Salt Draw

Salt Draw
Country United States
Basin
Main source Texas
31°20′01″N 104°15′57″W / 31.333698°N 104.265801°W / 31.333698; -104.265801 (Primary source of Salt Draw)
River mouth Toyah Lake near Pecos, Texas[1]
31°18′38″N 103°26′10″W / 31.310639°N 103.436131°W / 31.310639; -103.436131 (Mouth of Salt Draw)Coordinates: 31°18′38″N 103°26′10″W / 31.310639°N 103.436131°W / 31.310639; -103.436131 (Mouth of Salt Draw)

Salt Draw is a river in Texas. On April 4, 2004 flash flooding of Salt Draw caused the failure of a protective levee around Toyah, Texas, extensive flooding of most homes and property in Toyah, and the destruction of the Interstate 20 bridge over Salt Draw between Toyah and Pecos, Texas in Reeves County. Indirectly, 5 lives were also lost in a weather related traffic accident on U.S. Route 285 south of Pecos, which was being used as a detour because of the bridge failure.[2]

Jeannette Walls' grandmother Lily lived from 1901 until 1911 in a dugout at Salt Draw which is described in the 2009 novel Half Broke Horses.

See also

References
  1. Geographic data related to Toyah Lake at OpenStreetMap
  2. Flooding Near Toyah, Texas on April 4, 2004: Bridge Collapse on Interstate 20 at srh.noaa.gov


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/11/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.