| Rural
Electrification Administration Plant in Chippewa County
WI
On
Sunday, May 2, 1937, Wisconsin Power Cooperative was organized
by an assembly of farmers for the purpose of developing
a generating and transmission facility to provide low-cost
electric service for the rural area of Buffalo, Chippewa,
Clark, Dunn, Pierce, St. Croix, Taylor, and
Trempealeau counties.
Loans
from the Rural Electrification Administration (REA) financed
construction of the original station and transmission lines.
Ground was broken on November 8, 1937, and on March 12,
1938,the nation's first cooperative generating station was
ready for service.
Transmission
of electric energy into Buffalo and Trempealeau counties
began on March 14, 1938, and into the remaining six counties
by the end of that year. Additional generating units were
added by late 1941, providing capacity to serve rural membership
in Barron, Burnett, Eau Claire, Jackson, Polk, Rusk, and
Sawyer counties.
On December
16, 1941, Wisconsin Power Cooperative was merged with Tri-State
Power Cooperative of Genoa to form Dairyland Power Cooperative
of La Crosse. This historic plant was retired from service
and dismantled in 1975.
|
|