Seven Mile River (East Brookfield River)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Seven Mile River
Seven Mile River near Wire Village
Seven Mile River near Wire Village
Origin Browning Pond, Oakham / Spencer
Mouth East Brookfield River
Length 7.8 mi (12.55 km)
Source elevation 745 ft (227.1 m)
Mouth elevation 600 ft (182.9 m)
Avg. discharge 35 ft³/sec (0.99 m³/sec)
Basin area 88 mi² (272.9 km²)

The Seven Mile River in central Massachusetts heads at Browning Pond, at the Oakham and Spencer border, and travels south through Spencer, following a short distance from State Route 31 (North Spencer Road). It crosses under State Route 31 where State Route 31 becomes Pleasant Street, then continues south along Old Meadow Road and under State Route 9 near the junction of State Route 49. It then parallels Route 9 to its south until it joins the East Brookfield River between Lake Lashaway and Quaboag Pond.

Contents

[edit] Information

The Seven Mile River drains Spencer and surrounding communities. Named for its length, it is nearly eight miles long. The Seven Mile River is also called the Sevenmile River. Its mouth is at an elevation of about 600 ft (182.9 m) MSL and its head is about 745 ft (227.1 m) MSL. This 145 ft (44.2 m) fall was once used to produce waterpower for industry. There exists the remnants of several dams, two of which were taken out during a flood in the 1950s and never repaired. They remain as evidence of a forgone era when Spencer was a major manufacturing center. In addition to small local brooks and streams, the seven Mile River is fed from Turkey Hill Brook, north of town and Cranberry River to the south. This river is part of the Chicopee River Watershed.

Seven Mile River bridge in Spencer
Seven Mile River bridge in Spencer

[edit] History

In the 1800s, The Seven Mile River furnished waterpower to industry in Spencer. There were many factories along this river. Now a sewage treatment plant stands alone. At the head of Turkey Hill Brook, a major tributary to the Seven Mile River is Sugden Reservoir. The reservoir was part of Spencer's wire drawing industry and fed the Lower Wire Village Mill, which made card wire. This mill originally belonged to the Prouty Brothers. When sold to Richard Sugden, he improved it by building the Sugden Reservoir on the top of Turkey Hill. The new company's name became Wickwire-Spencer. It remained until after World War II.

[edit] Seven Mile River vs. Sevenmile River

Virtually all official documents pertaining to Spencer, Massachusetts call its major river the Seven Mile River[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9]

Given this, how is it that a river near Attleboro, in the Ten Mile River Watershed, gets to use its name? In addition, how is it that Spencer’s river is misspelled to Sevenmile River? Locals state that it is politics, “somebody stole the river!” Some think that the Geological Survey Quadrangle for the area had the space missing in its name so the name stuck. Anyway, if you live near Spencer, Massachusetts, the river remains the Seven Mile River. Anywhere else, it is probably called the Sevenmile River.

[edit] Coordinates

[edit] References



Flag of Massachusetts
Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Boston (capital)
Regions

The Berkshires | Blackstone Valley | Cape Ann | Cape Cod | Greater Boston | The Islands | Merrimack Valley | MetroWest | North Shore | Pioneer Valley | Quabbin Valley | South Coast | South Shore | Western Massachusetts

Counties

Barnstable | Berkshire | Bristol | Dukes | Essex | Franklin | Hampden | Hampshire | Middlesex | Nantucket | Norfolk | Plymouth | Suffolk | Worcester

Cities

Agawam | Amesbury | Attleboro | Barnstable | Beverly | Boston | Brockton | Cambridge | Chelsea | Chicopee | Easthampton | Everett | Fall River | Fitchburg | Franklin | Gardner | Gloucester | Greenfield | Haverhill | Holyoke | Lawrence | Leominster | Lowell | Lynn | Malden | Marlborough | Medford | Melrose | Methuen | New Bedford | Newburyport | Newton | North Adams | Northampton | Peabody | Pittsfield | Quincy | Revere | Salem | Springfield | Somerville | Southbridge | Taunton | Waltham | Watertown | West Springfield | Westfield | Weymouth | Woburn | Worcester

Topics

Culture | Geography | Government | History | Images | Towns | Villages