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Click
here for a informational
phamplet about Cleveland Water
While water has guided the
development of the Greater
Cleveland area, it almost kept
Cleveland from becoming a city.
Founded in a swampy area on the
shores of Lake Erie, the
settlement that later became
Cleveland was plagued by
malaria, which
wiped out almost all the
early settlers. More came,
however, drawn in part by the
easy availability of water from
Lake
Erie and the rivers and
creeks that flow into it.
The city's population stood at
57 in 1810, and wells were the
source of water. Around that
time, an individual named Benhu
Johnson provided what was the
first commercial supply of
water;in times of drought, he
would deliver about 50 gallons
of Lake Erie water in two
barrels for 25 cents. Cleveland
soon outgrew this idyllic
system, as the city's population
had risen to 17,000 by 1840. The
Ohio-Erie Canal, a major
engineering feat for the times
that ended in Cleveland, gave
the city a boost as people moved
to the area to build it, and
then stayed. The wells, rivers
and creeks that had served the
city for the past decades were
still sufficient, but just
barely.
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| The Cleveland water system is now well into its second century of evolution. Here, construction of the 135-million gallon Baldwin Reservoir begins early in the twentieth century... with wagons, not bulldozers. |
Seeing advantage in the business
of supplying the water
Cleveland's growing population
and economy required, a certain
Philo Scovill organized the
Cleveland Water Company with
several associates in 1833. This
private company, however, lacked
the resources to tackle a
project as huge as a waterworks
serving the entire community.
City council saw public interest
in a stable water supply, and
spent $35 to sink a public well
at Public Square in 1840. In the
following decade, the city built
a network of wells and cisterns
to serve its citizens, but by
1850 the necessity for a better,
more organized system of water
distribution became clear. No
entrepreneurs were willing to
put up the private capital
needed, so in 1853 city council
authorized the expenditure of
$400,000 for a centralized water
system.
The father of Cleveland's
waterworks was T.R. Scowden, the
chief engineer of the city who
pushed for and designed the
first system. His proposal,
which included a plan for sewers
as well, had the goal of
providing 'pure and wholesome
water to the inhabitants' of
Cleveland, a goal that has been
a guiding principle of the
Division of Water ever since.
Work started on a project that
appears modest by today's
standards: one pumping station,
a 5 million-gallon reservoir at
Kentucky and Prospect streets, a
300-foot, 50-inch diameter
pipeline from the lake shore
west of the Cuyahoga River to
the pump station, and another 11
miles of distribution pipe from
the reservoir. After several
revisions caused by engineering
obstacles such as quicksand, and
at a cost of about $500,000,
Cleveland's first water system
began operating on September 24,
1856. This system delivered
about 38,000 gallons per day.
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| The system's first pumps would be no match for the powerful pumps of today. |
The planners of the first
portion of the water system,
however, could not envision the
effect that the Civil War would
have on Cleveland. The war led
to rapid industrialization and
population growth, and as the
city grew, its borders expanded
and suburbs began to appear. At
the same time, greater
availability of water caused
people to use more, a trend
accelerated by the appearance of
flush toilets and kitchens that
used piped water. Yet just as
water use expanded rapidly
during the post-Civil War
period, unfortunately so did the
volume of pollution entering
Lake Erie. Modern sewage
treatment techniques were
unknown, and the citizens of
Cleveland began complaining
about the quality of their
water, which was drawn mainly
from Lake Erie at increasingly
polluted points near the shore.
More water, cleaner water and a
much broader distribution
network became necessary. The
best solution, again proposed by
chief engineer T.R. Scowden, was
to draw water from far offshore
where the water remained clean,
an objective that required
building a tunnel for over five
miles under the lake bed that
would end in a collection point,
called a "crib". The work began
in 1867 and took seven years of
dangerous toil. The 87-foot
diameter crib was also a home
and a navigational aid as it was
equipped with a lighthouse and a
house for the lighthouse keeper.
