Oak Leaf Lake Dam

Oak Leaf Lake Dam is an earth dam located in Gibson County, Tennessee, built in 2001. It carries a Low hazard potential classification and has a satisfactory condition assessment.

About Oak Leaf Lake Dam

The primary purpose of Oak Leaf Lake Dam is flood risk reduction. The dam is designed to control downstream flooding by temporarily storing excess water during storms and releasing it at a controlled rate. The dam is owned by John Stahlschmidt (private). It impounds the Trib-no. Fork Forked Deer.

The dam stands 37 feet tall and stretches 518 feet across, creates a reservoir covering 13 acres, has a maximum storage capacity of 244 acre-feet, and collects water from a drainage area of 0 square miles. Completed in 2001, the structure is relatively new.

This dam has a low hazard potential classification, meaning that failure would cause minimal damage, limited primarily to the dam owner's property, with no expected loss of life. Its condition is rated satisfactory, indicating no existing or potential dam safety deficiencies are recognized. The most recent inspection on record was 10/01/2024.

At 37 feet, this dam is taller than 84% of dams nationwide.

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Low HazardSatisfactory ConditionEmergency Action Plan: Not Required

Location

StateTennessee
CountyGibson
River/StreamTrib-no. Fork Forked Deer
Coordinates35.95778, -88.87028

Physical Characteristics

Dam TypeEarth
NID Height37 ft
Dam Length518 ft
Year Completed2001 (25 years old)

Storage & Hydraulics

NID Storage244 acre-ft
Max Storage244 acre-ft
Normal Storage150 acre-ft
Surface Area13 acres
Drainage Area0 sq mi
Spillway TypeUncontrolled

Ownership & Safety

PurposeFlood Risk Reduction
OwnerJohn Stahlschmidt
Owner TypePrivate
Hazard ClassificationLow
Condition AssessmentSatisfactory
Last Inspection10/01/2024
Emergency Action PlanNot Required

Identifiers

NID IDTN05343
Federal IDTN05343
More InfoState Dam Safety Program

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