Möhne Reservoir
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Möhne Reservoir | |
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Coordinates | |
Lake type | artificial lake |
Primary inflows | Möhne, Heve |
Primary outflows | Möhne |
Catchment area | 432 km² |
Basin countries | Germany |
Surface area | 1067 ha |
Water volume | 135 mio m³ |
The Möhne Reservoir is an artificial lake in North Rhine-Westphalia, some 45 km east of Dortmund. The dam was built between 1908 and 1913 to help control floods, regulate water levels on the Ruhr river downstream, and generate hydropower. Today, the lake is also a tourist attraction. The lake is formed by the damming of two rivers, Möhne and Heve, and with its four basins stores as much as 135 million cubic meters of water.
The dam was destroyed by British bombers (“The Dambusters”) during Operation Chastise on the night of 16-17 May, 1943, together with the Edersee dam in northern Hesse. Special bouncing bombs had been constructed which were able to skip over the protective nets that hung in the water. A huge hole of 77 m by 22 m was blown into the dam. The resulting huge floodwave killed at least 1579 people[1], 1026 of them foreign forced labourers held in camps downriver. The small city of Neheim-Hüsten was particularly hard-hit with over 800 victims, among them at least 526 victims in a camp for Russian women held for forced labour.
Though the Organisation Todt quickly repaired the dams with forced labourers commanded over from the construction of the Atlantic Wall, the impact of the raid on German industry in the Ruhr valley and indeed on the civil population was significant. In the Möhne and Ruhr valleys, 11 factories were totally destroyed, 114 seriously damaged, 25 road and rail bridges were destroyed and throughout the region power, water and gas supplies were seriously disrupted. Industry production was back at normal level by September, however.