Mormons
likened their exodus from Nauvoo to ancient Israel fleeing
from a hostile land into the wilderness. And like ancient
Israel, they looked to the word of their God for sustenance.
"I will even make a way in the wilderness, and
rivers in the desert," Isaiah wrote, "because
I give waters in the wilderness, and rivers in the desert,
to give drink to my people, my chosen."
Before leaving Nauvoo Brigham Young and other Mormons
had read about or heard reports from government explorers
and mountain men about the arid conditions found in
the Great Basin. Upon their arrival in the Great Salt
Lake Valley, members of the first company quickly set
about to turn the desert into a productive land just
as ancient Israel had done in their own promised land.
A small irrigation ditch was dug to divert water from
City Creek to the sunbaked and hardened soil. The Mormons'
long struggle to make the desert blossom as the rose
is an epoch-making account in history of the American
West.
The Mormons' development of irrigation was not, however,
the first such attempt to irrigate land in western North
America. Long before the discovery of the New World
by Europeans, Indians of the American Southwest diverted
water to their crops. In the 1760s Spanish settlers
at the mission of San Diego constructed canals to irrigate
their crops. Several years prior to the arrival of the
Mormon Saints at the Great Salt Lake Valley, some of
the first American settlers in Oregon had dug small
ditches to water their crops. And, contemporary with
the Mormon settlement of the Great Salt Lake Valley,
Indians in southern Utah were raising crops with the
aid of irrigation. Parley P. Pratt while on an expedition
to southern Utah commented on the use of irrigation
ditches by Indians living along the Santa Clara River.
The flows and gradients of nearby mountain streams coupled
with soil conditions and the amount of local annual
precipitation influenced the location, size, and eventual
success of many early Utah settlements. These factors
also influenced the amount of land colonizers farmed.
To build large irrigation canals required large pools
of human and financial resources. Recognizing this,
Brigham Young urged farmers "to raise (their) sustenance
from smaller quantities of land" than what they
had been accustomed to in the more humid regions of
the east. The success of building Zion rested squarely
on communal cooperative efforts and the individual discipline
of irrigators to use beneficially the limited water
available to them.
The irrigation canal was the first and most important
public utility in Utah. During pioneer times, at one
of the first public meetings held in a valley a watermaster
was appointed to oversee the distribution of water.
Today, in many Utah communities the watermaster is still
highly respected.
The development of irrigation in Utah is divided into
several distinct phases. During the first phase, which
ends in the 1880s, small irrigation works were constructed
at the mouths of canyons where there were perennial
flows of water. These early canals had small carrying
capacities and extended only short distances along the
lower foothills of the valleys of the Great Basin. They
were simple in design and construction. Stovepipes or
similar devices, and bottles or pans filled with water
were used to determine the location and appropriate
grades for the canals. Horses or oxen pulling A-shaped
wooden frames and slip scrapers were used to dig shallow
ditches. Men followed, using picks and shovels to complete
the work. Diversion dams at the head of the ditches
were constructed out of available building materials
including rock, straw, logs, and dirt. Because of their
often poor design and construction materials, diversion
dams had to be constantly rebuilt or replaced. Work
assessments for constructing canals and later for annual
canal maintenance were frequently made by the local
bishop from the pulpit of the local ward meetinghouse.
Farmers in the northern settlements of Utah early on
were generally more successful at irrigating their crops
than were farmers living in southern Utah. Their success
was due in large measure to the lay of the land, the
soil conditions, and greater precipitation in the form
of snow. Irrigators of southern Utah faced greater difficulties
in their attempts to coax water onto their land. Often
the soil of southern Utah was too sandy to hold water
effectively in the shallow canals, or the land was either
hardpan or slickrock covered with little vegetation
and thus unable to hold back much of the rushing waters
from sudden and often violent summer thunderstorms.
Washed-out irrigation ditches and broken diversion dams
were regular occurrences in southern Utah. In addition,
many streams in southern Utah flow intermittently, resulting
in irregular or missed water turns of irrigators during
critical periods of the irrigation season.
During this early period of irrigation development the
basic principles of water law as well as irrigation
traditions and customs were established. Utah irrigators
soon abandoned the long-cherished eastern convention
of riparian water rights for the doctrine of prior appropriation
and beneficial use. Riparian water rights state that
streams cannot be diminished in size because of diversion
or consumptive use. The doctrine of prior appropriation
was founded on a combination of the ideas of individual
stewardship, public ownership, and beneficial use, coupled
with the fact of the lack of water. Water rights in
Utah are granted to individuals for beneficial use only.
For the first few years, local bishops distributed water
based on their appraisal of the worthiness of the individual
irrigator. In 1852 the territorial legislature granted
authority to the county courts (a probate judge and
three selectmen, who were appointed) to control and
distribute the use of water and other natural resources
within their jurisdiction. Irrigators then petitioned
the courts for the use of the water. If the irrigator
failed to use the water beneficially or abandoned its
use, the county court reclaimed the water right for
the public.
In 1865 the territorial legislature granted individual
irrigators the authority to organize themselves into
irrigation districts. Districts then had the power to
levy water or canal assessments on their members for
the operation and maintenance of their canals. Two years
later, irrigation districts were granted the power to
form irrigation companies.
The second phase of irrigation development began in
the 1880s. Increased federal legislation aimed at eradicating
the practice of polygamy from the territory and severing
the strong church-state bond also influenced the development
of water law in Utah. In 1880 the territorial legislature
granted to the now elected county selectmen the power
to adjudicate water disputes. Furthermore, water was
given to anyone wanting water for beneficial purposes.
