Connecticut River

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Connecticut River
The Connecticut River looking north, from the French King Bridge at the Erving-Gill town line in Western Massachusetts
Country USA
States Connecticut, Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire
Major cities Hartford, CT, Springfield, MA
Length 407 mi (655 km)
Watershed 11,250 sq mi (29,137 km²)
Discharge at Thompsonville, CT
 - average 18,400 cu ft/s (521 /s)
 - maximum 95,400 cu ft/s (2,701 /s)
 - minimum 3,160 cu ft/s (89 /s)
Discharge elsewhere
 - West Lebanon, NH 6,600 cu ft/s (187 /s)
Source Fourth Connecticut Lake
 - coordinates 45°14′53″N 71°12′51″W / 45.24806, -71.21417
 - elevation 2,660 ft (811 m)
Mouth Long Island Sound
 - location Old Saybrook, Middlesex County, Connecticut, USA
 - coordinates 41°16′20″N 72°20′03″W / 41.27222, -72.33417
Major tributaries
 - left Chicopee
 - right White River
River map, with major tributaries and selected dams.

The Connecticut River is the largest river in New England, flowing south from the Connecticut Lakes in northern New Hampshire, along the border between New Hampshire and Vermont, through Western Massachusetts and central Connecticut into Long Island Sound at Old Saybrook, Connecticut. It has a total length of 407 miles (655 km), and a drainage basin extending over 11,250 square miles (29,100 km²). The mean freshwater discharge into Long Island Sound is 19,600 cubic feet (560 m³) per second. The river is tidal up to Windsor Locks, approximately 60 miles (97 km) from the mouth. The source of the Connecticut River is the Fourth Connecticut Lake in New Hampshire. Some tributaries include the Ashuelot, West, Miller's, Mill, Deerfield, White, and Chicopee rivers. (The Swift River, a tributary of the Chicopee, has been largely replaced by the Quabbin Reservoir which provides water to Boston.)

The river carries a heavy amount of silt, especially during the spring snow melt, from as far north as Quebec. The heavy silt concentration of the river forms a large sandbar near its mouth on Long Island Sound and has historically provided a formidable obstacle to navigation. The difficulty of navigation on the river is the primary reason that it is one of the few large rivers in the region without a major city near its mouth. The Connecticut River estuary and tidal wetlands complex is listed as one of the 1616 wetlands of international importance under the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands.

Contents

[edit] History

The river's name is the French corruption of the Algonquian word "quinetucket" and means long tidal river. The first European to see the river was the Dutch explorer Adriaen Block in 1614. As a result of this exploration, the Dutch named the Connecticut River the "Fresh River", and it was the northeastern limits of the New Netherlands colony, and the original border between New Netherlands and New England. The first English colonist to record his visit was Edward Winslow from the Plymouth Colony in 1632. In 1633 the English built a trading post on the site of Windsor, Connecticut, and the Dutch built one with a fort at the site of Hartford, Connecticut. As the number of English colonists increased, the Dutch abandoned their enterprise in 1654. The Fort at Number 4, now Charlestown, New Hampshire, was the northernmost English settlement on the river until the end of the French and Indian War in 1763. In the Treaty of Paris (1783), ending the American Revolutionary War, the new border between New Hampshire and what was to become the Province of Canada was defined to include the "northwesternmost headwaters of the Connecticut" . Because there are several streams that could fit that description, a boundary dispute led to the short-lived Indian Stream Republic, which existed from 1832 to 1835.

At first the broad, fertile valley attracted agricultural colonies, but the volume and fall of the river contributed to the rise of manufacturing in the valley. The greatest single drop of 58 feet (18 m) is at Holyoke, Massachusetts. Other important centers include Windsor and Hartford in Connecticut, Springfield, Massachusetts, the largest city on the river, Lebanon, New Hampshire, and Brattleboro, Vermont.

Image:DSCN3850 connecticutriverfromsaybrookept e.JPG
The Connecticut River as seen near its mouth.

