Log Pond Cove

Coordinates: 42°12′58″N 72°36′45″W / 42.216001°N 72.612550°W / 42.216001; -72.612550
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Log Pond Cove
Primary inflows
Connecticut River
Primary outflowsConnecticut River
Basin countriesUnited States
Surface area18.5 acres (7.5 ha)
Surface elevation102 ft (31 m)

Log Pond Cove, previously known as Money Hole,[1] is a former log pond and scenic wayside on the Connecticut River, about half a mile upstream from the Holyoke Dam at South Hadley Falls.

Sawmill of the Connecticut River Lumber Company on the shores of the cove, c. 1890

The 18.5-acre (75,000 m2) pond was once used for ice cutting,[2] as well as log drives from points north, diverted there in the late 19th and early 20th century. The log boom once set up there supplied contractors and the paper mills of Holyoke's industrial economy. After the last of these logging drives in 1915, silt gradually began to fill in the cove, gradually changing its river island border into a peninsula.[3]

By the mid-20th century the water body and its immediate surroundings had been acquired by the

US Fish and Wildlife Service staff and volunteers as an extension of the Silvio O. Conte National Fish and Wildlife Refuge.[4][5]

Today the cove is surrounded by 62 acres of undeveloped wetlands and functions as a sanctuary to many bird species, including

great blue herons and several duck species.[6]

References

  1. ^ Barrows, Charles Henry (1916). An Historical Address Delivered Before the Citizens of Springfield in Massachusetts at the Public Celebration, May 26, 1911, of the Two Hundred and Seventy-fifth Anniversary of the Settlement. Connecticut Valley Historical Society. p. 59.
  2. ^ "City Will Have Ice Enough". Springfield Republican. Springfield, Mass. February 11, 1913. p. 14. ...the Holyoke ice company plan to begin cutting ice in the saw-mill pond in the river Monday.
  3. ^ Lauer, Martin J. (July 7, 1987). "A natural 'paradise' in Holyoke; Civic Group wants riverfront north of dam preserved for wildlife, partly for camping, swimming". Springfield Union-News. Springfield, Mass. p. 8.
  4. ^ Parcel 071-00-020, Holyoke Assessor's Database
  5. ^ Lapis, Jennifer (October 11, 2017). "The fight against water chestnut: It takes a village". Field Notes. US Fish and Wildlife Service.
  6. ^ "Log Pond - Holyoke - MA". Mass-Trails.

External links

External media
Images
image icon A cove near the sawmill, Holyoke, Massachusetts, DigitalCommonwealth via Digital Amherst
image icon Train wreck on the bank of the Connecticut River near the Holyoke Dam, Digital Commonwealth via Holyoke Public Library
Video
video icon Water Chestnut control on Log Pond Cove, Ecological Connections