The Brandywine Watershed covers 330 square miles beginning in
the Honey Brook area of northern Chester County including
Coatesville, Downingtown,
West Chester and the central part of
Chester County and ending in Wilmington, Delaware where it joins
the Christina River. The source of the Brandywine Creek is in
the Welsh Hills near Honey Brook. Both the east and west
branches begin in that area. From top to bottom the stream
traverses about 60 miles. The west branch flows through the
City of Coatesville, the east branch through the Borough of
Downingtown. The two branches join at Lenape and flow southward
as the main stem through Chadds Ford, crossing the Delaware
state line and on to Wilmington.
The Brandywine Watershed is the home to
over 300,000 people. About 85% of the watershed is in Chester
County, Pennsylvania and the lower 15% in New Castle County,
Delaware.
The Brandywine Creek supplies the drinking
water for the City of Wilmington, Coatesville, Downingtown, West
Chester and areas surrounding those cities and boroughs. On an
average day about 30 million gallons are taken from the
Brandywine Creek for residential, commercial and industrial
use.
There are three major wastewater treatment
plants in the watershed at Downingtown, Coatesville and West
Chester. These three plants along with several smaller plants
and an industrial treatment plant at the ArcelorMittal Steel
facility in Coatesville treat about 11 million gallons daily.
Flows in the Brandywine Creek vary
throughout the year. Levels at Chadds Ford can range from over
three hundred million gallons a day in the higher flow seasons
during the spring to less than 50 million gallons a day during
low flows in late summer. Streamflows can be augmented by
discharges from Marsh Creek Reservoir and Chambers Lake. Under
normal flow conditions treatment plant effluent makes up three
to five percent of the streamflow and during the extremes of
historic low flow about 30 percent.
The Brandywine Creek provides recreation
for fishermen as well as water for canoeing and kayaking. The
Brandywine is stocked by the Pennsylvania Fish Commission in the
spring at a number of locations. In addition, local sportsman’s
groups also work to improve stream quality and provide fish for
stream stocking.
The Brandywine Watershed has been a
showcase for conservation programs which BVA began in 1945.
Farmers employ modern conservation practices, industries have
been leaders in reducing water use and treating wastewater,
spray irrigation was introduced into the watershed in 1972 and
is now found in many municipal and private systems throughout
the valley. In 1955 BVA initiated the planning which resulted
in the Brandywine Watershed Work Plan for flood control and
water supply. The resulting structures include Marsh Creek
Reservoir, Chambers Lake and flood control dams at Struble Lake,
Barneston and on Beaver Creek. These dams have helped to reduce
the extremes of flooding and drought in the Brandywine
Watershed.
Today BVA continues its mission through the
Red Streams Blue Program and with its watershed education
programs. The Red Streams Blue Program will help raise the
quality of substandard streams and the watershed education
programs will bring the message of conservation to the next
generation of decisionmakers, our school students.