In 1829 the Enfield Falls Canal was opened to circumvent shallows on the Connecticut River. The locks built for this canal gave their name to the town of Windsor Locks, Connecticut.[1]

In the late 1800s the river was used for massive logging drives from the far north, particularly the Nullhegan River basin in Essex County, Vermont. These spring drives were stopped after 1915, when pleasure boat owners complained about the hazards to navigation.[2]

The Connecticut River Flood Control Compact was established in 1953 in response to severe flooding. The Clean Water Act in 1965 has also had a major impact on the Connecticut River and its tributaries; since then, the river has been restored from Class D to Class B. It was designated as one of the American Heritage Rivers in 1997. The towns along the lower end of the river have enacted a cap on further development along the banks, so that no buildings may be constructed except on existing foundations.

[edit] Fish

The Connecticut River is a habitat to several species of anadromous fish, including the American shad, American eel, Striped Bass and the Sea lamprey. The United States Fish and Wildlife Service is undertaking an effort to repopulate the river with another species of migratory fish, the Atlantic salmon. For more than 200 years, Atlantic salmon have been extinct from the river due to damming. Several fish ladders and fish elevators have been built to allow fish to resume their natural migration upriver each spring.

[edit] Boating

The mouth of the river up to Essex is thought to be the busiest stretch of waterway in Connecticut. Neither local police departments nor the state Environmental Conservation Police patrol the area extensively (often only a few times a week). Several towns have no patrols at all, others keep boats available if needed.[3]

[edit] Angling the Connecticut

Image:TrophyStretchConnecticuttRiver.jpg
The In-Between-Waters of the Trophy Stretch of the Connecticut River near 1st Connecticut Lake, New Hampshire
Image:ConnecticuttRiverNearColebrook.jpg
Connecticut River near Colebrook, New Hampshire--Brook, Brown and Rainbow Trout
Image:BillDoingGuideWork.jpg
Drift Boat Fishing Guide working the Connecticut River near Colebrook, New Hampshire

The headwaters of the Connecticut River are at the northern tip of New Hampshire, near the Canadian border. Much of the beginning of the river's course in the town of Pittsburg is occupied by the Connecticut Lakes, a chain of deep, cold water lakes that are home to lake trout and landlocked salmon.

The river itself holds native brook trout, rainbow trout, and large brown trout. Landlocked salmon make their way into the river during spring spawning runs of bait fish and during their fall spawn. The river has fly-fishing-only regulations on five miles (8 km) of river. Most of the river from Lake Francis south is open to lure and bait as well. Two tail-water dams provide cold river water for miles downstream making summer fishing on the Connecticut River excellent.

[edit] Water quality testing project

A program of water testing is in the preparation stages. Water samples will be drawn three days a week at three locations: in the Greenfield area, below the Holyoke Dam in the Chicopee-Springfield area, and in the White River heartland area of Vermont. The results of the testing will be on a yet-to-be-created website up to 48 hours after samples are collected, due to the time required to evaluate the samples.[4]

[edit] Tributaries

Listed from south to north by location of mouth:

[edit] Crossings

The Connecticut River is major barrier to travel between western and eastern New England. Several major transportation corridors that cross the river are Amtrak's Northeast Corridor, Interstate 95 (Connecticut Turnpike) and Interstate 90 (Massachusetts Turnpike).

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Connecticut Heritage (Dorothy A. DeBisschop). The Canal at Windsor Locks. Retrieved January 20 2006.
  2. ^ Wheeler, Scott (September 2002). The History of Logging in Vermont's Northeast Kingdom. The Kingdom Historical. 
  3. ^ [1]Kaplan, Thomas, "River Watchers, Tackling Speeders and Thin Budgets", article in The New York Times, Metro section, August 30, 2007, accessed same day
  4. ^ Daily Hampshire Gazette article

[edit] External links

es:Río Connecticut fr:Connecticut (fleuve) gl:Río Connecticut he:נהר קונטיקט it:Connecticut (fiume) nl:Connecticut (rivier) pl:Connecticut (rzeka) sl:Connecticut River sv:Connecticutfloden zh:康乃狄克河

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