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Fairmount Water Works
please note:
- the content below is remote from Wikipedia
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{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2023}}- the content below is remote from Wikipedia
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History
18th century
Following a series of yellow fever epidemics in the late 18th century, which was at the time thought to be caused by unclean water or by rotting matter in the streets, city leaders appointed a "Watering Committee". The initial water system was designed by Benjamin Latrobe and accepted by the committee in 1799. His system utilized two steam engines in series to pump water from the Schuylkill River, into the city, then into two wooden tanks that held a total of just {{convert|57,000|USgal|L}}. From the wooden tanks, the water was gravity fed into a series of wooden water mains. The system was plagued with problems. If either of the steam engines failed, the water supply to the city was cut off.JOURNAL, Brown, Jeff L, Landmarks in American civil engineering history, Civil Engineering, 72, 11/12, 92â172, NovemberâDecember 2002, The committee began searching for another solution and eventually picked John Davis and Frederick Graff, Latrobe's apprentice and successor as chief engineer, to design a new waterworks, in order to meet the demand of the increasing numbers of city residents and to solve the problem of inadequate storage capacity.19th century
The Fairmount Water Works was initially constructed between 1812 and 1815 on the east bank of the Schuylkill River. The Water Works initially consisted of a {{convert|3|e6USgal|L}} earthen reservoir atop Faire Mount at the present site of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, and a pump house with two steam engines to pump water. Between 1819 and 1821, a {{convert|1600|ft|m|adj=mid|-long}} dam was built across the Schuylkill to direct water to a Mill House with three water wheels that replaced the steam engines in 1822. Later, Jonval turbines were used to lift the water in a New Mill House and in the renovated Old Mill House.The facility, the industrial nature of which was disguised by a Classical Revival exterior, became a tourist attraction for its beauty and its location on the riverside. Visitors included Charles Dickens, who praised it for its pleasant design and public usefulness. Another English visitor, Fanny Trollope, in her 1832 book Domestic Manners of the Americans, mentioned the Water Works:There is one spot, however, about a mile from the town, which presents a lovely scene. The water-works of Philadelphia have not yet perhaps as wide extended fame as those of Marley, but they are not less deserving it. At a most beautiful point of the Schuylkill River the water has been forced up into a magnificent reservoir, ample and elevated enough to send it through the whole city. The vast yet simple machinery by which this is achieved is open to the public, who resort in such numbers to see it, that several evening stages run from Philadelphia to Fair Mount for their accommodation.Trollope, Fanny, Domestic Manners of the Americans, Ch. 24.The Fairmount Water Works eventually closed in 1909 when several newer and more technologically updated facilities were built.File:Fairmount Water Works 07821r.jpg|Fairmount Water Works, Philadelphia, between 1860 and 1880File:Fairmount Waterworks 1835 (cropped).jpg|"Schuylkill Waterworks", 1835 engravingFile:Fairmount Water Works 1874.jpg|Fairmount Water Works, Philadelphia, about 1874File:Fairmount Water Works Water Wheel Cutaway.jpg|Cutaway showing water wheelFile:Fairmount Water Works Boiler System Cutaway.jpg|Cutaway showing boiler systemFile:Fairmount Water Works Jonval Turbine Cutaway.jpg|Cutaway showing Jonval turbineFile:Bird's-eye view from Lemon Hill Observatory, E. Fairmount Park, by Cremer, James, 1821-1893-cropped-large.png|Boathouse Row and Fairmount Water Works from Lemon Hill (circa 1872â1874)File:John Rubens Smith, A View of Fairmount and the Water-Works (1837).jpg|John Rubens Smith, "A View of Fairmount and the Water-Works", 1837Fairmount Dam
