Table of ContentsCollection OverviewCollection Inventory+/-
Biographical Note/Historical NoteContent DescriptionCollection UseAdministrative Information |
Collection Overview +/-
Collection Inventory +/- Box Folder Contents
Box , Folder : Legal records
Box 1, Folder 1 : Constitution and by-Laws, 1865?
Box 1, Folder 2 : Incorporation papers
Box 1, Folder 2 1: Articles of Incorporation, 1872
Box 1, Folder 2 2: Agreement for the Incorporation, 1876
Box 1, Folder 2 3: Agreement for the Incorporation, 1887
Box 1, Folder 2 4: Certificate of Amendment, Article Four,
1937
Box 1, Folder 2 5: Certificate of Adoption Agreement, 1914
Box 1, Folder 2 6: Certificate of Amendment, Articles Two and Three and
one-half, 1938, 1941
Box 1, Folder 3 : By-Laws, n.d.
Box 1, Folder 4 : Resolutions, Agreements and Amendments,
1924-1957
Box 1, Folder 5 : Provo Bench Canal and Irrigation Company, History and
Legal Description, n.d.
Box 1, Folder 6 : North Union Irrigation Company, By-Laws,
n.d.
Box 1, Folder 11 : Labor receipts, 1878-1879
Box , Folder : Correspondence
Box 1, Folder 7 : 1862, 1865-1867
Box 1, Folder 8 : 1868-1869
Box 1, Folder 9 : 1870-1872
Box 1, Folder 10 : 1873-1879
Box 1, Folder 12 : 1880-1882
Box 1, Folder 13 : 1883-1884
Box 1, Folder 14 : 1885-1887
Box 1, Folder 15 : 1888-1889
Box 1, Folder 16 : 1890-1893
Box 1, Folder 17 : 1894-1899
Box 1, Folder 18 : Miscellaneous, 1860-1899
Box 1, Folder 19 : 1901-1904
Box 1, Folder 20 : 1905-1907
Box 1, Folder 21 : 1908-1910
Box 2, Folder 1 : 1911-1913
Box 2, Folder 2 : 1914
Box 2, Folder 3 : 1915-1916
Box 2, Folder 4 : 1917-1921
Box 2, Folder 5 : 1922-1923
Box 2, Folder 6 : 1924
Box 2, Folder 7 : 1925-1926
Box 2, Folder 8 : 1927-1929
Box 2, Folder 9 : 1930-1932
Box 2, Folder 10 : 1933-1934
Box 2, Folder 11 : 1935-1939
Box 2, Folder 12 : 1939-1942
Box 2, Folder 13 : 1940-1945
Box , Folder : Miscellaneous
Box 2, Folder 14 : Miscellaneous water information, 1943
Box 2, Folder 15 : Miscellaneous water information, 1944
Box 2, Folder 16 : Easement for Canal Right-of-way, 1945
Box 2, Folder 17 : Miscellaneous, 1946-1967
Box 2, Folder 18 : Miscellaneous, n.d.
Box 9, Folder 16 : Stock Certificate, examples
Box 10, Folder 1 : Provo River Decree, 1921
Box 10, Folder 2 : Water Rights Adjudication, 1935-1938
Box 10, Folder 3 : Water Rights Adjudication, Christenson & Christenson
Attorneys, 1941-1942
Box 11, Folder 1 : Salt Lake Water Suit, 1942
Box 11, Folder 2 : Salt Lake Water Suit, 1942
Box 11, Folder 3 : Salt Lake City vs. Tamar Anderson, 1942
Box 11, Folder 4 : Haskell Bates vs. H. J. Hamilton, 1951
Box 11, Folder 5 : Christenson & Christenson Attorneys, Legal
correspondence, 1950-1957
Box 11, Folder 6 : Harding vs. Orem City & Provo Bench Canal Company,
miscellaneous, 1966
Box , Folder : Reports
Box 3, Folder 1 : Deer Creek Reservoir Hydrography, 1943-1945
Box 3, Folder 2 : Deer Creek Reservoir Hydrography, 1947-1954
Box 3, Folder 3 : Storage, distribution and discharge summaries,
1941-1942
Box 3, Folder 4 : Rough Water Use Schedules, 1964-1966
Box 3, Folder 5 : Rough Water Use Schedules, 1968-1972
Box 3, Folder 6 : Utah Lake and Jordan River, Diversions, Measurements,
Land Transactions, Legal Documents
Box 3, Folder 7 : Reports of Examination, 1956, 1959-1960
Box 3, Folder 8 : Reports of Examination, 1961-1963, 1965
Box 3, Folder 9 : Reports of Examination, 1966-1969, 1971
Box 3, Folder 10 : Financial reports, 1928-1946
Box 3, Folder 11 : Financial reports, 1947-1954
Box 3, Folder 12 : Insurance and indemnity, 1960-1963
Box 3, Folder 13 : Provo River Commissioners, 1937-1961
Box , Folder : Stock and Assessment Bound Ledgers
Box 4, Folder 1 : Stock and Assessment Ledger, 1868-1871
[indexed]
Box 4, Folder 2 : Stock and Assessment Ledger, 1870-1895
[indexed]
Box 4, Folder 3 : Stock and Assessment Ledger; Receipts and Disbursements,
1870-1896
Box 4, Folder 4 : Stock and Assessment Ledger, 1876-1895
Box 4, Folder 5 : Stock and Assessment Ledger, 1878-1887
[indexed]
Box 5, Folder 1 : Stock and Assessment Ledger, 1898-1915
[indexed]
Box 5, Folder 2 : Stock and Assessment Ledger, 1898-1941
Box 5, Folder 3 : Stock and Assessment Ledger, 1898-1924
[indexed]
Box 6, Folder 1 : Stock and Assessment Ledgers, 1887-1896
[indexed]
Box 6, Folder 2 : Stock and Assessment Ledgers, 1916-1919
[indexed]
Box 6, Folder 3 : Stock and Assessment Ledgers, ca. 1940
