of the dam, CLICK
HERE
The Toledo Bend Dam was planned for many years before
it became a reality.
Twelve years of study and planning were culminated October
5, 1961 with groundbreaking ceremonies officially launching the $60,000,000
Toledo Bend dam and reservoir project on the two-state boundary portion
of the Sabine River.
In any project as large and complex as construction of
the Toledo Bend dam and reservoir and hydroelectric facilities, first
things must come first. In fact, there was orderly scheduling of work
over the estimated four years necessary to bring the project to completion.
In order that an orderly completion of all work might
be achieved within the planned construction period, it was necessary to
initiate work on land acquisition, relocations of highways and other facilities,
and clearing of certain reservoir areas.
The general plan of construction, as originally contemplated,
required that excavation for the spillway and power house be the first
step to be undertaken at the damsite. Earth removed in construction of
the spillway and power house were used in the embankment, which meant
construction of the dam actually began with the earliest excavation on
the project.
Clearing of the damsite, spillway and power house area,
test borings, and on-the-ground surveying and staking preceded the beginning
of earth-moving operations.
Water flow in the river bed was cut off by construction
of small buffer dams just above and just below the damsite, during the
normally dry months of July through October, thus permitting heavy earth-moving
equipment to fill and compact the final gap in the huge embankment.
In connection with land acquisition, a timely and orderly
removal of merchantable timber was necessary. Clearing operations commenced
after removal of the timber. All work of this nature in the reservoir
was completed prior to commencing closure of the dam. Approximately 20,000
acres of timber were permanently submerged, and another 30,000 acres had
various degrees of submergence. Commercial timber was harvested prior
to completion of the project.
Of the total reservoir lands, about 56 percent or 101,600
acres lie in Louisiana and the rest of 44 percent or 80,000 acres in Texas.
In Texas, the reservoir is in Sabine and Shelby Counties, with a small
area in Newton County.
No towns or extensive improvements lay within the reservoir
area, although there were some rural dwellings, stores, churches, and
cemeteries in the area. All cemeteries were moved to higher ground. About
35,000 acres of the Sabine National Forest lay within the proposed Toledo
Bend Reservoir area, all of it on the Texas side.
The ground breaking ceremony for Toledo Bend Dam was held
on October 5, 1961.
Two Southern state governors Price Daniel of Texas and
Jimmy Davis of Louisiana stood side by side on the leading edge of a history-making
epoch as they dug the first official spades of earth in an impressive
beginning of the gigantic Toledo Bend dam and reservoir project which
was to cost up to $60,000,000 to complete and put into operation.
In spading the sand on the two shores of the Sabine River
at Hadden's Ferry, Governor Davis and Governor Daniel thrust the sharp
pointed spear of progress into the greatest single fresh water development
project ever undertaken in the two-state region.
The pleasant autumn air crackled with applause as numerous
dignitaries representing Texas and Louisiana lauded the Toledo Bend project
as the turning point to a new era of expansion and development of the
economic potential of a large area on both sides of the Sabine.
A crowd of exuberant citizens from both states packed
a pointed bluff jutting into the Sabine River about a mile south of the
actual dam site. A wilderness area without roads, the dam site was inaccessible
to officials and the large crowd.
Governors Daniel and Davis literally joined hands across
the Sabine River, to perform traditional ground breaking on the Louisiana
side first and then moved across the water by boat to duplicate the ceremony
on a sandy Texas beach.
The dedication ceremony for the completion of the Toledo
Bend Project was held on October 11, 1969 just eight years and six days
from the time that the ground breaking ceremony was held. The ground breaking
had been on the Louisiana side of the Sabine River and the dedication
ceremony was held on the Texas side.
Some 1,000 persons gathered Saturday morning, October
11, 1969, at Toledo Bend, to witness the official dedication of Toledo
Bend Dam and Reservoir.
The realization born of an idea twenty years ago, and
actually started construction eight years ago, was a joint effort of two
states' combination of will, fortitude, know-how, money, and determination.
Toledo Bend hydroelectric power reservoir is the only such in the nation
built without federal assistance. The 1,200-mile shoreline borders on
Texas and Louisiana, and it was through the cooperation of those two states
that Toledo Bend Dam and Reservoir stands today. Masters of the ceremonies
for the celebration were the presiding officers of the two state's river
authorities involved in the project. Gov. Preston Smith and Gov. John
McKeithen of Louisiana led the list of dignitaries at the dedication,
and did the honors of unveiling the plaque, turning on the turbines, and
expressing their pride and appreciation.
The project was blessed by holy water from the great bend
in the Tajo River in Toledo, Spain. The Archbishop of Toledo blessed the
water sent to Toledo Bend especially for the occasion. Ft. Polk's Army
Band provided music for the ceremonies.
State and national figures, as well as ordinary citizens,
shared in the happiness and pride of the day.
| Welcome |
Calvin T. Watts |
| Invocation |
Honorable Joe Cooper |
| Introduction- Board of Commissioners, Sabine River
Authority, State of Louisiana and Louisiana Dignitaries |
Calvin T. Watts |
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Introduction- Board of Directors, Sabine River Authority
of Texas and Texas Dignitaries
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Charles T. Wickersham |
| Recognition of Special Guest |
John W. Simmons |
| Presentation of Honorable John McKeithen, Governor,
State of Louisiana |
Leon Gary |
| Dedication Address |
Governor McKeithen |
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Presentation of Honorable Preston Smith, Governor,
State of Texas
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Charles T. Wickersham |
| Dedication Address |
Governor Smith |
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CONSECRATION OF WATER FROM TOLEDO,
SPAIN
GOVERNORS THROWING SWITCH TO START POWERHOUSE
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| Benediction |
Honorable Dudley Davis |
To view old
construction photos of the dam, CLICK
HERE
|