Lexington Reservoir

Lexington Reservoir
Location Santa Cruz Mountains
Santa Clara County, California
Coordinates 37°12′07″N 121°59′24″W / 37.202°N 121.99°W / 37.202; -121.99Coordinates: 37°12′07″N 121°59′24″W / 37.202°N 121.99°W / 37.202; -121.99
Type Reservoir
Primary inflows Los Gatos Creek
Primary outflows Los Gatos Creek
Catchment area 27.7 sq mi (72 km2) [1]
Basin countries United States
Surface area 450 acres (1.8 km2)
Water volume 21,430 acre·ft (26,430,000 m3)
Surface elevation 666 ft (203 m)[2]
References U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Lexington Reservoir
James J. Lenihan Dam
Exposed local bridge across Black Creek
Exposed building foundation
Lexington Reservoir Spillway/James J. Lenihan Dam, overflowing
Lexington Reservoir (James J. Lenihan Dam) Spillway, emptying into Los Gatos Creek
Lexington Reservoir Spillway filled with water.
Lexington Reservoir overflows into spillway, a rare event.

Lexington Reservoir is an artificial lake on the Los Gatos Creek near Los Gatos, California. The James J. Lenihan Dam, a 195 ft (59 m) high, 1,000 ft (300 m) thick earthen dam, forms the third-largest reservoir in Santa Clara County.[3][4]

Background

The reservoir is in the foothills of the Santa Cruz Mountains, at an elevation of 645 feet (197 m).[1][5]

State Route 17 runs alongside the dam's western edge and over part of the reservoir. Alma Bridge Road (Limekiln Canyon Road) runs around the eastern side, connecting with 17 at the north end and again at the south end via other surface streets.

The reservoir is contained in Lexington Reservoir County Park, which includes hiking trails in the hills with good views of the reservoir and of Silicon Valley. The Los Gatos Creek Trail starts at the dam and continues downstream along the creek's canyon.

It is part of the Santa Clara Valley Water District and provides water for Silicon Valley.

In October 2007, the Santa Clara Valley Water District began a construction project to replace the old 48-inch (1,200 mm) outlet pipe that runs through the base of the dam from the reservoir to Los Gatos Creek. The current outlet pipe will be replaced with a 54-inch (1,400 mm)-diameter pipe, new valves, outlet structures and a control building.[3]

The repairs are being made to allow the reservoir to drain quickly enough during emergencies such as after a major earthquake that could cause cracks in the dam, or during a series of heavy winter storms that pose flooding risks to Los Gatos and Campbell.[3]

History

In 1943, because of the rapid expansion of orchards in the county, the Santa Clara Valley Water District determined that the well water in the Santa Clara Valley was being diminished rapidly and a dam was needed on Los Gatos Creek, with one goal being to percolate the water into the ground and ultimately increase the amount of well water available. After rerouting State Route 17 near Windy Point, which is a mile south of Los Gatos, the District began dam construction in the spring of 1952, completing it that fall.[4]

The reservoir covered the towns of Lexington and Alma. Alma and Lexington reached their peak population in the mid-19th century, when about 200 people lived in each. Each of the towns had a post office, hotel, saloons, blacksmith shops, and half a dozen redwood sawmills. Lexington was the halfway stop for stagecoaches running between San Jose and Santa Cruz. The town served as a place to switch from four horses to six horses to get over the mountains. Lexington declined after 1880 when the narrow gauge railroad from Los Gatos to Santa Cruz bypassed it, while Alma declined when Highway 17 bypassed it in 1940. The railroad ceased operations in 1940. By 1950, only about 100 people lived in the two communities.[3]

Lexington gained national attention in 1883, when a Los Gatos saloon keeper, Lloyd Majors, hired two thugs to rob an elderly Lexington man who kept $20,000 in gold in his cabin. They burned him with turpentine-soaked rags and beat him with pistols, killing him, and then fled with the gold. Their sensational trial in San Jose drew national attention similar to that accorded to the Lizzie Borden ax murders nine years later. Majors and one of the thugs were hanged. The other spent 15 years in prison.[3]

Renovation Projects

In September 2007, the Santa Clara Valley Water District began its “Lenihan Dam Outlet Project” at Lexington Reservoir. This project replaced the old outlet pipe that releases water from Lexington Reservoir into some of the creeks and streams of Santa Clara Valley.

In the past, the old pipe required frequent maintenance and repairs because it was aging and collapsed in several areas. The new outlet pipe, which runs through a new tunnel in Saint Joseph’s Hill (on the east side of the dam), also features new actuating valves and a new intake structure.

The project was completed in Fall of 2009, and “first release” celebration was held on Oct. 20, 2009. The Santa Clara Valley Water District features a Lexington Reservoir & Lenihan Dam Project project page on its website.[6]

Lexington Reservoir County Park

Besides serving as a water supply for the area, the lake is used for rowing, paddling, and fishing. Santa Clara County Parks and Recreation Department manages the 914-acre (3.70 km2) Lexington Reservoir County Park.[7] The park provides facilities for hiking and picnicking. For fishing, the reservoir is stocked with black bass, trout, bluegill, and crappie. The park includes part of the San Andreas Fault, which crosses Los Gatos Creek just south of the upstream end of the reservoir. The mountains feature redwood forests, chaparral, grasslands, hardwoods, and mixed conifer habitats.[8]

When the level of Lexington Reservoir drops, it is possible to see portions of the old roads that were used in the construction of the reservoir and that served the historic towns of Lexington and Alma that were covered by the reservoir. Some building foundations in the ghost towns are also visible at times.[9]

The photo at right shows a bridge across Black Creek, built in 1926. The bridge, along with a few house foundations from the towns of Lexington and Alma, were exposed in 2008 when drought caused the water level to drop. These historical structures have been exposed only three or four times since the dam was constructed.[10]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/5/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.