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The total amount expended to June 30, 1889, including all outstanding liabilities is $34,642.81, and has resulted in so improving the river that boats now run at a stage of water 4 feet lower than before the improvements were begun.

The amount necessary to complete the improvement can not be given in advance of a survey to be made as soon as the stage of water will permit.

July 1, 1888, amount available

Amount appropriated by act of August 11, 1888

July 1, 1889, amount expended during fiscal year, exclusive of

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$1,726. 23 12,500,00

14, 226. 23

$3,500. 21
368.83

3,869.04

10, 357. 19

July 1, 1889, balance available .....

Amount that can be profitably expended in fiscal year ending June 30,1891 25,000.00 Sbmitted in compliance with requirements of sections 2 of river and

harbor acts of 1866 and 1867.

(See Appendix O 6.)

7. Ocmulgee River, Georgia.-The present project for the improvement of this river was adopted in 1876, and revised in 1882, and again in 1886, the object being to secure a low-water channel 60 feet in width and 4 fect in depth from Macon to the mouth of the river. The cost of improvement was originally estimated at $56,240, and in 1886 at $112,480. Prior to improvement, navigation was much impeded by rock shoals, sand-bars, overhanging trees, snags, and sunken logs, the low-water depth at some places not exceeding 2 feet.

During the fiscal year just closed 886 snags and logs and 4,313 overhanging trees were removed; 186 trees were deadened and 18 logs cut up on the river bank. The expenditures during the year amounted to $4,636.75. The total amount expended to June 30, 1889, including all outstanding liabilities, is $67,981.70, and has resulted in removing many dangerous obstructions, boats now being able to run without accident at a stage of water some 3 feet lower than before the improvements were begun. The amount necessary to complete the improvement can not be given in advance of a survey to be made as soon as the stage of water will permit.

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July 1, 1889, amount expended during fiscal year, exclusive

of liabilities outstanding July 1, 1888

July 1, 1889, outstanding liabilities...

July 1, 1889, balance available......

$1,883.83 15,000.00

16, 883.83

$4,636.75
728.78

5, 365. 53 11,518.30

Amount that can be profitably expended in fiscal year ending June 30, 1891 Submitted in compliance with requirements of sections 2 of river and harbor acts of 1866 and 1867.

(See Appendix O 7.)

30,000.00

8. Brunswick Harbor, Georgia.-The present project for the improvement of this harbor was adopted in 1880, and modified and enlarged in 1886, the object being to secure a navigable channel not less than 15 feet deep at mean low water. The mean rise and fall of tide is 6.8 feet,

The cost of the project of 1880 was estimated at $73,187.50 and as enlarged in 1886 at $190,000, inclusive of appropriations already made. In 1880, prior to improvement, the channel was not more than 9 feet deep at mean low water.

During the fiscal year just closed a survey of the harbor was made, 50,976.67 cubic yards were dredged, from the channel, and 2,318.88 cubic yards of brush fascines and 369.30 cubic yards of stone placed in the training-wall.

The expenditures during the year amounted to $12,655.57.

The amount expended to June 30, 1889, including all outstanding liabilities, is $111,706.74, and has resulted in securing a navigable lowwater channel not less than 15 feet deep.

July 1, 1888, amount available

Amount appropriated by act of August 11, 1888.

July 1, 1889, amount expended during fiscal year, exclusive of

liabilities outstanding July 1, 1888

July 1, 1889, liabilities outstanding..

July 1, 1889, amount covered by existing contracts......

July 1, 1889, balance available..........

$36.73 35,000.00

35,036.73

$12, 665.57

6,577.90

15, 200, 12

34, 443.59

593. 14

Amount that can be profitably expended in fiscal year ending June 30,1891 Submitted in compliance with requirements of sections 2 of river and harbor acts of 1866 and 1867.

(See Appendix O 8.)

62,500.00

9. Jekyl Creek, Georgia.-The present project for the improvement of this creek was adopted in 1888, the object being to obtain a navigable channel through the creek 7 feet deep at mean low water. The cost of the improvement was estimated at $38,500.

Prior to improvement the low-water depth at some places did not exceed 3 feet, with a mean rise and fall of tide of 7.1 feet.

No work was done prior to the last fiscal year.

During the fiscal year just closed 20,486.84 cubic yards were dredged from the mouth of the creek and the shoal inside, leaving a navigable channel not less than 5 feet deep at mean low water. The amount expended to June 30, 1889, including all outstanding liabilities, is $4,766.95. It is proposed during the coming year, with any funds which may become available, to complete the dredging and begin work on the training-wall and closing-dam.

