Named for the Scantuck Indians, the Scantic River watershed drains
some 90,000 acres in Connecticut and Massachusetts. It is fed by several small
tributaries, of which many are considered “Class A” water quality (suitable for
drinking).
The Town of Hampden, Mass., settled in 1841, contains a substantial
number of Scantic River miles and in the past, these miles hosted a number of
flourishing mills. Dependent upon the Scantic’s water power, the mills prospered
but as the years passed a lack of transportation from mill site to market made
commerce increasingly difficult until gradually the mill wheels fell silent. Ruins of
the mills are still evident.
Host of seasonal runs of shad and salmon, the river was a source of
food, waterpower and irrigation for early settlers of the area. In the 1800’s,
Colonel Augustus Hazard founded the Hazard Powder Company, on the banks of
the Scantic in what became Hazardville. The company supplied the Union armies
during the Civil War with much of its gunpowder. The Hazard Powder Company
disappeared in a mighty blast in 1913; however, some of the foundations are still
intact and the area is now known as “Powder Hollow”.
In 1728, Ebenezer Grant of East Windsor built a shipyard at the
confluence of the Scantic and Connecticut Rivers. Located just below the Enfield
Rapids, the enterprise thrived until some time after 1812, when it gradually came
to a close.
There is a great deal more history about the Scantic, which we hope to
publish in the near future. Anyone having information or anecdotes please
contact us at ScanticRWA@yahoo.com or SRWA, Box 303, Somers, CT 06071. |