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<ead audience="external"> 
  <eadheader audience="internal" langencoding="ISO 639-2"> 
	 <eadid systemid="UHi" source="DLC" type="local number">b0217</eadid> 
	 <filedesc> 
		<titlestmt> 
		  <titleproper> St. George and Santa Clara Field Irrigation Company
			 Records, 
			 <date>1864-1927</date></titleproper> 
		  <subtitle>A Register of the Collection at the <lb/>Utah State
			 Historical Society</subtitle> 
		</titlestmt> 
		<publicationstmt> 
		  <publisher>Utah State Historical Society</publisher> 
		  <date type="publication">1999</date> 
		</publicationstmt> 
	 </filedesc> 
	 <profiledesc> 
		<creation>Finding aid encode in EAD 1.0 by Craig Ringgenberg using XMetaL
		  1.0, 
		  <date>1999.</date></creation> 
		<langusage>Finding aid written in
		  <language>English</language>.</langusage> 
	 </profiledesc> 
  </eadheader> 
  <frontmatter> 
	 <titlepage> 
		<note> 
		  <p>The machine-readable finding aid for this collection was created by
			 the </p> 
		</note> 
		<author>Collections Management staff, Utah State Historical
		  Society,</author> 
		<note> 
		  <p>with financial assistance from an LSTA grant provided by the </p> 
		</note> 
		<sponsor>Utah State Library Division.</sponsor> 
		<publisher>Utah State Historical Society</publisher> 
		<date type="publication">1999</date> 
		<address> 
		  <addressline>Salt Lake City, Utah</addressline> 
		</address> 
		<note> 
		  <p> 
			 <extref href="http://history.utah.gov/findaids/logo.jpg"
			  actuate="auto" show="embed"/><lb/> Copyright Utah State Historical Society. All
				rights reserved.<lb/> Reproduction, storage or transmittal of this work, or any
				part of it, in any form or by any means, for commercial purposes, is prohibited
				without prior authorization of the Utah State Historical Society. This work may
				be used for scholarly and other non-commercial use provided that the Utah State
				Historical Society is acknowledged as the creator and copyright holder. </p> 
		</note> 
	 </titlepage> 
  </frontmatter> 
  <archdesc audience="external" relatedencoding="marc"
	langmaterial="eng" level="collection" type="register"> 
	 <did> 
		<head>Summary Description</head> 
		<repository label="Repository">Utah State Historical Society</repository>
		
		<unitid label="Collection number" countrycode="US"
		 repositorycode="UHi">Mss B 217</unitid> 
		<origination label="Creator"> 
		  <corpname encodinganalog="110"> St. George and Santa Clara Field
			 Irrigation Company. </corpname></origination> 
		<unittitle label="Title" encodinganalog="245"> St. George and Santa Clara
		  Field Irrigation Company Records, 
		  <unitdate type="inclusive">1864-1927</unitdate></unittitle> 
		<physdesc encodinganalog="300">1.5 lin. ft. (3 boxes)</physdesc>
		<physdesc encodinganalog="300">3 reels</physdesc> 
		<note> 
		  <p>Available on microfilm (MIC 1200-1202) </p> 
		</note> 
		<abstract>Irrigation company in Washington County, Utah. Correspondence,
		  1906-1917; annual reports, 1907-1911; ledgers, 1864-1927; minutes,
		  1864-1900.</abstract> 
	 </did> 
	 <controlaccess> 
		<head>Topics:</head> 
		<subject encodinganalog="650">Irrigation -- Utah.</subject> 
		<subject encodinganalog="650">Water supply -- Agriculture.</subject> 
	 </controlaccess> 
	 <controlaccess> 
		<head>Places:</head> 
		<geogname encodinganalog="651">Pine Valley (Utah).</geogname> 
		<geogname encodinganalog="651">Santa Clara (Utah).</geogname> 
		<geogname encodinganalog="651">St. George (Utah).</geogname> 
	 </controlaccess> 
	 <bioghist> 
		<head> Background </head> 
		<bioghist encodinganalog="545"> 
		  <head> Background Note </head> 
		  <p>The St. George and Santa Clara Field Irrigation Company has served
			 the needs of St. George, Santa Clara and Pine Valley since 1864. It was
			 incorporated in 1954, but has existed under one name or another since the early
			 period of colonization in Washington County. Many of those who were prominent
			 in the settlement of the St. George area are listed as members or officers of
			 the company. Erastus Snow, Anthony W. Ivins, and William Macfarlane were
			 important members of the Dixie mission and of the St. George and Santa Clara
			 Field Irrigation Company. </p> 
		  <p>Parley P. Pratt's report to Brigham Young on his return to Salt Lake
			 City in 1849 indicated that the climate and topography of southern Utah would
			 allow the cultivation of crops if sufficient water were available. Young
			 believed that settlements in southern Utah would become exporters of certain
			 crops to the northern colonies and would be a bastion of defense preventing
			 intrusions into the Kingdom. The diversion of the Santa Clara River into a
			 system of canals, however, was the first step and so the early emigrants
			 created the St. George and Santa Clara Field Irrigation Company. </p> 
		  <p>The community of Santa Clara, established in 1854, was the first of
			 the three communities served by the St. George and Santa Clara Field Irrigation
			 Company to be settled. A year later it was followed by Pine Valley located at
			 the headwaters of the Santa Clara River and, seven years later, by St. George.
