Lake Cumberland was impounded from the
Cumberland River by the
United States Army Corps of Engineers' construction of the
Wolf Creek Dam, beginning in 1939 and ending with impoundment in 1952 after a delay caused by World War II. The Corps' name for the work is the Wolf Creek Project but Congress named the impoundment Lake Cumberland in 1952, adopting the name promoted by business interests in the area.
Dam repairs In 1967 a leak was found at the Wolf Creek Dam. Repairs were made in the late 1970s at a cost of over $96 million. On January 22, 2007, the
United States Army Corps of Engineers began lowering the water level in Lake Cumberland, fearing a possible breach in Wolf Creek Dam. Water seepage had again eroded the limestone under the dam, creating the potential for a breach and subsequent flood that would cause damages into the billions of dollars in cities downstream. By September 2011 Lake Cumberland was approximately below its normal level. The drop in water level had a negative impact on the area's
tourism industry as
marinas and municipalities scrambled to adjust their facilities for the lower water level. The caverns beneath the structure complicated plans for repairs, but a $594 million project to construct a new wall inside the dam was completed by early 2013. ==Uses==