Lives and Property
By Stephen Smoot
From the end of the 19 th through the first quarter of the 20 th century, timber companies
relentlessly chopped down as many trees as their numbers of men and machinery would allow.
Eventually, only a few stands of original virgin timber remained in spots as scattered as the
Vanderbilt preserve in western North Carolina or Cathedral State Park in Preston County.
With the removal of both the valuable mature timber, as well as less useful saplings, in the clear
cutting process. According to Ronald Lewis, Professor Emeritus at West Virginia University in
his book Transforming the Appalachian Countryside, the State Board of Agriculture reported in
1900 that the spruce forest alone in West Virginia had dwindled from 1.5 million to less than
225,000 acres.
He added that “several companies operated on Spruce Knob, removing the timber from 30 to
fifty acres each day . . . the wasteful methods employed by the companies of clear-cutting
everything in their path without regard to size turned Spruce Knob into a desolate place.”
AB Brooks, director of the West Virginia Geological Survey, in 1908 reported damage created in
the cut over Spruce Knob countryside by machinery sparking fires in the dead underbrush.
Erosion also took its toll, as the State Board of Agriculture stated in 1900 that on the iconic
mountain, there was “not enough soil in a square rod to meet the ordinary requirements of a hill
of corn.”
Lewis then described the inevitable result of the loss of trees through cutting, loss of other
vegetation through fire, and the loss of soil through erosion – an rapid increase in the number and scope of large destructive floods. “with the forests removed,” he wrote, “so too were the natural controls on water flow.
When cycles of high precipitation hit in the following decades, floods devastated both farms and
communities in areas most directly affected by the clear-cutting of Appalachian timber. Today,
modern timber cutting practices carefully preserve the integrity of the forest, resulting in West
Virginia annually growing twice as many trees as are lost through timbering or natural attrition,
but awareness of the need for this did not take place until the 1930s.
The new awareness came too late. Only after decades could the forestlands in West Virginia and across the Appalachian region see a recovery of both their size and their ability to mitigate heavy precipitation and limit flooding.
The Tennessee Valley Authority’s Depression-era seizure of farmland for use in building dams
for hydroelectric power and flood control required a near-tyrannical cost, but did prove that a
network of dams could reduce the impacts of flooding in the mountains and Appalachian Plateau hills and hollows.
In 1944, Congress passed the Flood Control Act, followed by the Watershed Protection and
Flood Prevention Act of 1954.
This federal legislation empowered the United States Department of Agriculture’s Natural
Resources Conservation Service to enact a series of programs to reduce or prevent the impacts of heavy precipitation and flooding. One provided for the construction of hundreds of small
watershed flood control dams.
According to Gene Sauerborn from the West Virginia Conservation Agency “building started in
the 50s, then hit their stride in the 50s, 60s, and 70s.” The peak of construction nationwide took
place between 1963 and 1966. He emphasized that this particular program aimed at creating
structures to trap excess water on tributaries well upstream of where they empty into larger
streams and rivers. They serve as part of “a cumulative holding back of waters.”
He adds that 112 of these by the end of this year “will be at the end of their evaluated life.”
West Virginia has 170 small watershed flood control dams constructed statewide. The West Fork Conservation District, which includes Harrison County, has 15
State and local officials are responsible for regular maintenance. According to a typical operation and maintenance agreement signed in 1964, the Soil Conservation Service (now NRCS) provides technical assistance while the conservation district (the agreement now includes both the local district and WVCA) will prevent any changes that would interfere with the proper function of the dam and serve as sponsors.
Expenses incurred under the operations and management agreement came in at just under
$300,000 in 2010, but topped $1 million in both 2014 and 2021. Sauerbrun noted that state and
local authorities are now responsible for repairs short of dam rehabilitation. Rehabilitation means the replacement of the structure or the bringing of it up to modern engineering standards, which can cost an average of between $8 and 12 million. The need for rehabilitation, however, does not necessarily indicate an emergent danger of failure.
Seven dams in Harrison County, Salem Fork Dam Sites 11A, 11, 13, 12, nine, 15, and 14 have all passed their allotted life of 50 years. Construction of these all took place between 1954 and 1958.Don Whetzel, Operations Manager East for the West Virginia Conservation Agency, stated “that is not uncommon across the state and country. These dams can continue to function properly, as they are designed.”
Whetzel shared that these dams each successfully functioned during heavy rains in April of this year “and held back higher than normal amounts of water.”
State and local conservation officials, fortunately, have diligently performed proper maintenance
on these dams built of earth, concrete, or a combination of both. Sauerbrun says “most as a
whole are in pretty good shape.” He added that modern “engineering standards DO warrant upgrades to these structures – which have passed their evaluated life – to ensure their longevity.”
A major issue, however, lies in the growth of population and development around and even
beneath these dams. New Creek Dam Site number one in Mineral County, for example, was
constructed prior to that of a Keyser neighborhood located not only beneath the dam, but also in
its spillway. A WVCA map lays out plans for roadblocks and evacuation centers that would have
to accommodate hundreds currently living in the path of the spillway and also on New Creek
downstream.
In many ways, the dams help to pay for themselves even beyond the tremendous benefits of
flood prevention. According to the West Virginia Conservation Agency, between 2014 and 2023,
NRCS “quantified more than $9.1 million in average annual benefits to areas surrounding the 73
Potomac Valley dams. The lakes and ponds created behind the dams provide areas for water
supply, irrigation, erosion prevention, livestock watering, and also adding value to wildlife
Habitats.
Patsy Trecost II, Harrison County Commissioner, explained the benefit to WVCA, which quoted him on their website as saying “while dams in Harrison County are primarily for flood protection, it is also important to have a reserve of water for farmers in times of drought.”
He added that the Salem Fork dams provide vital flood protection for Salem, Lumberport, and other communities.