Amount appropriated by act of August 11, 1888.
July 1, 1889, amount expended during fiscal year, exclusive of
liabilities outstanding July 1, 1888..

July 1, 1889, outstanding liabilities....

July 1, 1889, balance available.....

$5,000.00

$4,758.70

8.25

4,766.95

233.05

Amount (estimated) required for completion of existing project..

33,590.00

Amount that can be profitably expended in fiscal year ending June 30, 1891 15,000.00 Submitted in compliance with requirements of sections 2 of river and harbor acts of 1866 and 1867.

(See Appendix O 9.)

10. Cumberland Sound, Georgia and Florida.-The present project for the improvement of the entrance to this sound was adopted in 1879,

the object being to secure a navigable low-water channel across the b from 20 to 21 feet in depth. The cost of improvement was estimat at $2,071,023.

Prior to improvement the low-water depths of the entrance vari from 11 to 12.5 feet, with a mean rise and fall of tide of 5.9 feet.

During the fiscal year just closed the south jetty was raised to t level of mean low water for a distance of about 3,000 feet from sho The hydrographic survey of the harbor was completed. The expen tures during the year amounted to $34,049.54. The total amount pended to June 30, 1889, including all outstanding liabilities, is $11 616.24.

It is proposed during the coming year, with any funds which may come available, to raise the south jetty.

The amount estimated as necessary to complete the improvement $1,591,023.

July 1, 1888, amount available

$1,00

Amount appropriated by act of August 11, 1888.

112,50

113,50

July 1, 1989, amount expended during fiscal year, exclusive of liabilities outstanding July 1, 1888.....

$34,049. 54

July 1, 1889, outstanding liabilities..

July 1, 1889, amount covered by existing contracts........

13, 072. 44
60,657,08

107,77

July 1, 1889, balance available...

5,72

Amount (estimated) required for completion of existing project..... 1,591, 02 Amount that can be profitably expended in fiscal year ending June 30,

1891

Submitted in compliance with requirements of sections 2 of river and harbor acts of 1866 and 1867.

(See Appendix O 10.)

500,00

EXAMINATIONS AND SURVEYS FOR IMPROVEMENT, TO COMPLY W REQUIREMENTS OF THE RIVER AND HARBOR ACT OF AUGUST

1888.

The act of August 11, 1888, provides for examination and surve Savannah River, as to whether the damage to the Vernezobia freshet in eighteen hundred and eighty-seven was caused by the work at Tides, and whether the maintenance of said bank is essential to the su of the work at Cross Tides, and what will be the cost of so constru said bank as to confine the water of said river to its bed. Lieutenant ter was charged with and has completed this examination and su the results of which will be found in Appendix O 11.

It appearing from the report of the preliminary examination mad the local engineer that the following localities are worthy of imp ment, and the public necessity therefor being apparent from the and reasons reported, which are concurred in by the Chief of Engin Lieutenant Carter was charged with their survey, the results of v will be submitted when received:

1. Savannah River above Augusta, and between Augusta and Ande pille, Georgia.

2. Oconee Rirer, Georgia.

3. Ocmulgee River, Georgia,

IMPROVEMENT OF CERTAIN RIVERS AND HARBORS IN THE STATE OF

FLORIDA.

Officer in charge, Capt. William M. Black, Corps of Engineers, with Lieut. D. Du B. Gaillard, Corps of Engineers, under his immediate orders; Division Engineer, Col. William P. Craighill, Corps of Engineers.

1. St. John's River, Florida.-Operations for the improvement of this river have been carried on in conformity with a project submitted in 1879 by the late General Gillmore, colonel Corps of Engineers. The plan contemplates the formation of a continuous channel 15 feet deep at mean low water from Jacksonville to the ocean. The points where work is required are in a reach near Dame's Point, 12 miles from the mouth, and on the bar at the mouth. Near Dame's Point the mean low-water depth varies from 9 to 10 feet. The bar at the mouth is formed of sand. Before work began, the mean low-water channel depth across it varied from 5 to 7 feet, with a tidal range of 5 feet. The channel across the bar shifts continually north and south through a mile range. The work was divided in two parts, (1) the formation of a channel across the bar at the mouth, by the concentration and direction of the tidal currents by two jetties, to start from the opposite shores of the entrance, and to converge until, on the bar, their outer ends should be approximately parallel and 1,600 feet apart; and, (2) the improvement of the Dame's Point Reach. The estimated cost of the two parts is $1,306,500 and $120,000, respectively.