This stoic individual typically
spent nine lonely months at his
post, perhaps gazing longingly
across the lake at the rapidly
rising Cleveland skyline.
Building on the potential of the
new crib, the Kinsman Reservoir
was completed in 1883 and the
Fairmount Reservoir was
completed in 1885. The Kentucky
Reservoir, just 30 years old,
was taken out of service; it
became an emergency reservoir
for fighting fires. The water
system was now supplying more
than 10 million gallons of water
per day through some 125 miles
of distribution mains, both
representing enormous jumps from
the figures a short 30 years
earlier.
The system's growth created
administrative challenges as
well. In 1856, users paid a
one-time charge of $3 to have a
licensed plumber tap into the
system and an annual fee of $5
per dwelling, with surcharges
for additional facilities. Yet
expansion meant a need for
capital, and questions about
equitable distribution of costs.
Metering began in 1870, and the
additional revenue provided by
more exact billing turned out to
be essential as Cleveland
continued to grow and demand an
ever greater supply of water.
Growth continued to outstrip the
capacity of the water supply
system. Moreover, one crib far
out in the lake was insufficient
and the old intakes near the
mouth of the Cuyahoga River,
which had become the city's de
facto sewer, were too close to
the pollution the growing city
generated. Between 1890 and
1916, the system was therefore
greatly expanded, centered
around the construction of two
intake tunnels that ran under
the bed of Lake Erie for several
miles to points farther out in
the lake where the water was
still pure. These were the days
when men and mules did risky
underground work that massive
machines do today. Pockets of
explosive, poisonous gas and the
soft clay under Lake Erie made
the work extremely dangerous,
and frequent explosions and
cave-ins claimed the lives of
dozens of workers. In fact,
compensation to the families of
those who lost their lives was a
prominent component of the
expenditures on the water system
during these years.
Yet out of the tragedy arose new
inventions to eliminate the
hazards. One of them was the
"safety hood' invented by
Garrett A. Morgan, an innovator
in the field of safety devices
and a Cleveland resident (See
Garret Morgan Biography from
History Index Page). A gas
explosion in 1916 left a group
of workers trapped in a tunnel
beneath Lake Erie, and 10 men
died because of the fumes while
attempting to rescue them.
Morgan was called to the scene
with his safety hood, and he and
other volunteers used the device
to successfully rescue several
of the trapped workers. Morgan's
safety hood, the forerunner of
the modern gas mask, has gone on
to save countless lives in
fields from fire fighting to law
enforcement. Cleveland honored
Morgan's genius and courage in
1991 by rededicating the
renovated Division Avenue Water
Works with his name.
Risk lurked in the early water
system in other forms as well.
Typhoid fever and cholera often
broke out in Cleveland, a result
of society's insufficient
knowledge of water treatment
processes at the time and the
growing amount of pollution in
Lake Erie as the city became
more industrial. Science was on
the move at the beginning of the
twentieth century, however, and
Cleveland began adding chlorine
to its water in 1911, and began
testing the water daily in 1913.
Filtration began in 1917; the
Division Avenue Water Treatment
Plant, built on the site of the
older Division pumping station,
opened with the latest in water
filtration and treatment
technology. The effect of the
new treatment technologies was
soon clear. In 1900, the death
rate from typhoid fever per
100,000 persons was 110, but
dropped to merely one in 1930.
The 1920's were an age of
prosperity in Cleveland, and the
city expanded accordingly.
