Damming the Delaware


Book Description

First published in 1987 and named a Choice Outstanding Academic Book the following year, Damming the Delaware is the definitive study of two hundred years of water management history along the Delaware River. The history of the Tocks Island Dam Project is traced from an early 1783 anti-dam treaty, through the highly emotional environmental controversy in the 1970s, to the historic Good Faith agreement of the 1980s. The story involves the water politics of four states, two major U.S. cities, and the federal government, plus the influence of the environmental movement over major public works projects. In this second edition, the author updates the Tocks Island/Delaware River story to 2005. A major shift in the underlying philosophies of Delaware River management during the intervening years is described along with various successes and failures in water management. A Foreword to the second edition is written by Maya van Rossum, the Delaware Riverkeeper and Executive Director of the Delaware Riverkeeper Network, a nonprofit environmental advocacy organization that has both successfully fought dam projects and removed existing dams.




Damming the Delaware


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Power Aspects of the Tocks Island Dam, Delaware River Basin


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Committee Serial No. 91-4. Reviews requested revisions to Tocks Island Dam power plant plan including National Park Service request for additional recreation facilities, and private utilities' request for construction of privately operated pumped storage plant in place of conventional power plant. Also discusses adverse effect of plant construction on Delaware oyster industry.




Boundaries of Analysis


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The Tocks Island Dam


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Tocks Island Lake Development


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Delaware Diary


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Tracing the history of the Delaware, this book delves into archives and newspaper files to explore the men who tried to tame this wild river. Many attempted to venture down it in a variety of vehicles due to the needs of commerce, but in recent times it has been converted to leisure activities.




Tocks Island Deauthorization


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