As the improvement at the mouth was at first most urgently required, the five appropriations up to that of 1886, inclusive, aggregating $675,000, were made for improving "the channel over the bar at the mouth," under the estimate for that part of the total project. Since 1887 the depth on the bar has been greater than that in the Dame's Point Reach, and the interests of commerce have demanded that work at the latter point should be started. Accordingly, the appropriation in the act of August 11, 1888, was made for improving the river "from Jacksonville to the ocean, including the channel over the bar at the mouth," under the estimate for the entire project, of which $576,500 remains to be appropriated.

On June 30, 1888, the south jetty had a total length of 6,667 feet, of which 4,100 feet were built to the level of mean low water. The north jetty had a total length of 6,585 feet, of which a length of 553 feet, including the shore extension, was at the full height and capped. With this exception, neither jetty has been built a full-sized cross-section. Both jetties are made of one or more layers of log or brush mattresses covered with riprap stone. Since 1886 oyster shells have been used as hearting. The total proposed lengths for the south and north jetties are 6,800 and 9,400 feet, respectively. The amount expended to June 30, 1888, was $670,957.13. At that time a straight permanent channel had been secured across the bar, having a least mean low-water depth of from 12 to 13 feet. The channel depth across the bulkhead at the inner end of the jetties was from 11 to 12 feet.

Operations during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1889, comprised a survey of the Dame's Point Reach, on which to base a detailed project for its improvement, and the continuation of the work on the north jetty, under the contract with Mr. R. G. Ross, of Wilmington, N. C.; the foundation of the north jetty was extended 1,455.2 feet by brush fascine mattresses 120 feet wide, ballasted with stone, the narrow portion of the superstructure was strengthened and built up, and it was ex

tended 1,065 feet by a mound of riprap stone with shell hearting. The length of the north jetty foundation is now 8,040.2 feet of the superstructure, built to the level of mean low water 6,697 feet. No work was done on the south jetty.

During the past fiscal year the north jetty channel, which occupies the position which it is believed the permanent jetty channel will take, has widened and deepened considerably, and at the present time a distance of but 1,500 feet, measured in the direction of flow of the ebb carrent, separates its inner 12-foot contour from the 12-foot contour of the present jetty channel across the bar.

The channel across the bar has also widened during the past year, the distance between the 10-foot contours on the edges of the bar chan nel being now 1,100 feet. The least width of this channel between 12. foot contours is 250 feet, and the least depth along its axis is 12.8 feet. The jetty middle ground, west of Ward's Bank, has continued to sboal, and now has a least depth of 9.8 feet on the crossing to the south jetty channel; but it is hoped that the extension of the superstructure of the north jetty will cause that channel to unite with the present bar channel.

July 1, 1888, amount available

Amount appropriated by act of August 11, 1888

July 1, 1889, amount expended during fiscal year, exclusive of

liabilities outstanding July 1, 1888

July 1, 1889, outstanding liabilities...

July 1, 1889, amount covered by existing contracts

$4,042.87 175,000.00

179, 042. 87

$57, 281.55

22, 960. 31

57,541.93

137,783.79

41, 259.08

July 1, 1889, balance available

576,500,00

Amount (estimated) required for completion of existing project....
Amount that can be profitably expended in fiscal year ending June 30, 1891 300, 000. 00
Submitted in compliance with requirements of sections 2 of river and
harbor acts of 1866 and 1867.

(See Appendix P 1.)

2. Volusia Bar, Florida.-Volusia Bar is situated at the head of Lake George and is formed by materials brought down by the St. John's River and deposited at the point where the current of the narrow river loses its velocity as the bed widens to form the lake. The usual depth on the bar, before operations began, was from 3 to 4 feet with a very crooked channel. At times this depth was diminished so much as to stop navigation entirely.

The adopted plan of improvement was to contract the waters on the bar by the construction of two converging brush and stone jetties, with a view to causing a scour to the depth of 6 feet. Should the depth caused by the jetties not be sufficient, recourse was to be had to dredg ing. Between the jetties on the bar, lines of guide piles were placed to keep vessels off the jetties and to define the channel clearly.

In 1887 it was decided to limit the channel depth sought to the 5 feet then obtained, on account of the evident shoaling in the lake beyond the jetties and because that depth was sufficient for the requirements of the existing river commerce.

Up to June 30, 1888, $24,646.44 had been expended, including liabili ties then outstanding. The jetties had been built to their full length and to a height sufficient to produce the desired effect; two lines of firmly. set fender-piles defined the jetty channel on the crest of the bar, and a straight channel with a minimun mean low-water depth of 5 feet had

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