Hoover Dam Essays

  • Hoover Dam

    1138 Words  | 3 Pages

    Lying in Black Canyon is the monumental structure known as Hoover Dam. Also known as Boulder Dam, Hoover Dam was built from 1931 to 1936. Frank Crowe was the head director of the building. The dam was built to irrigate the dry desert in the south west United States. The site of Hoover Dam is visited by millions of people annually and will continue to provide energy to many cities. In 1922, a commission was formed between Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming. The

  • The Hoover Dam

    1748 Words  | 4 Pages

    turbines from dams to provide power was a brilliant idea until water levels started running lower than normal. The water waste from humanity is directly contributing to portions of it, aside from drought conditions affected by pollution, widespread fires battled, and more adds to the depletion thereof. When humanity is relying on power provided from dams to handle the demand, they are essentially relying on the assumption that water levels will always be there to provide it. The Hoover Dam provides power

  • The Construction of the Hoover Dam

    1343 Words  | 3 Pages

    Hoover Dam began to be built during the Great Depression. There were not many jobs because of the economic stand point during the 1930s. The construction of the Hoover Dam created more jobs helping the people receive a job. Even though people received a job, safety was an issue. Some of the safety issues were weather conditions, pneumonia causes, high scalars, and discrimination. Supervisors had a goal to finish the Hoover Dam in record time. The supervisors on the Hoover Dam project were solely

  • Hoover Dam

    1574 Words  | 4 Pages

    Hoover Dam The Hoover Dam is one of America¡¦s greatest civil engineering marvels (Hernan 22) and ¡§has become a magnet to those fascinated by human ingenuity at its best¡¨ (Haussler 30). With its enormous size and construction during the Great Depression, it was an interesting topic to me. I would like to major in civil engineering and, at first, I was researching this topic. I was looking for salary and job descriptions. Then, I discovered the name John L. Savage, the engineer who supervised

  • Hoover Dam Research Paper

    1324 Words  | 3 Pages

    Learning Dictionary, a dam is defined as, A wall that is built across a river in order to stop the water flowing and to make a lake.” The Hoover Dam is located in the Colorado River between Arizona and Nevada. It was first called the Boulder Dam but was later named the Hoover Dam. It was named after President Herbert Hoover. Hoover was not only the president but also an engineer, and when he was Secretary of Commerce (before being President) he urged the construction of the dam. The dam is 726 feet tall

  • A Modern Marvel: The Hoover Dam

    1203 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Hoover Dam is a modern marvel and a testament to American ingenuity. At over six million six hundred thousand tons and jetting seven hundred sixty feet from the canyon floor, six hundred sixty feet across the bottom and, one thousand two hundred forty four feet across the top, the structure is awe inspiring even to a modern audience. Three quarters of a century since its completion it still stands as a symbol of one of the greatest construction projects of the ages. The need for a dam to block

  • An Essay On The Hoover Dam

    756 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Hoover Dam The Hoover Dam is one of the biggest dams and power plants in the world. It was built during the Great depression and continues to be a source of energy for the area. Between 1930 and 1936, thousands of people worked on the dam and ninety-six workers died from accidents directly relating to the building of the dam. It was the first human-made structure to exceed the masonry mass to that of the Great Pyramid of Giza. Hoover Dam is located on the border between Nevada and Arizona

  • The Hoover Dam

    1225 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Hoover Dam Out in the middle of no where, an hour drive away from Las Vegas, NV lies one of the biggest dams and power plants in the world. Built in the heart of the depression, it serves as more than just a barrier from water to pass through. The concrete poured into the walls of Hoover Dam, are made by the sweat and blood of hundreds of Americans who were looking to save themselves, and their families. Residing on the Colorado River, the Hoover dam rises out of no where. Downstream

  • The Hoover Dam and Its Construction

    4038 Words  | 9 Pages

    Counting only dams taller than fifty feet high, the U.S. has some 5,000 dams that range from giant hydroelectric dams such as the Grand Coulee in Washington State to flood control dams in the southeast and dams that provide water for irrigation in California. Overall the United States has as many as 2.5 million dams of one sort or another. The design and construction of many of these dams took place between 1930 and 1975. This 45 years period is known as the golden age of dam building, starting

  • Hoover Dam Research Paper

    1440 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Hoover Dam is an engineering marvel completed in the year 1935. The dam spans the Colorado River in the Black Canyon, about 30 miles south of Las Vegas. The dam provides hydroelectric power and irrigation in the arid regions of Arizona and California. At the time, it was the tallest dam in the world and it created the largest man made lake in the United States. The dam was built before the luxuries of modern tools and technology, so the workers faced many challenges during the construction

