THE LAY OF THE LANDThe Center for Land Use Interpretation Newsletter

 

Interpretation is an art, which combines many arts, whether the materials presented are scientific, historical, or architectural.

-Freeman Tilden

 

Immersed Towns Surface For Exhibit At CLUI Intentionally Submerged America Subject Of Program

Immersed Remains:
Towns Submerged In America
The Exhibit

Terminal Island

Terminal Island:
Touring The Edge Of America
Part 1
Part 2

Jane Wolff Delves Into The Delta:
CLUI Independent Interpreter Program Presents Her Work

Tour Of The Monuments Of The Great American Void:
A Bus-centered Circumnavigation Of The Great Salt Lake
Day 1
Day 2

Report From The Desert Research Station:
CLUI Outpost In The Mojave

Report From The Great Basin:
CLUI Wendover Interpretive R&D Continues

Playas, New Mexico:
A Modern Ghost-town Braces For The Future

Coal: Dig It Up, Move It, Burn It:
Wyoming’s Powder River Basin

Sublime Explosive Pastoral:
A Visit To Dupont On The Brandywine

There Is Something About Colorado Springs

Global Positioning Pivots Around Colorado Springs
And A Brief History Of American Space Time

Reflections On Chicago
Six Iconic Monuments Of The City

Unusual Real Estate Listing # 2465
Angel’s Ladies Brothel, Beatty, Nevada

Dutch Crater On Hold
Polder Bombing Suspended

CLUI Land Use Database Upgrades
New Interactive Mapping Goes Google

Newsletter Acknowledgements

Book Reviews

  Immersed Towns Surface for Exhibit at CLUI
Intentionally Submerged America Subject of Program

Part of the Immersed Remains exhibit at CLUI Los Angeles.
CLUI photo by Elon Schoenholz

Over the past century, hundreds of towns have been drowned in the nation, primarily for reservoir construction. Collectively, these lost places offer an alternate version of the history of America. An exhibit at CLUI Los Angeles from January 21 through March 27, 2005 explored the phenomenon of these intentionally submerged communities.

The exhibit was the result of three years of periodic research on the subject, conducted by CLUI researcher Angela Loughry, assisted by Carrie Lincourt, Mike Asbill, and Matthew Coolidge. Research included communicating with many local historic organizations, town offices, museums, municipalities, and archivists, as well as government agencies like the TVA, the Bureau of Reclamation, state parks departments, and the Army Corps of Engineers. Individuals from the Submerged Cultural Resources of the National Parks Service were helpful, though the majority of work conducted by this government entity focuses on Native American artifacts, lost to the likes of the waters of Lake Powell, or historic offshore shipwrecks. Similarly, obscure books with promising titles like 50 Dives in 50 States offered just a few pieces of this submerged history. No nationwide survey of the cultural resources these sacrificed towns represent seems to exist.

The methodology originally developed for the exhibit included presenting contemporary views of some of these underwater communities, if at all possible. An inventory of possible sites from across the country was assembled in a database. Diving shops and clubs in the vicinity of the townsites were contacted to determine if anybody had direct experience with the towns. Few did, and even fewer had any photographs. In areas that were more densely populated, like the northeast, reservoirs are often part of a municipal drinking water supply, and recreational use restrictions prevent divers from having easy access. Remarkably, one exception was found in the largest manmade body of water in New England, the Quabbin Reservoir. A biologist named Ed Klekowski from the University of Massachusetts had accompanied a state police Underwater Recovery Team on a rare exercise on Quabbin, and had taken video equipment explicitly to document the communities of the Swift River Valley that were lost when the Quabbin was built in the late 1930s.

Vivid video like this of other drowned towns proved illusive. Many of the towns were located along river valleys now so deep under water that no diver could easily visit, and no light would penetrate to those depths. Attempts to troll for deep remains were made by the CLUI using a submersible infrared camera, with an attached light source. In all cases the murky, silty water proved impenetrable, and the imagery unsatisfactory.

As the list narrowed down, visits were made to over a dozen reservoirs to capture images, follow up leads, meet with knowledgeable locals, and examine archives.

Over time, as patterns for the stories of the subjects emerged, and the types of documentation available stabilized, the final structure for the exhibit formed. Three curatorial threads would bind it together. The first would be a timeline following the settlement and development of the United States; the second would show a transformation of documentary forms (from intentional black and white photographic recordings, to video, to fresh digital pictures); and the third would evolve from the beginnings of disappearance, through total loss, to a rediscovery, a revisitation, and a reemergence.

Finally, six towns under six reservoirs were selected to portray this multifaceted phenomenon, through a variety of media. In each case, an image of downtown would show the community as it looked soon before the flood, and a map would show where the town was, and where, now, the water is.

 
 

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