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D.C. Jackson, professor of history, appears as an on-camera expert on the PBS American Experience program “Grand Coulee Dam.” The segment was aired nationwide  at 8 p.m. on Tuesday, April 3. It will be re aired on Sunday, April 9, @ 1:30pm on Lehigh Valley Channel 39.

Jackson, an expert on the history of water resources, was interviewed in New York City by a crew from Insignia Films last fall for the 90-minute documentary. The segment highlights the origins of the project in the 1920s as well as the innovative technologies used during construction.  The film also features the men and women who lived and worked at Grand Coulee in the midst of the Great Depression, and the native people whose lives were forever changed as the dam’s rising reservoir obliterated their ancestral homeland.

One of many public works projects built under President Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal, the dam is the largest hydro-electric dam in the U.S. and at one time was the largest in the world, says Jackson, who has also appeared as an expert about dams on the History Channel program Modern Marvels and in an episode of the five-part PBS miniseries Building Big.

The electricity generated by the dam was used to make huge quantities of aluminum during World War II, and it was seen by many Americans as a symbol of the resilience of the American people in enduring hard times.

In addition to offering a historical perspective on Grand Coulee, Jackson provided Insignia Films with a rare photograph from his private archives of Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt during a visit to the dam.

“She wasn’t that impressed with the early stages of the dam, but her husband reveled in his association with the project.  Later the reservoir was named Franklin D. Roosevelt Lake in his honor,” Jackson says.

“In the film, I provide context for dam-building in American history and I also offer commentary on issues involving the dam’s construction,” he says. “There were many top scholars from the Pacific Northwest who made contributions to the film and I was honored to be included in their company.”

The dam originally generated 2 million kilowatts of electricity, more than enough to power the cities of Portland and Seattle combined (in the 1970s the power capacity was enlarged to 6 million KW). The film explores how the tension between technological achievement and environmental impact hangs over the project’s legacy.

“For all the wonders that are brought by electricity, there is always a price to be paid, and Grand Coulee is a great project in which to explore that dialectic,” Jackson says.

Last year, Jackson delivered the keynote address at the Hoover Dam 75th Anniversary Celebration in Las Vegas, Nev. In 2010 he also received the Overseas Prize, an international honor from the Institution of Civil Engineering, given for his article “Structural Art: John S. Eastwood and the Multiple Arch Dam,” published in the August 2009 Proceedings of the ICE – Engineering History and Heritage.  He is co-author (with David Billington of Princeton University) of the 2006 book Big Dams of the New Deal Era published by the University of Oklahoma Press.