  • Case study on the Hoover Dam

    2913 Words  | 6 Pages

    Before Hoover Dam After By- Balaji.T.K, CE02B011 CONTENTS No     Description     Page no 1.     Hoover dam –an Introduction     1 2.     Requirements posed by structural design     2 3.     Requirements posed by other details     6 4.     Type of Concrete     7 5.     Guidelines for Mix design     9 6.     Fabrication and Installation     10 7.     Formwork     11 8.     Cooling of concrete     12 9.     Temperature control of Mass Concrete     12 10.     Quality Assurance     13 11.     Bibliography     14

  • President Franklin D. Roosevelt's Speech At The Dedication Of Hoover Dam

    718 Words  | 2 Pages

    President Franklin D. Roosevelt's Speech at the Dedication of Hoover Dam Sept. 30, 1935 It was the great Hoover Dam, a great National Treasure. It was the feat of mankind which rose 726 feet above the bedrock of the river, altering the geography of an entire region, creating the largest artificial lake in the world and holding enough water to cover the entire State of Connecticut to a depth of ten feet. It was this dam that managed to provide for the entire annual electricity

  • The Hoover Dam Comparison

    973 Words  | 2 Pages

    SINCE THE AFTERNOON in 1967 when I first saw Hoover Dam, its image has never been entirely absent from my inner eye. I will be talking to someone in Los Angeles, say, or New York, and suddenly the dam will materialize, its pristine concave face gleaming white against the harsh rusts and taupes and mauves of that rock canyon hundreds or thousands of miles from where I am. I will be driving down Sunset Boulevard, or about to enter a freeway, and abruptly those power transmission towers will appear

  • Percy Jackson Titans Curse by Rick Riordan

    778 Words  | 2 Pages

    with. For example when they are at the Hoover Dam Percy said “I need to get to the dam snack bar and everyone cracked up except zoe(p 208). He is a good character and friend to all of his friends in the book. The conflict happened when Percy found out that Dr. Thorn was still alive Dr. Thorn attacked Percy and his friends when they went to get Grover, Percy's friend who is half goat. The rising action happened when they were on their way to the Hoover Dam and they find a manatee who has the power

  • Wackenhut SS

    1734 Words  | 4 Pages

    Wackenhut SS It was a warm spring day. I turned down the radio as I drove across the bridge at Hoover dam, water and cement connected the state line separating Arizona from Nevada. Crossing the dam then past the tourist information center reached two huge stone angel monuments with arms and wings stretched toward the sky. The sight of them invoked religious desperation from me as if a I was lacking from divine intervention. Parked on either side of the two towering angels sat two highway patrol

  • The Hoover Dam: Significance To The Civil Engineering And Society

    855 Words  | 2 Pages

    Objective: The Hoover Dam is significant to the civil engineering and society because it helped the United States during The Great Depression, it required new engineering techniques to be established to have it built, and at the time of its construction it was the tallest concrete dam in the United States. The memo will also describe some other basic information about the Hoover Dam and an inquiry into scientific, social, and symbolic significance of the Hoover Dam. Introduction: The Hoover Dam, at the

  • Summary Of At The Dam By Joan Didion

    820 Words  | 2 Pages

    visited the Hoover Dam in 1967, she saw something beyond just a dam. She saw “ a dynamo finally free of man, splendid at last in its absolute isolation”(Didion, 10), where the ability of machinery to run on its own intrigued her. The dam was shrouded by a mysterious aura with “its pristine concave face gleaming white against the harsh rusts and taupes and mauves “(Didion, 9) of the distant canyon it laid amongst. Didion, in her essay “ At the Dam,” explored her fascination by Hoover Dam and what the

  • Glen Canyon Dam Pros And Cons

    1380 Words  | 3 Pages

    Controversies Over Glen Canyon Dam Glen Canyon Dam is located on the Colorado River near the city of Page in northern Arizona. Construction of the dam started in 1956. It was meant to function as a water storage and a delivery center for the Lover Colorado River Basin to get sufficient water in times of drought. Glen Canyon Bridge was built by U.S. Bureau of Reclamation to support the construction of the dam. In 1966, the dam was completed (“Glen Canyon Dam” n.d.). Its reservoir became to be known

  • herbert hoover and his role in the great depression

    1019 Words  | 3 Pages

    Herbert Hoover and His Role in The Great Depression With the continually worsening conditions, and the stock market crash on Black Tuesday, October 29, 1929, the United States was thrown into the biggest economical disaster of our history. Everyone, excluding the rich upper class, became poor and most unemployed. The majority of the American populace found themselves living in ‘shantytowns’ or ‘Hoovervilles’ as they later became to be known, which consisted of many cramped shacks constructed from

  • The Pros And Cons Of Water Dams

    659 Words  | 2 Pages

    Water Dams There are approximately 75,000 water dams just in the United States, providing the right amount of water in the right place at the right time. Majority of our world today relies on water dams. They are an efficient way of storing water, creating electricity and more. Even though our world has become almost dependent on this invention, it does have just as many cons that it does pros. A water dam is a barrier that stores water; it can be on the surface or in underground caves. A dam is