			 The interplay between the residents of St. George, Santa Clara, and Pine Valley
			 is the substance of the records. Each community needed the water of the Santa
			 Clara River if their crops were to survive the heat of summer days when the
			 temperature often was in excess of 100 degrees. Yet, even though their very
			 survival was at stake, they rarely, if ever, forgot that they were Mormon
			 missionaries called to glorify the Kingdom and establish bulwarks of defense on
			 the Mormon borderlands. </p> 
		  <p>The two most striking features of the land around St. George are the
			 paucity of water and the alkalinity of the soil. Scrub oak, a variety of cactus
			 species, and a sparse growth of pigweed and grass are all that grow naturally
			 in the harsh environment. Since the recorded annual precipitation between 1893
			 and 1901 was only 6.31 inches and the historical average is less than fifteen
			 inches, it is little wonder that none but the hardiest of water-conserving
			 plants can survive. </p> 
		  <p>If that were not enough, the 
		  <title render="italic">Deseret News</title> reported that in 1858
		  two-thirds of the crops planted on the St. George and Santa Clara Fields had
		  failed to grow in the alkaline soil. An early emigrant to the area, James
		  McKnight, reported "In some places, upon the application of water, a surface
		  was changed into a cement caused by a super-abundance of lime in the soil." The
		  harsh chemical composition of the soil made it necessary for the farmers to
		  develop new ways of growing crops. They learned that in fields where alkalinity
		  was high, their crops did better when protected from direct contact with water.
		  </p> 
		  <p>A third factor that caused hardship to the pioneers was, ironically,
			 the great floods that came unexpectedly, ravaging the land and destroying the
			 fruits of years of labor. Irrigation canals could be destroyed or severely
			 damaged when the rains, uninhibited by vegetation, coursed over the baked land
			 into gullies of storms past rushing over fields and leaving behind deposits of
			 silt and sand. The Swiss colonists, for example, who arrived in Santa Clara in
			 1861 had only begun to build their rude shelters when the rains came forcing
			 them to find what comfort they could in hastily constructed adobe houses. Some
			 of them took refuge in the fort at Santa Clara only to be forced to leave when
			 the flood water engulfed the structure, carrying it downstream. </p> 
		  <p>These were the forces that controlled the lives of the men who built
			 the St. George and Santa Clara Field Irrigation Company. The hardships they
			 faced were more intense than those endured by most colonies in Utah. The
			 combination of aridity, poor soil, near starvation and disease must have taken
			 their toll on the families who had come to glorify Zion. Yet somehow they
			 survived to build and rebuild again dams that would store the spring runoff and
			 irrigation canals that would take it to their fields and into their towns. </p>
		  
		</bioghist> 
	 </bioghist> 
	 <scopecontent encodinganalog="520"> 
		<head> Scope and Content </head> 
		<p>The records of the St. George and Santa Clara Field Irrigation Company
		  includes correspondence from 1906 to 1917, annual reports from 1907 to 1911,
		  and financial reports from 1899 and 1923. In addition there are ledgers and
		  minute books from 1864 to 1900. The minute book currently being used by the
		  company contains the records of the company from 1900 to the present. </p> 
		<p>The records of irrigation companies often reflect the most basic needs
		  and frustrations of the people they serve. Water, or the lack of it, is often
		  the line between survival and starvation and its use has been the subject of
		  bitter controversy and, at times, the cause of open hostility. The minutes of
		  the St. George and Santa Clara Field Irrigation Company are valuable because
		  they document the process that was used to define water rights, the close link
		  between church and community, and the ability of the water users to work
		  together toward common goals. </p> 
		<p>Since Santa Clara was the first community to be established on the
		  Santa Clara River, its residents were the first to claim water rights and build
		  canals. Later, after Pine Valley and St. George were settled, the adjudication
		  of water rights became a major issue. Entries in the minute books before 1872
		  often are discussions of which community has what rights and an attempt to
		  determine how much water each individual can expect to receive. Care man stood
		  in a meeting of his peers and said "We all have rights and should be brethren."
		  and another echoed that sentiment saying "those rights of the people must be
		  tested something must be determined." Yet another entry attests to the
		  desperate need to adjudicate water rights and determine the amount of water a
		  man could expect to irrigate his land. On 12 January 1868 the residents of
		  Santa Clara had voted to share their water with those living downstream in St.
		  George. A period of drought made their decision seem foolhardy and on 26
		  January it was "Moved, seconded, and carried that the vote of 12th January be
		  recinded (sic) and that they run their own risk but only have water when there
		  is any to share." </p> 
		<p>No one was more aware of the accuracy of John Wesley Powell's
		  observation that land in the arid regions was near worthless without water than
		  those farming in southern Utah. The Mormons, however, benefitted from the
		  community awareness of the need to cooperate in the development of natural
		  resources. Whereas other states had need of land banks and squabbles over water
		  and grazing land often led to range wars between competing landowners, Utahns
		  had recourse to their church to arbitrate conflicts and serve as a court of
		  final appeal. This close connection between the LDS Church and the irrigation
		  companies is clearly shown in the early minutes of the St. George and Santa
		  Clara Field Irrigation Company which describe meetings held in the St. George
		  Tabernacle. These meetings were often led by the bishop or same other prominent
		  member of the church. </p> 
		<p>Perhaps the most striking characteristic of the records of the St.
