Poverty Bay Herald
14 October 1936
Auckland Star
16 November 1935
New Zealand Herald
17 August 1883
Nelson Evening Mail
29 December 1943
Bay of Plenty Times
19 January 1949
Northern Advocate
20 May 1949
Bay of Plenty Times
9 October 1946
West Coast Times
22 June 1882
Evening Star
10 December 1931
King Country Chronicle
26 February 1920
Otago Daily Times
27 September 1941
Ashburton Guardian
20 May 1949
Bay of Plenty Times
17 March 1924
Feilding Star
13 June 1925
Gisborne Herald
21 May 1949
Greymouth Evening Star
20 May 1949
Grey River Argus
21 May 1949
Waipawa Mail
8 April 1921
Wanganui Chronicle
30 March 1921
Ohinemuri Gazette
13 April 1921
Auckland Star
10 August 1934
Northern Advocate
10 August 1934
New Zealand Herald
10 August 1934
Greymouth Evening Star
10 October 1936
Ashburton Guardian
10 August 1934
Evening Post
20 March 1933
Evening Star
15 November 1946
Wairarapa Daily Times
28 August 1926
Water pours down spillways of the Roxburgh hydro-electric dam and sprays spectacularly back into the Clutha River. The dam, in a narrow gorge in the Clutha River in Central Otago, is 365 m wide and has a 7.3 m roadway along the top. It is 76m high. Lake Roxburgh, which was formed behind it, extends back 32km through the Roxburgh Gorge to Alexandra. The power station, on the west bank of the river, has been producing electricity since 1956 and at the time of its completion, in 1962, it was the largest hydro-electric power station in New Zealand. Its capacity of 320 megawatts has since been surpassed by Manapouri, Benmore, and Maraetai. Pictures by ROD DEW.
Press
8 March 1985
Nelson Evening Mail
17 March 1932
Otago Daily Times
16 April 1948
Grey River Argus
22 June 1923
New Zealand Herald
29 July 1910
Evening Star
17 October 1928
Nelson Evening Mail
19 October 1942
Otago Daily Times
25 September 1928
Thames Star
11 October 1928
Dominion
22 September 1928
Manawatu Times
10 January 1940
Waikato Independent
7 May 1945
Sun (Auckland)
15 May 1930
Evening Post
25 August 1945
Hawera & Normanby Star
22 August 1923
Stratford Evening Post
17 October 1923
Franklin Times
9 December 1935
Hauraki Plains Gazette
4 December 1935
Auckland Star
17 October 1936
Otago Daily Times
14 November 1946
Thames Star
11 September 1936
Thames Star
7 September 1936
Ashburton Guardian
23 August 1950
Gisborne Herald
10 February 1949
King Country Chronicle
8 August 1933
Poverty Bay Herald
10 August 1933
THE BANKS OF LOCH LOMOND, Perthshire, Scotland, will soon be enriched by about £500,000 every year. That is the rough value of the 120,000,000 units of electricity which will be produced by the Loch Sloy hydro-electric scheme, on which 2000 men are-working The photograph shows the massive dam at the end of Loch Sloy. The final level will be that of the control tower in the centre. On top of this, a house will be built for the superintendent. A 10-foot road will go across the top of the structure. Loch Sloy is situated 788 feet above sea level, in a district which has more than 100 inches of rain a year. The dam will allow about 500,000 gallons to pour through the power station every day.
Greymouth Evening Star
20 September 1949
Taranaki Herald
19 July 1907
Auckland Star
9 January 1914