
Complexity in a Ditch
Bringing Water to the Idaho Desert
Washington State University Press
Will be published approx. on 6. November 2017
Book
Paperback/Softback
256 pages
978-0-87422-353-8 (ISBN)
Description
Water--or the lack of it--has profoundly shaped the settlement patterns, economic development, and political dynamics of the arid American West. On Idaho's Snake River Plain, the irrigation process has been particularly complex, influenced by local and national politics as well as geographic geography and technology. Throughout two decades, decisions surrounding water use shaped the state's settlement patterns, economic development, and political dynamics. Author Hugh T. Lovin researched and published insightful articles on the topic in a wide array of scholarly journals. These selected essays offer a thorough examination of the transformation and controversy related to the region's irrigation.Encouraged by the Carey Act of 1894, settlers flocked to the Idaho desert. Bureau agents and speculators followed. Lovin explores their efforts to farm, promote, and irrigate, covering successes and failures of key players. He discusses related federal policies, the New West reclamation tragedy near Twin Falls, the King Hill project, the fight to divert Yellowstone water, and more. Idaho historian Adam Sowards' valuable introduction sets Lovin's work in context and concludes, "No one knows irrigation better than Hugh Lovin, and the essays included here are gems of historical research.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Pullman, WA
United States
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Dimensions
Height: 231 mm
Width: 150 mm
Thickness: 18 mm
Weight
363 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-87422-353-8 (9780874223538)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Hugh T. Lovin (1928-2014), was a fourth-generation Idahoan and Boise State University history professor from 1966 through 1993. He earned a master's degree in history at Washington State University, and a PhD at the University of Washington. He was the editor of Labor and the West, an anthology published by Sunflower University Press, and wrote for many different historical journals. Professor Adam Sowards is the Director of the University of Idaho's Program in Pacific Northwest Studies. He is an environmental historian who focuses on North America, especially the West, and is affiliate faculty with American Indian Studies, Environmental Science, Water Resources and American Studies at the University of Idaho.
Content
Preface: Remembering Hugh Lovin, Judy Austin
Introduction: Finding Complexity in a Ditch: Hugh T. Lovin and Idaho Irrigation History, Adam M. Sowards
Part I: People 1. Dreamers, Schemers, and Doers of Idaho Irrigation, Agricultural History 76:2 (2002)
2. Sage, Jacks, and Snake Plain Pioneers, Idaho Yesterdays 22: no. 4 (Winter 1979)
Part II: Policy
3. "Duty of Water" in Idaho: A "New West" Irrigation Controversy, 1890-1920, Arizona and the West 23 (Spring 1981)
4. The Carey Act in Idaho, 1895-1925: An Experiment in Free Enterprise Reclamation, Pacific Northwest Quarterly (October 1987)
Part III: Projects
5. Free Enterprise and Large-Scale Reclamation on the Twin Falls-Northside Tract, 1907-1930, Idaho Yesterdays 29, no. 1 (Spring 1985)
6. Weaving Tangled Webs at the King Hill Irrigation Projects
7. Fixing It and Paying for It at King Hill
8. A "New West" Reclamation Tragedy: The Twin Falls-Oakley Project in Idaho, 1908-1931, Arizona and the West 20
9. Yellowstone National Park, Jackson Hole, and the Idaho Irrigation Frontier
Idaho Yesterdays, Vol. 43, No. 4, Winter 2000
Epilogue: Water, Arid Land, and Visions of Advancement on the Snake River Plain
Idaho Yesterdays, Vol. 35, no 1, (Spring 1991
Remembering My Father, Jeffrey Lovin
Index
Introduction: Finding Complexity in a Ditch: Hugh T. Lovin and Idaho Irrigation History, Adam M. Sowards
Part I: People 1. Dreamers, Schemers, and Doers of Idaho Irrigation, Agricultural History 76:2 (2002)
2. Sage, Jacks, and Snake Plain Pioneers, Idaho Yesterdays 22: no. 4 (Winter 1979)
Part II: Policy
3. "Duty of Water" in Idaho: A "New West" Irrigation Controversy, 1890-1920, Arizona and the West 23 (Spring 1981)
4. The Carey Act in Idaho, 1895-1925: An Experiment in Free Enterprise Reclamation, Pacific Northwest Quarterly (October 1987)
Part III: Projects
5. Free Enterprise and Large-Scale Reclamation on the Twin Falls-Northside Tract, 1907-1930, Idaho Yesterdays 29, no. 1 (Spring 1985)
6. Weaving Tangled Webs at the King Hill Irrigation Projects
7. Fixing It and Paying for It at King Hill
8. A "New West" Reclamation Tragedy: The Twin Falls-Oakley Project in Idaho, 1908-1931, Arizona and the West 20
9. Yellowstone National Park, Jackson Hole, and the Idaho Irrigation Frontier
Idaho Yesterdays, Vol. 43, No. 4, Winter 2000
Epilogue: Water, Arid Land, and Visions of Advancement on the Snake River Plain
Idaho Yesterdays, Vol. 35, no 1, (Spring 1991
Remembering My Father, Jeffrey Lovin
Index