Power for Progress - A weekly column from the Grand River Dam Authority
This Is Man’s Deed
By late summer of 1940, Grand Lake was finally a reality. The major work on Pensacola Dam had been completed earlier that year and the waters of the Grand River had steadily filled the lake throughout the summer months. The dream of a hydroelectric facility across the Grand River Valley – first envisioned by Henry C. Holderman and then pursued by many others – had come true.
One of those present to see that dream go from blueprint to reality was Mrs. Francis Hope (Kerr), Holway. She was the wife of William Rea (W.R.) Holway, who was the longtime consulting engineer for the Grand River Dam Authority. Holway, a graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), was also the lead engineer on the construction of Pensacola Dam.
When that massive construction project – which provided jobs for thousands of Oklahomans during the Great Depression – was completed, Mrs. Holway, who had been a school teacher, put pen to paper to celebrate the monumental achievement.
And truly it was monumental. After all, Pensacola Dam stretches out for a mile across the Grand River Valley and is defined by its multiple arches which helped land the impressive structure on the National Register of Historic Places in 2003. But all that concrete, all that iron, all that blood, sweat, and tears did not just happen. It took the effort of thousands of men and women, working long hours in the sun and heat, rain and wind, dust and smoke, to complete the dam that has benefited so many others throughout the years.
And 79 years ago at this time, many of them were celebrating the successful completion of all their hard work.
Mrs. Holway forever immortalized those efforts in her poem, This Is Man’s Deed, which can be found today on a plaque, located on the west end of the dam.
This Is Man’s Deed
Glorious and eternal
These towers and walls
Remember
Dreams of young men
Magnificent in hope
The long and crowded hours
When patient skill
Daring to create
Formed and shaped the plan
And labors heavy round
Brave constancy of toil
Making the vision real
The plan complete
Headquartered in Vinita, GRDA is Oklahoma’s state-owned electric utility; fully funded by revenues from electric and water sales instead of taxes. Each day, GRDA strives to be an “Oklahoma agency of excellence” by focusing on the 5 E’s: electricity, economic development, environmental stewardship, employees and efficiency.