District Digest News Stories

Center Hill Lake open house, power plant tours draw young, elderly visitors

Nashville District Public Affairs
Published July 21, 2012
Tim Dunn, right, operations project manager for the mid-Cumberland area, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Nashville District, explains why the Corps is having guided tours of the Center Hill Lake power plant during an interview with NBC News Channel 4 reporter and videographer Forrest Sanders July 21, 2012. (USACE photo by Fred Tucker)

Tim Dunn, right, operations project manager for the mid-Cumberland area, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Nashville District, explains why the Corps is having guided tours of the Center Hill Lake power plant during an interview with NBC News Channel 4 reporter and videographer Forrest Sanders July 21, 2012. (USACE photo by Fred Tucker)

Linda Adcock, project manager on the Center Hill Earthen Dam Seepage Rehabilitation Project, explains to Jared Herren, 9, how the 110-inch by 84-inch Bauer Cutter can drill 300 feet into soil and rock and pump the cuttings back to the surface in a slurry mix for removal. Jared’s late great-grandfather, Oba Herren, reportedly lost approximately 100 acres of property taken for construction of the dam and resulting Center Hill Lake, but who was also employed in the construction. Adcock briefed visitors to the July 21, 2012 tour of the power plant and ongoing construction project. (USACE photo by Fred Tucker)

Linda Adcock, project manager on the Center Hill Earthen Dam Seepage Rehabilitation Project, explains to Jared Herren, 9, how the 110-inch by 84-inch Bauer Cutter can drill 300 feet into soil and rock and pump the cuttings back to the surface in a slurry mix for removal. Jared’s late great-grandfather, Oba Herren, reportedly lost approximately 100 acres of property taken for construction of the dam and resulting Center Hill Lake, but who was also employed in the construction. Adcock briefed visitors to the July 21, 2012 tour of the power plant and ongoing construction project. (USACE photo by Fred Tucker)

Tom Nixon, 83, who worked on the construction of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Nashville District Center Hill Dam that was completed for flood control in 1948, shared memories with employees and other visitors July 21, 2012. From left in background are Nixon’s wife, Dot; son, David; and daughter-in-law, Gloria. Many younger folks don’t remember the flooding that occurred almost annually before the dam was built, according to Nixon. (USACE photo by Fred Tucker)

Tom Nixon, 83, who worked on the construction of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Nashville District Center Hill Dam that was completed for flood control in 1948, shared memories with employees and other visitors July 21, 2012. From left in background are Nixon’s wife, Dot; son, David; and daughter-in-law, Gloria. Many younger folks don’t remember the flooding that occurred almost annually before the dam was built, according to Nixon. (USACE photo by Fred Tucker)

Chuck Ogle, Center Hill power plant superintendent, briefs visitors July 21, 2012 prior to the first tour of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Nashville District facility since Sept.11, 2001. (USACE photo by Fred Tucker)

Chuck Ogle, Center Hill power plant superintendent, briefs visitors July 21, 2012 prior to the first tour of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Nashville District facility since Sept.11, 2001. (USACE photo by Fred Tucker)

LANCASTER, Tenn. (July 21, 2012) – The first tours of the Center Hill Lake Power Plant since Sept. 11, 2001 drew the young and the elderly here today.  Visitors ranged from an 83-year-old gentleman who worked on construction of the dam to a nine-year-old boy whose late great-grandfather’s property was reduced by approximately 100 acres, but who also worked on construction of the dam.

“Most of the younger folks around here nowadays don’t remember the flooding that occurred almost annually before this dam was built,” said Tom Nixon, 83, who worked for one of the contractors during construction of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Nashville District dam that was completed for flood control in 1948.

Mr. Nixon came with his wife, Dorothy; son, David; and daughter-in-law, Gloria, and shared some of his memories with Corps personnel during the tour of the power plant, the open house at the resource manager’s office and the update briefing on the Earthen Dam Seepage Rehabilitation Project.

Among the younger visitors was Jared Herren, 9, whose late great-grandfather, Oba Herren, reportedly lost approximately 100 acres of property taken for construction of the dam and resulting Center Hill Lake, but who was also employed in the construction.

Jared was accompanied by his parents, Glen and Jill Herren and showed interest in all phases of the tour and open house, particularly in the huge drilling rig working on the earthen dam barrier wall and the 110-inch by 84-inch Bauer HydroCutter that will drill more than 300 feet into the soil and rock.

“Bauer’s HydroCutter is the largest in the world, developed for this project. They excavate with large cutting teeth on the reverse rotating wheels and the rock cuttings are pumped back to the surface in a slurry medium for removal,” said Linda Adcock, project manager. “With the pertinent questions Jared asked, I had difficulty accepting that he was only nine years old,” she added.

Additional guided tours of the Center Hill Lake Power Plant, which are approximately 45 minutes, are scheduled 10 and 11 a.m., and noon Aug. 18 and Sept. 22. Tour size is limited and is on a first-come, first-serve basis. All guests including minors are required to submit a request form at least five days prior to the tour and receive confirmation from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Nashville District.

To request a tour registration form and to learn more about tour rules and details please call the Center Hill Lake Resource Manager’s Office at (931) 858-3125, or visit the Center Hill Lake website at http://www.lrn.usace.army.mil/op/cen/rec/.

For more news, updates and information, visit the Nashville District website at www.lrn.usace.army.mil, and follow on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/nashvillecorps and on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/nashvillecorps. The public can also follow Center Hill Lake’s Facebook page at http://www.facebook.com/centerhilllake.