Lake History

Fort Gibson Lake is located on the Grand (Neosho) River about 5 miles northwest of historic Fort Gibson, Oklahoma, from which it draws its name. It is about 7.7 miles above the confluence of the Grand (Neosho) and Arkansas Rivers. The lake lies in Wagoner , Cherokee, and Mayes Counties and extends upriver to the Markham Ferry Dam (Lake Hudson). Northeast Oklahoma has long been noted for its oustanding fishing. At Fort Gibson Lake, sportsmen will find black bass, white bass, crappie, and several varieties of catfish and panfish. Three heated fishing docks offer winter fun for crappie fishing. When "game fever" is in the air, hunters will find such species as whitetail deer, bobwhite quail, mourning dove, duck, geese, cottontail rabbit and squirrel.

Local History

Fort Gibson Lake nestles in the hills of eastern Oklahoma where the Cherokee Indians for 60 years maintained a self-governing Indian Nation. Nearby Fort Gibson, for which the lake is named, played a prominent part in the military history of early-day Oklahoma. It was the scene of many important events - from the first appearance of the Indians of the Five Civilized Tribes, through its contacts with the tribes of the western plains, and the turbulent years of the Civil War. Union and Confederate forces at different times occupied the post. Founded in 1824 by Col. Matthew Arbuckle, of the 7th Infantry, and named for Col. George Gibson, this was the farthest west military outpost in the chain of fortifications stretching from the northern to the southern borders of the United States. Until 1857, it served as the chief military center for the Indian Territory and many treaties with the Indians were signed here. It was the base for the establishment of the subposts of Forts Chaffee, Wayne, Holmes, Arbuckle, and Washita. Jefferson Davis, later president of the Confederacy, served here under Gen. Zachary Taylor, who became President of the United States in 1849. Washington Irving, accompanying an exploring expedition in 1832, started the trip from Fort Gibson which he described in his book, 'A Tour On The Prairies." It was also from Fort Gibson that George Catlin, renowned painter of the American Indian, set out with the First Infantry Dragoons on their expedition into the Kiowa and Comanche Country i n 1834. The name of the first post office at the site, Cantonment Gibson, was changed to Fort Gibson in 1842. Among the many famous Americans identified with Fort Gibson are Capt. Nathan Boone, A.P. Chouteau, Sam Houston, Gen. Henry Leavenworth, Robert E. L ee, and John Howard Payne. Fort Gibson National Cemetery - the only national cemetery in Oklahoma is located 1/2 mile east of the town of Fort Gibson. The old Texas Road, with its traffic of cattlemen, freighters, and traders, passed near the Fort, but the main communication for the troops and residents of the surrounding country was by steamboat on the Arkansas River. French fur traders of the Southwest made it a center for their business transactions, and supplies for a large area were imported and dispersed from this point. Abandoned by the Government in 1857, Fort Gibson was reoccupied during the Civil War. After the war it continued as an agency, aiding in the civilization of the west before it was fully abandon in 1890. Today at Fort Gibson, a reconstructed log stockade stands on the site of the first log fort. Now a National Historical Landmark, the stockade is owned by the state of Oklahoma and is open to the public year-round. Other communities near the lake, with the dates their post off ices wer e established, include Wagoner, 1888; Okay, a trading post as far back as 1822, had several names before it became "Okay" in 1919; Mazie, 1905; Chouteau, 1871; Murphy, 1912; and Hulbert, 1903.

HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT

The Fort Gibson project was authorize d by the Flood Control Act of 1 941 and incorporated in the Arkansas River multiple-purpose plan by the River and Harbor Act of July 1946. Designed and built by the Tulsa District, Corps of Engineers, the project was started in 1942, suspended during Worl d War 11, and completed in September 1953, at a cost of $42,535,000.

History of Construction:

Construction began in 1942, was suspended during World War II, and resumed in May 1946. Closure of the embankment was completed in June 1949. The project became fully operational when the last of four generators started producing commercial power in September 1953.

Type of Structure:

The dam includes two concrete, gravity, non-overflow sections. One section, 285 feet long, extends from the spillway to the earth embankment at the right abutment. The other section, 460 feet long, extends from the intake structure to the earth embankment at the left abutment. The dam also includes two earth embankment sections, one of which extends about 374 feet from the natural ground at the right abutment to the right bank concrete non-overflow section. The other embankment, 63 feet long, extends from the left abutment to the left bank concrete non-overflow section. The powerhouse intake structure is located adjacent to the spillway on the left and is 318 feet long . The total length of the structures, including the spillway, is 2,990 feet, and the maximum height above the streambed is 110 feet. Oklahoma State Highway 251A extends across the top of the structures. There are seven rolled earthfill dikes on the west side of the reservoir which have a total length of 21,678 feet.

Spillway and Outlet Works:

The spillway section is a concrete, gravity, ogee weir which extends across the existing river channel and a major portion of the right bank flood plain. Spillway capacity is 986,000 cfs at the top of the flood control pool. The spillway is equipped with thirty 40-foot by 35-foot tainter gates operated by individual electric-motored hoists. The total length of the spillway is 1,490 feet. Outlet works consist of ten 5-foot 8-inch by 7-foot rectangular sluices located through the spillway weir. Capacity of the outlet works varies from 21,000 cfs at the flood control pool elevation with no spillway discharge to 14,400 cfs at the flood control pool elevation with the spillway discharging at full capacity. Flows through the sluices are controlled by means of hydraulically-operated cast-iron slide gates. Emergency closure of the sluices can be accomplished using a bulkhead lowered by a hoist into frames provided at the sluice entrances. A 48-inch diameter pipe is located through the right abutment of the dam for municipal water supply for the city of Muskogee. Bank-full capacity on the Grand (Neosho) River below the dam is about 100,000 cfs.

Hydrologic Data:

Estimated peak discharge and volume for the flood of 7 May to1 June 1943 (with Grand Lake O' the Cherokees in operation) were 400,000 cfs and 5,918,000 acre-feet, respectively. Total runoff from the drainage area above the dam site was 8.88 inches.

 

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