Cedar Creek (Wisconsin)

Cedar Creek is a 53-kilometre-long (33 mi)[1] stream in southeastern Wisconsin in the United States. The Cedar Creek watershed is a 330 km2 (127 mi2) sub-basin of the larger Milwaukee River watershed.[2][3]

Description edit

Cedar Creek originates from Big Cedar Lake in the Town of West Bend and flows east into Little Cedar Lake. It then flows east through Jackson before turning south, crossing State Highway 60 where there is a USGS gauge[4] and briefly flows through Grafton before entering Cedarburg's north side. The creek flows through downtown Cedarburg, and empties into the Milwaukee River southeast of Cedarburg in the Town of Grafton. The lower section through Cedarburg is notable for its the steep slope, and early settlers made use of this by building several mills and accompanying dams.[citation needed]

The lower portion of the creek through downtown Cedarburg until its confluence with the Milwaukee River is impacted by the milldams and PCB pollution produced by Mercury Marine and Amcast automotive.[5] Numerous cleanups have occurred, including a 2018 cleanup from the Cedarburg Mill's pond to the Cedarburg Wire and Nail Factory dam was completed in 2018.[5]

Mills edit

Several mills dammed the lower portion of Cedar Creek in the mid and late 19th century. The mills proved successful and had large impacts on the local economy. By the early 20th century many of the mills had moved away from hydropower to more reliable steam or electric power.[6] Financial trouble for the mills began during the Great Depression and continued into later decades as larger mills and factories outcompeted the small mills. By the late 1960s, all the mills had either ceased operations, and some buildings have been converted to commercial uses, while others were abandoned unused or demolished.[citation needed]

Mills on Cedar Creek
Mill Name Year Built Products Produced Notes
Concordia Mill 1853 Grain Dam washed out and removed 1996
Cedarburg Wire and Nail Factory 1871 Grain, lumber, drawn steel, hydroelectricity
Columbia Mill 1843 Grain Demolished
Cedarburg Mill 1844 Grain Rebuilt 1855 with current stone structure
Hilgen and Wittenberg Woolen Mill 1864 Textiles

Flooding edit

Cedar Creek is normally a small low discharge stream, however like many streams it experiences regular flooding. In 1881, a sudden spring melt caused severe flooding that washed out all the dams on Cedar Creek except the one at the Cedarburg Mill. The flood also washed away at least one bridge.[6] Large floods occurred in 1952, 1959, 1960, and 1975.[7] In 1996, flooding washed out the dam at the Concordia Mill. Its millpond contained PCBs, and the washout complicated the cleanup by sending PCBs downstream.[citation needed]

Cedar Creek Flood Discharges[7]
Location Drained Area (km2) 20 Year Flood (m3/s) 50 Year Flood (m3/s) 100 Year Flood (m3/s) 500 Year Flood (m3/s)
County Highway I 280 71 128 157 184
State Highway 60 USGS Gage 04086500 303 75 134 165 194
At outlet 320 76 138 169 200

Parks edit

Public Parks along Cedar Creek
Name Municipality
Adlai Horn Park, Cedar Creek Park, Boy Scout Park Cedarburg
Grafton Lions Park Grafton
Covered Bridge Park, Town of Cedarburg Canoe Launch Town of Cedarburg
Jackson Marsh State natural Area Jackson

Bridges edit

Road and Railroad Bridges and Crossings on Cedar Creek
Road/Railroad Name Times Crossed Notes
Green Bay Rd 1
Lakefield Rd 1 Washed out in the great spring flood of 1881, later rebuilt.[6]
Canadian National Railroad[8] 4
Private 1
Highland Avenue 1 Site of the Highland Avenue Bridge, built in 1939 as a PWA project.
Columbia Rd 1
Bridge Rd 1 Original stone arch bridge re-decked, but original arches still visible.
State Highway 60 5
Cedar Creek Rd 3
County Highway I 1
Covered Bridge Rd 1 Site of the last covered bridge.[6]
Kaehlers Mill Rd 1
County Highway NN 2
County Highway Y 1
County Highway M 1
County Highway G 1
Hickory Ln 1
Sherman Rd 2
Western Ave 1
County Highway P 1
Interstate 45 1
South Mayfield Rd 1
Lily Rd 2
Scenic Dr 2
County Highway C 1
Pleasant Valley Rd 1
Hillside Rd 1

Notes edit

  1. ^ U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline data. The National Map Archived 2012-03-29 at the Wayback Machine, accessed May 19, 2011
  2. ^ "Milwaukee River Basin". Milwaukee Riverkeeper. Retrieved 2020-12-09.
  3. ^ Graham, Jackson (2015). Climate Impact on Groundwater Flow Processes in the Cedar Creek Watershed and Cedarburg Bog (MS thesis). University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.
  4. ^ "USGS Current Conditions for USGS 04086500 CEDAR CREEK NEAR CEDARBURG, WI". waterdata.usgs.gov. Retrieved 2020-12-08.
  5. ^ a b "CEDAR CREEK Site Profile". cumulis.epa.gov. Retrieved 2020-12-08.
  6. ^ a b c d "Early history of Ozaukee County, Wisconsin". 1965. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  7. ^ a b "Flooding Insurance Study | Ozaukee County, WI - Official Website". www.co.ozaukee.wi.us. Retrieved 2021-03-02.
  8. ^ "Wisconsin Railroad Map" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2016-01-30.

43°20′23″N 88°13′22″W / 43.33972°N 88.22278°W / 43.33972; -88.22278