Immigrants poured into the area,
and Cleveland was one of the 10
largest cities in the United
States. Demand for water
continued to increase rapidly,
and the water system was
expanded to respond. An
important result was the
addition in 1925 of the Baldwin
Water Treatment Plant and its
135-million-gallon underground
reservoir. Carved out of solid
rock and the largest covered
reservoir in the world when
completed, the reservoir helped
Baldwin meet the growing needs
of the downtown area, the east
side and communities to the
east. Baldwin was engineered to
allow newly built facilities to
incorporate existing
infrastructure. To feed its
enormous reservoir, Baldwin was
linked to the Kirtland Pumping
Station, whose powerful
steam-driven intake pumps
represented the apex of
technology at the time, and in
turn to the crib finished in
1904. The Fairmount Reservoir
became a staging area for raw
water coming from the Kirtland
Pumping Station, and a pump
station was attached to bolster
supply to Baldwin. All the
while, the distribution network
grew in scope and complexity as
the Greater Cleveland area
expanded into the farmland and
forest surrounding it.
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| Early Steam-driven Engines at the Garrett A. Morgan Water Treatment Plant |
The stock market crash of 1929
and the beginning of the Great
Depression put a temporary brake
on both the city's growth and
demand for water. While the
Parma Reservoir was completed in
1934 to serve the communities to
the south and west of Cleveland,
other projects were delayed or
canceled, and water use dropped
off. By the end of the 1930's,
however, water use was on the
rise again and Cleveland's water
system was bumping up against
its limitations. The citizens of
Greater Cleveland demanded more
water, particularly the
inhabitants of suburban areas
who typically suffered severe
water shortages and pressure
problems during the summer. Yet
a full-scale expansion effort
had to wait until the end of
World War II. During the war,
city politicians such as Emil
Crown, a modern-day T.R. Scowden
who served as Director of Public
Utilities from the mid-1930's
until the mid-1950's, worked
miracles to obtain required
materials from the War
Production Board, which rationed
items such as steel pipe. Yet
their efforts only kept the
system functioning; water ran
short and water and pressure
dropped in the summer, but the
war came first. Questions of
money and equitable distribution
of costs also had to be worked
out.
Immediately after the war ended,
Cleveland geared up for a
massive water system expansion
that resulted in the
construction of first the
Nottingham Water Treatment Plant
in 1951 and the Crown Water
Treatment Plant, named after the
legendary Emil Crown, in 1958.
The city was at its peak, and
the scale of the water system
reflected it. The system served
44,000 people in 1860, but now
served 1.6 million. Moreover, it
now had four intakes
stretching between 2.5 and 4
miles into Lake Erie, compared
to the single 300-foot intake
completed in 1856. These
intakes were between two to
three times larger than the
original intake. Reservoir
capacity in 1963 was over 233
million gallons, compared to 5
million in 1856, and the water
was distributed through over
3,700 miles of mains, compared
to 11 in the beginning.
The system had reached maturity,
but maturity and the system's
complexity brought with them a
need for innovative solutions to
the problems they imposed.
Nottingham and Crown were
representative of the
disagreements about rates and
service between Cleveland and
its suburbs that began coming to
the fore as Cleveland's growth
leveled off in the 1960's.
Planning for Nottingham, which
primarily serves Cleveland's
southeast suburbs, began in
1925, but this plant was not
completed until nearly 30 years
later. A main reason was the
debate on financing that grew
out of the differing viewpoints
of Cleveland and the suburbs.
Crown was built to serve
Cleveland's expanding western
suburbs, which periodically
considered building their own
separate water system because of
the water shortages they
experienced until Crown began
operating. In sum, the growth of
the Greater Cleveland area had
been straining the ability of
the status quo to meet all
residents' needs. Crown and
Nottingham were two important
steps Cleveland took to improve
suburban service, a process that
continues today.
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The Filtration gallery at Garrett A. Morgan in the 1960's.
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Cleveland's changing demographic
and economic picture after the
1950's necessitated changes to
the water system's
administration. The heavy
industry that had made Cleveland
a wealthy and powerful city also
made it a challenging place to
live. Beginning in the 1960's,
the city was saddled with the
enormous cost of cleaning up
Lake Erie, polluted by the
city's growth. Many residents
left for the suburbs, and then
some of the industries
themselves left for lower cost
sites elsewhere in the U.S. and
overseas. Water consumption rose
in the suburbs, but dropped in
metropolitan Cleveland. Many of
the same issues regarding the
equitable distribution of costs
that had hindered the much
needed Nottingham plant boiled
over into a protracted political
struggle between the city and
the suburbs over water from 1975
to 1980.
