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SAM RAYBURN RESERVOIR.
Sam Rayburn Reservoir, formerly known as McGee Bend Reservoir,
is dammed eighty miles north of Beaumont (at 31°04' N, 94°06'
W). It is fed by the Angelina River and lies in Jasper, Angelina,
Sabine, Nacogdoches, and San Augustine counties. Construction
at the McGee Bend site began on September 7, 1956, and deliberate
impoundment of water began on March 29, 1965. Paul Hardeman, Incorporated,
of Stanton, California, served as general contractor for the project,
which cost $63,290,000. The project was renamed in honor of Samuel
T. (Sam) Rayburnqv in 1963. The reservoir is designed for flood control and power
generation, owned by the United States government, and operated
by the United States Army Corps of Engineers, Fort Worth district.
The earthfill dam has a spillway crest elevation of 176 feet and
a top flood-control pool capacity of 3,997,600 acre-feet. Its
two hydroelectric plants generate a total capacity of 52,000 kilowatt-hours
marketed by the Southwestern Power Administration. With a drainage
area of 3,449 square miles, Rayburn Reservoir conserves water
for municipal, industrial, agricultural, and recreational purposes.
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Copyright ©, The Texas State Historical Association, 1997-2002 |