Thomson Dam
St. Louis River Water Project
Thomson Dam, MN

• Structure ID: NDI: MN00604
• Location: River Mile 29.2
• Structure Type: Earth Embankment w/Concrete Gravity Structure
• Structure Width: 1,600 Foot Main Structure, 473 Foot Wide Spillway
• River Elevation (Pool): 1,069 Feet
• River Elevation (Outflow): 1,051 Feet
• Water Fall: 18 Feet
• Hydro Power: 70-Megawatts
• Date Built: 1907
The Thomson Water Project consists of a number of components located in and around Thomson, Minnesota, and the nearby Jay Cooke State Park. The dam features a remote power house that is 3 miles from the main dam.

The project begins with the main dam structure near the St. Louis River bridge on MN-210. Water flows out of this structure and into the historic St. Louis River channel. Water also backs up behind the dam forming Thomson Reservoir, which is about one square mile in size. A second dam structure and outlet allows water to flow into Thomson Canal. That 2 mile long canal feeds into a mile long set of underground pipes, which carry the water to the power plant. While the power plant is 3 miles from the dam, the river channel takes a bit over 5 miles to reach the power plant.

While most visitors see only the dam structure near the St. Louis River channel, the dam is actually composed of many smaller dam segments. Some of these segments have been rebuilt and merged over the years. Here is a current listing from the National Dam Inventory:

Dam ID Structure Width Height
MN00604Thomson 160015
MN83020Thomson Dam No 1-1/2 9010
MN83021Thomson Dam No 2A, 2B 53023
MN83022Thomson Dam No 2-1/2 1309
MN83023Thomson Dam No 3, 2-3/4, 3, 3A, 4, 4A 132238
MN83024Thomson Dam No 5 10023
MN83025Thomson Dam No 5-1/2 11523
MN83026Thomson Dam No 6 12551
MN83027Thomson Dam No 8 10012
MN83028Thomson Dam No 9 10011
MN83029Thomson Dam No 10 8011
MN83030Thomson Dam No 11, 11-1/2, Gate House 36517
MN83031Thomson Dam No 12 45012

The Thomson Water Project was built by Great Northern Power in 1907. Great Northern Power was an operating division of the Great Northern Railroad. It was later transferred to the St. Louis Power Company. Today, it is known as the Thomson Energy Center, which is owned by Minnesota Power, which is a division of Allete, Inc.

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Photo and text by John A. Weeks III, Copyright © 2007, all rights reserved.
For further information, contact: john@johnweeks.com