Ocoee Dam No. 2 is located above the mouth of the Ocoee River, near the center of the Ocoee Gorge, a steep-sided valley sliced as the Ocoee winds its way westward through the Appalachian Mountains. Ocoee No. 2 is upstream from Ocoee Dam No. 1 and downstream from Ocoee Dam No. 3. The flume connecting Ocoee Dam No. 2 to its powerhouse winds its way along the cliffs overlooking the south side of the gorge before dropping the water to the powerhouse downstream from the dam. The dam and reservoir are surrounded by the Cherokee National Forest, and the only major road access is provided via the Ocoee Scenic Byway, a section of U.S. Route 64.
Capacity
Ocoee Dam No. 2 is a rock-filled crib-type dam high and long. The two units at the powerhouse downstream from the dam have a generating capacity of 23,100 kilowatts. The dam typically schedules major recreational releases on weekends in spring and fall and five days per week in summer months. The dam's flume consists of a wooden trough situated upon a shelf carved out of the cliffside. The trough carries the water to a point just above the powerhouse where it drops the water through two large steel pipes to the powerhouse below. Without this flume system, the dam would be practically useless as a power plant. There is also a funicular railway at the powerhouse site that is used for transport from the powerhouse to the flume.
History
The growth of industry in Chattanooga some west of the Ocoee River in the latter part of the 19th and early 20th centuries required large amounts of electric power. Several private entities attempted to meet this demand by building dams that could produce hydroelectricity. In 1910, a group of financiers formed the Eastern Tennessee Power Company to use the Ocoee's hydro-power potential. ETPC completed Ocoee Dam No. 1 in late 1911, and work began on Ocoee Dam No. 2 the following year. To build the dam, ETPC constructed a wooden "crib" made of by timbers, and filled the crib with stone. ETPC engineers realized that if the dam were built at the ideal powerhouse site, it would be unable to utilize the potential energy from the five-mile stretch immediately upstream in which the river drops in elevation. Engineers solved this dilemma by constructing the flume on the cliffs above the river gorge, which allows just a drop in the water level from the point at which it exits the reservoir to the point at which it spills through the pipes into the powerhouse below. At by, the flume was unusually large for its day. The dam was completed in 1913, and its two generators went online in October of that year.
TVA
In 1922, Eastern Tennessee Power merged with several other entities to form the Tennessee Electric Power Company. TEPCO maintained Ocoee Dam No. 2 until 1939, when a U.S. Supreme Court decision forced the company to sell its assets to the Tennessee Valley Authority, which had been established to oversee flood control and development in the greater Tennessee River valley. The $78 million TVA paid for TEPCO included $2.59 million for Ocoee Dam No. 2. TVA made several improvements to the dam in the 1940s which increased the dam's generating capacity by 15%. The dam's basic diversion design was used by TVA in the construction of Ocoee Dam No. 3 several miles upstream in 1942. By 1976, Ocoee No. 2's flume had deteriorated, and TVA decided to shut it down. To prevent it from being dismantled, several preservationist groups had the dam and flume placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979. TVA renovated the flume with treated wood, and placed it back in operation in 1983.