View source for Spicket River Information
From Forestlake_wiki
Jump to:
navigation
,
search
<!--[[Photos]]--> [[Image:scene on Spicket river.jpg|300px|thumb|right|Spicket River Postcard]] The Spicket River is a 17.7 mile long (28.5 km)[1] river located in New Hampshire and Massachusetts in the United States. It is a tributary of the Merrimack River (or Merrimac River, an earlier spelling that is sometimes still used), part of the Gulf of Maine and Merrimack River watershed. The Spicket River begins at the outlet of [http://www.wildlife.state.nh.us/Fishing/bathy_maps/island_derry.pdf Island Pond] in Derry, New Hampshire, and flows south into Salem, New Hampshire, passing through the Arlington Mill Reservoir. Island Pond is a 532-acre water body located in Rockingham County in southern New Hampshire, United States, in the towns of Derry, Hampstead and Atkinson. [http://www.wildlife.state.nh.us/Fishing/bathy_maps/arlingtonmill_salem.pdf Arlington Mill Reservoir] is a 320-acre impoundment located in Rockingham County in southern New Hampshire.The [[ARLINGTON POND PROTECTIVE ASSOCIATION]] is a local Water Resource, Wetlands Conservation and Management Organization. The [http://www.waymarking.com/waymarks/WM5GD5 Wheeler Dam] created the Arlington Reservoir in 1923. The [[Dam]] was repaired in 2007. The river continues through Salem, encountering copious suburban development, and enters the city of Methuen, Massachusetts, where it drops nearly 100 feet over a series of dams on its way to the Merrimack River in Lawrence. The United States Geologic Survey maintains two streamflow guages on the Spicket River. One [[Image:Streamflow near Methuen.jpg|200px|thumb|left|USGS 01100561 SPICKET RIVER NEAR METHUEN, MA]] near Methuen on Hampshire Road and one in North Salem, New hampshire. The links are here; [http://waterdata.usgs.gov/ma/nwis/uv/?site_no=01100561 USGS 01100561 SPICKET RIVER NEAR METHUEN, MA] <br> [http://waterdata.usgs.gov/nwis/uv?01100505 USGS 01100505 SPICKET RIVER AT NORTH SALEM, NH]<br> <!--NWS 5 CHR IDENT|USGS STATION NUMBER|GOES IDENTIFR |NWS HSA |LATITUDE dd mm ss| LONGITUDE ddd mm ss|LOCATION NAME| NSLN3 |01100505 |175D6128 |GYX |42 50 57 |-071 12 56|SPICKET RIVER AT NORTH SALEM NH--> [http://www.eagletribune.com/punewsnh/local_story_087011020.html/resources_printstory Resident wants feds to look at dam on Spicket River] <br> ==THE WATER-POWER OF THE STREAMS OF EASTERN NEW ENGLAND.== [http://books.google.com/books?id=veYqAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA41&lpg=PA41&dq=spicket+river&source=web&ots=TLMq020s9e&sig=qvh9Q1jn-Fb4m95kOnGk60kSpoo&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=10&ct=result#PPA39,M1 Water Power of Eastern Massachusetts 1880] By GEORGE F. SWAIN, S. В., Assistant Professor of Oivil Engineering in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, Massachusetts, Special Agent October 12, 1882 THE SPICKET RIVER. This stream empties into the- Merrimack at Lawrence, rising in Rockingbam county, New Hampshire, and : flowing south and southeast into Massachusetts, its length in a straight line being about 15 miles and its drainage area 79 square miles, of which 10 are in Massachusetts. It is not a very good stream for power, its flow being very variable. Several small ponds near the headwaters are dammed and used to regulate the flow, viz : [http://www.wildlife.state.nh.us/Fishing/bathy_maps/canobie_salem.pdf Policy pond], in New Hampshire, covering about 450 acres, and with a range of 8 feet ; Island pond, covering about 480 acres, and other smaller ones. In Lawrence there are three mills on the stream, the lowest with a fall of 15 feet, the next with 12 feet, and the third, the Arlington worsted-mill, with 12 feet. The power at the last is stated at 140 horse-power during part of the year. A short distance above, a fall of 39 feet is used, at the Methuen Company's cotton-mill, with 300 horse-power during eight months. In very dry seasons the flow of the stream is very small, and the mills depend upon steam. == Hydroelectricity== [http://www.mtpc.org/project_detail.cfm?ProjSeq=1048 Spicket River Hydrofacility Control Updates 2008] == Stone structures == [[Image:Card00180_fr.jpg|300px|thumb|left|Spicket River Bridge Salem N.H.]] [[Image:Sandscanoe1920.jpg|150%|thumb|right|Sands Bridge circa 1920]] [http://www.stonestructures.org/html/handbook-resources.html Documenting stone structures]
Return to
Spicket River Information
.
Views
Page
Discussion
View source
History
Personal tools
Log in
Site navigation
Main page
Current events
Association Docu.
Guidestar.org
Commission
Outlet Gate Tender
Spicket Watershed
City of Methuen
Bathymetric Map
Metro Beaches Commission
Geese Information
Bulletin Board
Greenscapes.org
Help
Watershed links
Methuen Rail Trail Blog
State Geologist
Department of Fish and Game Division of Ecological Restoration
Merrimack River Watershed Council, Inc
Massachusetts Watershed Coalition
Mystic River Watershed Association
USACE New England
Natural Flow Salem NH
Mass. Congress of Lakes and Ponds
Cobbett Pond Improvement Association
Foster's Pond Corporation
Geosyntec & Cobbett Pond Restoration Project
Friends of Lake Quannapowitt
Flood-FIRMap
FEMA Maps
Search
Wikiwork
User's Guide
Mediawiki Home
Configuration
Recent changes
FAQ
Community portal
Toolbox
What links here
Related changes
Special pages