Saturday 10th May 2025

Historical Society To Focus On Kentucky Dam

ky-dam

 

The October meeting of the Jackson Purchase Historical Society will be hosted by the Kentucky Dam Village State Park on Saturday, October 19.

The meeting will begin at 10:30 am in the Henry Ward Building, the main lodge at the park, 166 Upper Village Inn Drive in Gilbertsville if using GPS.

The meeting will focus on the construction of Kentucky Dam, the last of the TVA high dams that transformed life in the Tennessee River Valley. The National Hydropower Association is joining us, as a co-sponsor. 

The program will feature Robert L. Underwood, author of the recently published Dam It! Electrifying America and Taming Her Waterways.  The book was selected as the gold medal winner in the 2024 International Book Awards for the General History category.  While his book deals with the entire history of hydroelectric dams in the United States, his talk will emphasize the TVA, and especially the story of the TVA’s mightiest, Kentucky Dam.  He has a special connection to Kentucky Dam as his grandfather was the project manager for the construction of the dam.  Bob Underwood has a PhD in engineering from Stanford University and an MBA. He has had a successful career developing technology-based businesses. 

“The construction of Kentucky Dam is arguably the most significant event in the history of the Jackson Purchase. The jobs it created allowed many families to stay “home” rather than go to Michigan for jobs. When we interviewed people who had worked on the dam that came through time and time again – the dam allowed me to stay here. The low-cost electricity it generated in huge quantities allowed the full electrification of the region and attracted more industry and jobs. This improved the lives of everyday people throughout the Purchase and its vicinity, JPHS president Bill Mulligan stated. “Its impact on the region is as monumental as its size,” he concluded. 

The October meeting’s co-sponsor, the National Hydropower Association, is the leading organization in the United States dedicated exclusively to championing waterpower as America’s original clean, renewable energy resource.  It represents more than 300 companies in the North American hydropower industry, from Fortune 500 corporations to family-owned small businesses.

The Kentucky State Parks are celebrating their 100th Anniversary this year. Long recognized as on the finest state park systems in the country, it includes a wide variety of parks. Kentucky Dam Village State Park dates to the completion of the dam when Henry Ward, a pioneer in Kentucky parks, arranged for the Commonwealth to acquire the site of the village that had developed to house and serve the needs of the workers and their families. Many of the cottages housed workers and administrators during the construction. The park has added structures over the years and remodeled the cottages, but the core of the park is the worker village. 

In 1958, a group of historians met in Murray, Kentucky led by faculty from Murray State University and University of Tennessee-Martin and formed the Jackson Purchase Historical Society to promote interest, study, and preservation of the regional history of the territory encompassed in the Treaty of Tuscaloosa, known as the Jackson Purchase. The society now holds eleven meetings each year with a speaker on Jackson Purchase history and publishes an award-winning journal on local history. Members include a wide range of people who simply share a love of history and a love of the Jackson Purchase area. 

The society recently refurbished its website and an array of information about the society and Jackson Purchase history is available at: jacksonpurchasehistoricalsociety.org.

Free electronic access to back issues of the Journal through 2023 is available through the Murray State University libraries at https://digitalcommons.murraystate.edu/jphs/.

Articles are welcome for future issues of the JPHS Journal and can be sent to the editor, Bill Mulligan at billmulligan@murray-ky.net. We also welcome inquiries about topics, books for review, or offers to review a book. Copies of the Journal are available from the Jackson Purchase Historical Society, PO Box 531, Murray, KY 42071. The cost is $15.90 including postage and sales tax. Anyone interested in Jackson Purchase history is welcome to join the JPHS. 

 

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