The first use of water from Westchester County came from the
Old Croton Dam, which was completed in 1842. During the 1880s, New York faced increased demands for water and sought to enlarge the
Croton Distributing Reservoir located in Manhattan to meet that need. The enlargement was completed in 1906 as a part of a system of reservoirs – the
Croton Watershed – designed to draw water from
Putnam and
Westchester counties to New York City. In 1885, the old Kensico Dam was built south of the village of
Kensico as an additional source of water for New York City. The dam formed a small lake with water from the
Bronx and
Byram Rivers, but it was not enough for New York's increasing population. A larger reservoir was needed to act as a holding tank for distribution to New York City. Kensico was surrounded by hills that came to a natural V-shape, making it an ideal area to hold a vast amount of water. To the south of Kensico were two ponds in
Harrison, Rye Pond and Little Rye Pond, which would eventually form part of the new reservoir. A nearby quarry in Harrison bordering Cranberry Lake provided the necessary materials for building the new dam. In 1905, New York State passed legislation to allow fundraising for the construction of Kensico Reservoir. The following year, final planning by the state was approved, and preliminary surveys were started. A seventeen-mile railroad spur and a small network of highways were built to carry materials from quarries at nearby Cranberry and Silver Lakes to the dam site. A camp for the workers and their families was also constructed, along with public facilities for their children. To prepare for the dam construction, each individual lot of land was
condemned and appraised, and the owner was paid a "fair value" for the land. Many of the families had to move to the surrounding communities of
Armonk, Harrison,
Valhalla, and
White Plains. The village of Kensico was then flooded to make way for the reservoir. On July 12, 2018, the
New York City Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) announced plans for a Kensico-Eastview Connection Project. The project mainly involved constructing an approximately 2-mile long tunnel between the Kensico Reservoir and the nearby
Catskill-Delaware Water Ultraviolet Disinfection Facility. ==Dam construction==