Cagles Mill Lake

Cagles Mill Lake
Cagles Mill Lake as seen from dam. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers photo.
Cagles Mill Lake
Cagles Mill Lake
LocationOwen / Putnam counties, Indiana, United States
Coordinates39°27′52″N 86°52′58″W / 39.4644628°N 86.8829156°W / 39.4644628; -86.8829156
Typereservoir
Primary inflowsMill Creek
Primary outflowsMill Creek (39°30′00″N 86°56′13″W / 39.500°N 86.937°W / 39.500; -86.937 (confluence of Mill Creek and Deer Creek))
Basin countriesUnited States
Surface area1,400 acres (570 ha)
Water volume228,120 acre⋅ft (0.28138 km3) Peak 27,112 acre⋅ft (0.033442 km3) Normal
Surface elevation636 feet (194 m)
Websitehttp://www.in.gov/dnr/parklake/2960.htm

Cagles Mill Lake, also known as Cataract Lake or Cagle's Mill Reservoir or Lieber Reservoir, is a reservoir located near Cataract, Indiana, in Lieber State Recreation Area, in west central Indiana on the borders of Putnam and Owen counties. It was Indiana's first flood control reservoir.

Cagles Mill Dam is a flood control project of the United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE), an earthen dam that was dedicated on 1952-06-18 and completed in December 1953. Its purpose was to alleviate flood damage in the valleys of the Eel, the White, and the Wabash rivers.

The Lake is alimented from the north by Mill Creek and drains out through Mill Creek, once more. Mill Creek flows into Deer Creek which in turn flows into the Eel River to its south, which then makes its way to the White River.

Mill Creek is named for a grist mill, Cagle Mill, that used to operate downstream of where the Lake now is. The mill itself was destroyed and rebuilt several times over the years, finally vanishing for good in 1975. However, its low-level dam still exists.

Near to the site of the mill are the Hoosier Highlands, a recreational area created in 1924, whose name was suggested by Indiana poet William Herschel.