Quequechan River

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Quequechan River in Fall River, Massachusetts.
Quequechan River in Fall River, Massachusetts.

The Quequechan River, also known as the Quiquechan River, is a river in Fall River, Massachusetts that flows northwest to connect the South Watuppa Pond to the Taunton River. The name means "Falling River" in Wampanoag, hence the town's name.

The river is approximately 2 miles long, and mostly placid, until it nears downtown Fall River, where a quickly declining grade causes it to turn rapid. The river used to have a spectacular waterfall right before it entered into the Taunton River, but the building of the Braga Bridge caused the river to be diverted through pipes for more then half its length. Sections can still be spotted above ground, most notably the placid sections in the vicinity of Interstate 195 just after the Government Center.

[edit] Geography

South Watuppa Pond breaks out of its bed through the Quequechan River, which falls to a channel leading to what is now Battleship Cove on the Taunton River. The Quequechan originally flowed unconfined over an almost level course for more than a mile. In the last half-mile (800 m) of its progress it rushes down the hillside in a narrow, precipitous, rocky channel, creating the falls for which Fall River is named. In this distance the total fall is about 132 feet (40 m). and the volume of water 122 cubic feet per second (3.5 m³/s).

[edit] History/Future

The waterfalls on the Quequechan were located between Pocasset and Central Streets and, Route 195. This originally attractive feature of the landscape has seldom been visible since it was covered over by cotton mills in the 19th century. Having become an underground feature of the industrial landcape, it also became a sewer. In the 20th century the mills were abandoned and some of them burned, exposing the falls once more. Subsequently they went under Route 195, which crosses the Taunton at Battleship Cove. Currently the citizens of Fall River are enthusiastically working on a project to "daylight" the falls, restore or recreate them, and build a green belt with a bicycle path along the Quequechan River.