Moreover, the inflation that
began its upward spiral in the
1960's and the unwillingness of
users to approve higher rates
made funds increasingly less
available, leading to creeping
neglect of Cleveland's superb
water system because it is a
user-funded utility that does
not rely on tax dollars for
financial support. Capital
expenditures on the water system
averaged under $10 million
annually during the 1970's,
which was insufficient to
maintain the system, much less
expand it. The water system was
in desperate need of
refurbishment three decades
after reaching its peak, but it
was this need that united the
city and its suburban customers
in a fair agreement covering the
supply and price of water.
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| The larger water towers of today can hold nearly as much water as the first reservoir built in 1856. |
The effort to rehabilitate the
neglected water system began in
1982 as an outgrowth of new
water service agreements
hammered out between the City of
Cleveland and the suburbs from
1975-1980. Dubbed the Capital
Improvement Program, or CIP, the
effort continues today and
entails a broad range of
projects to improve and
strengthen the system. These
include upgrading of the four
treatment plants, which in 1982
had been in service from 26 to
65 years. For example, the
Division Water Treatment Plant
was completely renovated before
being renamed the Garrett A.
Morgan Water Treatment Plant.
Improvements and additions to
the system of water mains to
raise reliability and water
quality are another key
component of the CIP, as are the
addition of new technologies and
equipment for controlling
distribution and guaranteeing
water supply quality in the face
of strict federal regulations.
For instance, the CIP resulted
in the upgrading of advanced
control technology, the SCADA
system, at the Supervisory
Control Center in Parma Heights,
which opened in 1967. SCADA
helps highly skilled personnel
make distribution as efficient
as possible and respond quickly
to emergencies. Altogether, the
CIP is budgeted at over $900
million through 2008, and is
positioning Greater Cleveland to
successfully meet its water
demands well into the next
century.
The CIP, however, is not being
achieved through sharp increases
in water rates. Although rates
have risen somewhat, Cleveland
water remains among the least
expensive in the nation, while
also rating among the highest in
quality. A key factor supporting
the low cost of Cleveland water
is the Cleveland Division of
Water's management structure. As
the CIP began to take shape, the
Division of Water and City
government realized that bold,
new management practices would
be needed to get the work done
without placing a heavy
financial burden on the system's
customers.
Efficiency is the watchword of
Cleveland's water system today.
Modern management principles
have been joined with advanced
technology to speed
administrative work, meter
reading and billing, repair
time, and treatment and
distribution. Today, the
Division of Water gets more work
done more cost efficiently than
at any time in its history. And
remember Benhu Johnson, the man
who sold Lake Erie water by the
barrel? He distributed water at
a cost of about two gallons for
a penny, but today the Division
of Water distributes a far
cleaner, healthier water at the
price of about 15 gallons for a
penny. The residents of Greater
Cleveland can depend on their
excellent water system, today
and tomorrow.
Cleveland water costs less per
gallon today than it did 150
years ago, and consistently
ranks among the highest in
quality in the United States.
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Garrett Augustus Morgan
(1877 - 1963)
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Garrett Augustus
Morgan, was an
African-American businessman
and inventor whose curiosity and
innovation led to the
development of many useful and
helpful products. A practical
man of humble beginnings,
Morgan devoted his life to
creating things that made the
lives of other people safer and
more convenient.
Among his inventions was an
early traffic signal, that
greatly improved safety on
America's streets and roadways.
Indeed, Morgan's technology
was the basis for modern traffic
signal systems and was an
early example of what we know
today as Intelligent
Transportation Systems.
The Inventor's Early Life. The
son of former slaves, Garrett A.
Morgan was born in Paris,
Kentucky on March 4, 1877. His
early childhood was spent
attending school and working on
the family farm with his
brothers and sisters. While
still a teenager, he left
Kentucky and moved north to
Cincinnati, Ohio in search of
opportunity.