		  George and Santa Clara Field Irrigation Company is how well they show
		  democratic forces at work in southern Utah. Although the three communities
		  served by the company were governed by their spiritual leaders, the minutes
		  detail the give and take discussion that was part of water adjudication.
		  Although the three communities served by the company were governed by their
		  spirits leaders, the minutes detail the give-and-take discussion that was part
		  of water adjudication. At times, it became necessary to refer a particular
		  matter to the church authorities for settlement, but in most cases the daily
		  affairs of the company were decided after mutual discussion by all members of
		  the company. </p> 
	 </scopecontent> 
	 <admininfo> 
		<head> Administrative Information </head> 
		<prefercite> 
		  <head> Preferred Citation: </head> 
		  <p> St. George and Santa Clara Field Irrigation Company Records,
			 1864-1927, Utah State Historical Society. </p> 
		</prefercite> 
		<acqinfo> 
		  <head> Acquisition Information: </head> 
		  <p>Gift of Schuyler Everett</p> 
		</acqinfo> 
		<userestrict> 
		  <head> Restrictions on Use </head> 
		  <p> The St. George and Santa Clara Field Irrigation Company Records are
			 the physical property of the Utah Historical Society, Salt Lake City, Utah.
			 Literary rights, including copyright, may belong to the authors or their heirs
			 and assigns. Please contact the Historical Society for information regarding
			 specific use of this collection. </p> 
		</userestrict> 
		<processinfo> 
		  <head> Processing Information: </head> 
		  <list> 
			 <item> Collection processed by Alec Avery, 1980</item> 
			 <item> Finding aid compiled by Alec Avery, 1980</item> 
			 <item> Finding aid edited by Linda Thatcher, 2000</item> 
			 <item> Collection cataloged by Richard Saunders, 1988 (RLIN ID:
				UTSX88-A237). </item> 
			 <item> Finding aid encoded for the World Wide Web by Craig
				Ringgenberg, 2000. </item> 
		  </list> 
		</processinfo> 
	 </admininfo> 
	 <dsc type="in-depth"> 
		<head> Container list </head> 
		<thead> 
		  <row> 
			 <entry> Box </entry> 
			 <entry> Folder </entry> 
			 <entry> Contents </entry> 
		  </row> 
		</thead> 
		<c01 level="series"> 
		  <did> 
			 <container type="box" label=""></container> 
			 <container type="folder"></container> 
			 <unitid></unitid> 
			 <unittitle></unittitle> 
		  </did> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="39222000103346">1</container> 
				<container type="folder">1</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Correspondence, 17 August 1906 - 12 August
				  1917</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="">1</container> 
				<container type="folder">2</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Annual reports to board of directors and stockholders,
				  1907-1912</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="">1</container> 
				<container type="folder">3</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Ledger and minute book; field accounts, minutes of
				  board, trustee, landowners meetings, inventory and appraisal of estates,
				  expenses, 20 February 1864 - 17 November 1877</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="">1</container> 
				<container type="folder">4</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Ledger and minute book; list of stockholders, minutes of
				  board, trustee meetings, accounts, 15 January 1872 - 15 December
				  1878</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="">1</container> 
				<container type="folder">5</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Ledger; accounts, 15 March 1879 - 14 December
				  1899</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="">1</container> 
				<container type="folder">6</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Minutes of board, stockholders meetings, 17 January 1880
				  - 14 January 1900</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="">1</container> 
				<container type="folder">7</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Ledger; accounts, 1889-1902</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="39222000103353">2</container> 
				<container type="folder">1</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Ledger; list of water claimants, assessments, shares,
				  1888-1891</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="">2</container> 
				<container type="folder">2</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Ledger; accounts, 15 August 1901 - 31 December
				  1907</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="">2</container> 
				<container type="folder">3</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Minutes of board, stockholders meetings, by-laws, roll
				  of attendance; 25 May 1901 - 28 December 1923</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="">2</container> 
				<container type="folder">4</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Ledger; index, accounts, 1 January 1908 - 31 December
				  1916</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="39222000103361">3</container> 
				<container type="folder">1</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Ledger; index; canal accounts, 1 January 1917 - 31
				  December 1927</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="">3</container> 
				<container type="folder">2</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Miscellaneous minutes of stockholders, water users
				  meetings, 1908-1914</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02 level="file"> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box" label="">3</container> 
				<container type="folder">3-4</container> 
				<unitid></unitid> 
				<unittitle>Miscellaneous financial materials; agreement, 1878;
				  balance sheet, 1912; accounts, list of stockholders, tax list, receipts,
				  assessments, resolution, agreement, notices of meetings, etc.</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		</c01> 
	 </dsc> 
  </archdesc> 
</ead> 
