Fossil Creek meanders ten miles to the Verde River, dropping some 1,600 feet during its course and, at the turn of the century, enticed miners in the copper-rich Irving area to use a new technology -- hydroelectric power. A seven-mile series of flumes brings the water from a dam below Fossil Spring to the Irving Plant and then to Stehr Lake.
Childs-Irving
![](/sites/default/files/styles/landmark_node_/public/landmarks/images/Childs-Irving_Hydroelectric_Project.jpg?itok=IoJKkai3)
YearAdded:
Image Credit: Original Image: Public Domain (National Park Service)Image Caption: Childs-Irving Hydroelectric ProjectEra_date_from: 1909
1976
Innovations
![](/sites/default/files/styles/thumbnail/public/landmarks/images/Childs-Irving_Hydroelectric_Project.jpg?itok=xMPUzwpa)
Fossil Creek meanders ten miles to the Verde River, dropping some 1,600 feet during its course and, at the turn of the century, enticed miners in the copper-rich Irving area to use a new technology -- hydroelectric power. A seven-mile series of flumes brings the water from a dam below Fossil Spring… Read More