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Public Service Company

In 1927, F.O. Stanley sold the Fall River Hydroelectric Plant to the Stanley Corporation. The Stanley Corporation tried to keep up with skyrocketing demand by extending the power lines to more and more cottages. The Stanley Hotel built a coal plant that year, so extra electricity from the plant could be released for sale. The Stanley Corporation made other improvements, such as raising the dam at Cascade Lake to allow for more water pressure in the penstock. However, the Corporation's ownership of the plant was short lived, and in 1928 Public Service Company of Colorado took over ownership of the small plant. Elkhorn Avenue in the 1920s 

 

Public Service Company continued to upgrade the plant in hopes that they could keep supply in check with the demand people in the Estes Park area had for electricity. They switched the plant from a single phase unit to a three phase hook up, which meant that the switchboard and the Western Electric generator had to be altered. This also allowed almost twice as much power to be produced. In 1928 and 1929, the entire distribution system was rebuilt. In 1931, a second addition was made to the plant. A third room now housed a Fairbanks Morse 50 horsepower diesel generator, so power was no longer dependent on the Fall River for generation. The diesel could produce electricity whether or not stream flow in the Fall River was high. 

 

A third unit still couldn't keep up with demand. In 1933, Public Service Company enhanced the dam on Fall River, doubling the capacity of the Cascade Lake reservoir. In 1938, they added onto the second addition and installed a huge 6-cylinder 300 horsepower Fairbanks Morse diesel and a 200 kilowatt generator. This unit is no longer visible in the plant today, but explains the large open space in the room housing the 1931 diesel unit. In 1945, Public Service Company sold the hydroplant to the Town of Estes Park, who owns the plant currently, although it was shut down by the furious waters of the Lawn Lake Flood in 1982.