Although Morgan's formal
education never took him beyond
elementary school, he hired a
tutor while living in Cincinnati
and continued his studies in
English grammar.
In 1895, Morgan moved to
Cleveland, Ohio, where he went
to work as a sewing machine
repair man for a clothing
manufacturer. News of his
proficiency for fixing things
and experimenting traveled fast
and led to numerous job offers
from various manufacturing firms
in the Cleveland area.
In 1907, Morgan opened his own
sewing equipment and repair
shop. It was the first of
several businesses he would
establish. In 1909, he expanded
the enterprise to include a
tailoring shop that employed 32
employees. The new company
turned out coats, suits and
dresses, all sewn with equipment
that Morgan himself had made.
In 1920 Morgan moved into the
newspaper business when he
established the Cleveland Call.
As the years went on, he became
a prosperous and widely
respected business man, and he
was able to purchase a home and
an automobile. Indeed it was
Morgan's experience while
driving along the streets of
Cleveland that led to the
invention the nation's first
patented traffic signal.
The Garrett Morgan Traffic
Signal. The first American- made
automobiles were introduced to
U.S. consumers shortly before
the turn of the century. The
Ford Motor Company was founded
in 1903 and with it American
consumers began to discover the
adventures of the open road.
In the early years of the 20th
century, it was not uncommon for
bicycles, animal-powered wagons
and new gasoline-powered motor
vehicles to share the same
streets and roadways with
pedestrians. Accidents were
frequent. After witnessing a
collision between an automobile
and a horse-drawn carriage,
Morgan was convinced that
something should be done to
improve traffic safety.
While other inventors are
reported to have experimented
with and even marketed traffic
signals, Garrett A. Morgan was
the first to apply for and
acquire a U.S. patent for such a
device. The patent was granted
on November 20, 1923. Morgan
later had the technology
patented in Great Britain and
Canada as well.
The Morgan traffic signal was a
T-shaped pole unit that featured
three positions: Stop, Go and an
all-directional stop position.
This “third position” halted
traffic in all directions to
allow pedestrians to cross
streets more safely.
Morgan's traffic management
device was used throughout North
America until it was replaced by
the red, yellow and green-light
traffic signals currently used
around the world. The inventor
sold the rights to his traffic
signal to the General Electric
Corporation for $40,000. Shortly
before his death, in 1963,
Morgan was awarded a citation
for his traffic signal by the
United States Government.
Other Morgan Inventions. Garrett
Morgan was constantly
experimenting to develop new
concepts. Though the traffic
signal came at the height of his
career and became one of his
most renowned inventions, it was
just one of several innovations
he developed, manufactured and
sold over the years.
Morgan invented a zig-zag
stitching attachment for
manually operated sewing
machine. He also founded a
company that made personal
grooming products, such as hair
dying ointments and the
curved-tooth pressing comb.
Another Significant Contribution
to Public Safety. On July 25,
1916, Morgan made national news
for using a gas mask he had
invented to rescue several men
trapped during an explosion in
an underground tunnel beneath
Lake Erie. After the rescue,
Morgan's company received
requests from fire departments
around the country who wished to
purchase the new masks. The
Morgan gas mask was later
refined for use by U.S. Army
during World War I. In 1921,
Morgan was awarded a patent for
a Safety Hood and Smoke
Protector. Two years later, a
refined model of his early gas
mask won a gold medal at the
International Exposition of
Sanitation and Safety, and
another gold medal from the
International Association of
Fire Chiefs.
As word of Morgan’s life-saving
inventions spread across North
America and England, demand for
these products grew. He was
frequently invited to
conventions and public
exhibitions to demonstrate how
his inventions worked.
Garrett A. Morgan died on August
27, 1963, at the age of 86. His
life was long and full, and his
creative energies have given us
a marvelous and lasting legacy.
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