And, under the 1880 water law, irrigation rights became
personal property and appurtenant to the land.
It was during this period that farmers turned their
attention away from building Zion based on small self-sufficient
farms to improving their own economic conditions based
on larger and more productive agricultural units. The
size and number of farms grew dramatically during the
last two decades of the nineteenth century, and a second
generation of canals was needed. These newer canals
were generally situated higher up on the foothills,
and were longer, deeper, and had larger carrying capacities.
Construction of these canals required larger sums of
capital, which generally were not available in the territory.
Some irrigation companies turned to the federal government
for assistance. While federal aid to most irrigators
did not come until the passage of the Carey Act in 1894
and the Reclamation Act of 1902, some federal support
for Indian irrigation projects did trickle down during
the late 1880s and 1890s to various Indian reservations
in the West, including the Uintah Indian Reservation
in eastern Utah. Unable to secure federal aid, some
irrigation companies turned to private eastern capital
for financial assistance. Irrigation schemes often were
hastily planned, quickly blossomed on paper, but dried
up just as quickly when it came to constructing the
canals, leaving many irrigators high and dry.
Still other farmers looked elsewhere for "new"
sources of water. In Wasatch and Sanpete counties, for
instance, farmers constructed two transmontane tunnels
and diversion canals to divert water from the Colorado
River drainage system to the Great Basin drainage system.
These two irrigation projects without any outside help
preceded the Strawberry Reservoir project by a decade
and the Central Utah Project by more than fifty years.
The turn of the century marked a new era for irrigation
in the state. Following the first national irrigation
congress, held in Salt Lake City in 1891, Utah irrigators,
government officials, and civic leaders recognized that
Utah's irrigation laws and management of water policies
were outdated and that new laws and policies were needed.
Shortly after statehood was attained in 1896, the state
legislature established the office of state engineer.
At first the state engineer's water responsibilities
were limited, but during the first decade of the twentieth
century his duties and authority for managing water
resources were greatly expanded.
It was during the first decade of the twentieth century
that irrigated lands increased by 132 percent, the largest
percentage increase in the state's history. New irrigation
systems were built or older ones expanded or rehabilitated
to meet the increased needs of newly established farms.
Following the opening of the Uintah Indian Reservation
to homesteaders in 1905, an extensive irrigation system
was built in that area. Farmers in Utah Valley also
took advantage of the opening of the reservation and
the newly created federal reclamation program to win
support for the Strawberry project. Jewish farmers from
the east were enticed to take up virgin lands in Sanpete
County. Some state support was provided to them, but
their efforts at irrigating the land met with little
success and their project, Clarion, was soon abandoned.
Many other state-supported irrigation projects, however,
did meet with some measure of success.
At the turn of the century, the politics of water and
the need for irrigation in the West drew national political
attention. Political parties adopted planks in their
campaign platforms supporting western reclamation endeavors.
Regionally, the development of the Strawberry Reservoir
in Utah and other irrigation projects in the Colorado
River Drainage Basin brought to a head competing water
claims upon the Colorado River by Colorado River Basin
states and Mexico. On 24 November 1922, following months
of debate and discussion, the Colorado River Compact
was signed by the Colorado River Basin states. The compact
divided the waters of the Colorado River between the
upper and lower basin states and Mexico, and it marked
the beginning of yet another era in the development
of irrigation in Utah as well as in the West.
The Upper Colorado Basin states signed the Upper Basin
Compact in 1948. It divided Colorado River water among
the Upper Basin States of Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, New
Mexico, and Arizona.
New reclamation and irrigation projects in Utah were
stimulated by these two water compacts. In 1924, Weber
County farmers entered into an agreement with the Bureau
of Reclamation to develop further the Weber River. The
Weber River Project was the first in the country to
serve as an entirely multipurpose project, including
recreation, municipal and industrial use, fish and wildlife,
flood control, and irrigation programs. Other federally
funded projects followed, including Echo Park Dam, which
was later substituted by Flaming Gorge, and Glen Canyon
Dam. During the 1930s the Civilian Conservation Corps
was involved in Utah in the building of 91 large irrigation
and flood control dams, 423 impoundments and diversion
dams, and 309 smaller dams. These water improvements
were in part a result of the continued demands of agriculture
in the state. By the early 1930s Utah farms numbered
about 30,000. The average size of Utah farms was also
larger.
With the completion nearing of the Central Utah Project,
which will be the last large federally funded project
in the state, irrigators and urban dwellers are turning
their attention to improving water systems. While the
open dirt ditch is still common, canals and ditches
increasingly are being lined with cement to conserve
water. Other irrigators are enclosing their irrigation
canals and ditches with pipe. Large sprinkler systems
powered by gravity or electrical motors are now widely
used, and they are proving to be more efficient than
the traditional method of flood irrigation. To conserve
water, Utah farmers also are planting new strains of
crops that require less water.
The importance of water and the development of irrigation
in Utah is recognized and honored in various ways. Water
fountains, pools, and artificial lakes dot university
and college campuses, industrial parks, the Salt Lake
International Airport, Main Street of Salt Lake City,
and the central plaza of the LDS Church Office Building
block. The Hurricane Canal, the Mountain Dell Dam in
Parley's Canyon, and the Indian irrigation system in
the Uinta Basin are nationally recognized as important
historic sites.
The story of irrigation in Utah is the saga that began
with the individual irrigator, shovel in hand, coaxing
a trickle of water onto the dry land. The history of
Utah is indeed inextricably linked to the development
of irrigation.
Craig Fuller