Completed in 1822, Fairmount Dam cut diagonally across the river, channeled water into the Waterworks, and acted as a spillway.WEB,weblink Fairmount Dam, 1819â1821, 2010-08-03, Gibson, Jane Mork, 1990, Workshop of the World, Oliver Evans Press,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20090327100933weblink">weblink 2009-03-27, Although repairs and additions to Fairmount Dam have been undertaken in the years since its construction in 1819â1821, the original cribs have remained as placed, with the added support constructions before and behind., dead, The Schuylkill is a tidal river, so it also prevented brackish water in the Delaware River from mixing with the fresh water. Above it, the dam created the "Schuylkill Pond", several miles of tranquil water used for recreation.File:Fairmount dam, from Robert N. Dennis collection of stereoscopic views-cropped-large.png|Fairmount Dam, from the rocks belowFile:Fairmount Falls, Phila. Pa, from Robert N. Dennis collection of stereoscopic views-cropped-large.png|"Fairmount Falls"File:Fairmount from West Philadelphia, by Newell, R., d. 1897.jpg|Fairmount Waterworks and Dam, from the westFile:Schuylkill Falls, by R. Newell & Sons.png|Fairmount Dam, from the southFile:Fairmount Water Works Dam.jpg|Current dam (built in 1928) and Boathouse Row in the background20th century
File:Philadelphia night 13.jpg|thumb|Fairmount Water Works (foreground) and the Philadelphia Museum of ArtPhiladelphia Museum of ArtAfter the waterworks closed in 1909 the facility was used for several purposes, including the Philadelphia Aquarium, which closed in 1962, and an indoor swimming pool which closed in 1973. Attempts have been made to return the waterworks to its previous position as an engaging tourist attraction. Despite a severe fire which caused setbacks to the restoration, an interpretive center has now been added and tours are regularly given. Its position near Boathouse Row and the Philadelphia Museum of Art is hoped to aid in making it a regularly visited tourist site once more.The Fairmount Water Works buildings now house the Fairmount Water Works Interpretive Center (FWWIC), a hands-on science and environmental educational center, created by the Philadelphia Water Department. The FWWIC offers interactive exhibits, lectures, events, and school programs.21st century
In December 2004, Michael Karloutsos won a 25-year, $120,000/year lease with the Fairmount Park Commission. After a highly publicized renovation, Karloutsos opened Water Works Restaurant and Lounge within the Water Works on July 20, 2006.WEB,weblink Bread and Water Works, Philadelphia Daily News,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20060618130613weblink">weblink 2006-06-18, This restaurant closed in 2015,WEB,weblink Philly to Trumpâs Big New State Dept. Hire: Your Company Owes Us $100K, Philadelphia Magazine, and an event venue opened shortly thereafter.NEWS,weblink Big new event pavilion at Fairmount Water Works will be replaced next year, after some express concerns, Asha, Prihar, June 17, 2022,See also
- Fairmount Park
- List of crossings of the Schuylkill River
- List of National Historic Landmarks in Philadelphia
- List of tourist attractions in Philadelphia
- Louis Wernwag
- National Register of Historic Places in North Philadelphia
- Schuylkill Canal
References
{{Reflist}}External links
{{Commons category}}- Fairmont Water Works: 1800â1860 from American Studies at the University of Virginia
- Water Works Restaurant
- The Fairmount Water Works by Jane Mork Gibson
- Water for the City
- {{HABS |survey=PA-1654 |id=pa3688 |title=Fairmount Water Works, Aquarium Drive, Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, PA |photos=14 |color=4 |cap=6}}
- {{HAER |survey=PA-51 |id=pa0837 |title=Fairmount Water Works, Aquarium Drive, Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, PA |photos=162 |color=12 |dwgs=36 |data=198 |cap=13}}
- Fairmount Water Works at the Historical Marker Database
- content above as imported from Wikipedia
- "Fairmount Water Works" does not exist on GetWiki (yet)
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- "Fairmount Water Works" does not exist on GetWiki (yet)
- time: 3:02pm EDT - Thu, Apr 25 2024
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