Box 6, Folder 4 : Stock and Assessment Ledgers, 1944-1956
Box 6, Folder 5 : Stock Certificates, Examples
Box , Folder : Stock and Assessment Ledger Sheets
Box 7, Folder 1 : Abbott - Adams
Box 7, Folder 2 : Allen - Andersen
Box 7, Folder 3 : Anderson - Automotive Products Corporation
Box 7, Folder 4 : Backman - Benjamin
Box 7, Folder 5 : Bentley - Booth
Box 7, Folder 6 : Boswell - Brooks
Box 7, Folder 7 : Brought - Bylund
Box 7, Folder 8 : Calder - Chatwin
Box 7, Folder 9 : Childs - Cick
Box 7, Folder 10 : Clark - Coombs
Box 7, Folder 11 : Cordner - Cutler
Box 7, Folder 12 : Dalebout - Davis
Box 7, Folder 13 : Day - Dimmick
Box 7, Folder 14 : Dixon - Dunn
Box 7, Folder 15 : Earl - Ewell
Box 7, Folder 16 : Fachser - Fielding
Box 7, Folder 17 : Finch - Fuller
Box 7, Folder 18 : Gabbitas - Geneva
Box 7, Folder 19 : Gillies - Guymon
Box 8, Folder 1 : Hacking - Hanson
Box 8, Folder 2 : Harding - Haws
Box 8, Folder 3 : Haycock - Hirst
Box 8, Folder 4 : Hoagland - Hutchings
Box 8, Folder 5 : Innes - Ivie
Box 8, Folder 6 : Jackson - Jewett
Box 8, Folder 7 : Jex - Johnson
Box 8, Folder 8 : Johnston - Justesen
Box 8, Folder 9 : Kallas - Kutch
Box 8, Folder 10 : Lamb - Long
Box 8, Folder 11 : Longman - Lynn
Box 8, Folder 12 : McArthur - Mackey
Box 8, Folder 13 : Majestic - Meldrum
Box 8, Folder 14 : Memmott - Moore
Box 8, Folder 15 : Morby - Murray
Box 8, Folder 16 : Nash - Nuttall
Box 8, Folder 17 : Oaks - Overman
Box 9, Folder 1 : Pace - Peterson
Box 9, Folder 2 : Petro - Provo Building and Loan Society
Box 9, Folder 3 : Provo City - Pyne
Box 9, Folder 4 : Rappleye - Roberts
Box 9, Folder 5 : Robertson - Russell
Box 9, Folder 6 : Sabey - Shepherd
Box 9, Folder 7 : Sheppard - Skinner
Box 9, Folder 8 : Smith - Soulier
Box 9, Folder 9 : Sowards - Stratton
Box 9, Folder 10 : Stubbs - Symonds
Box 9, Folder 11 : Talboe - Turesauski
Box 9, Folder 12 : Ungerman - Voelker
Box 9, Folder 13 : Wagers - Whittaker
Box 9, Folder 14 : White - Wright
Box 9, Folder 15 : Y and H Development Company - Zobell
Biographical Note/Historical Note +/-Mormon pioneers first settled in Utah Valley in 1849. The pioneers selected the valley for settlement principally because of its water supply. Several streams from the canyons of the Wasatch range cross a gently sloping alluvial plane and empty into Utah Lake. The largest is the Provo River. Coming from Provo Canyon it cuts a half moon rim near the center of the valley and flows in a southeasterly direction to the lake. To the southeast of the river, lying between the mountains and the lake, is Provo, the Utah County seat. It was the first settlement by Mormon pioneers in the valley. The first land to be farmed was that within easy reach of the river. The settlers constructed several small ditches in the first few years of settlement which provided the water necessary to make agriculture flourish in the immediate region. But the district north of Provo located on a high bench of land called Provo Bench remained a treeless sagebrush country for many years. Settlers had long recognized the potential value of the district if it could be irrigated, but early attempts to locate springs or dig wells produced scant results. Finally, the homesteaders devised a plan to build a canal to convey water from the Provo River to the Bench and organized a company for that purpose. On 17 January 1853, the Territorial Legislature granted a charter to the newly formed Provo Canal and Irrigation Company. The act authorized the company to divert one-half of the waters of the Provo River as near the mouth of the canyon on the north side of the stream as possible. The Provo Bench Company became the first irrigation corporation organized in the State of Utah. Obtaining a charter and building a canal were two different matters. It was not until 1863 that the settlers were able to construct a successful canal. The canal itself was only two-and-a-half-feet deep and about six-feet wide, but it provided sufficient water to irrigate the district adequately. Cultivation and crop production, however, increased with population and soon more water was needed. Early in June 1865, the landowners got together and pursuant to an act of the legislative assembly of the Territory of Utah petitioned for more water from the Provo River, the petition was granted. The company reincorporated as the Provo Bench Canal and Irrigation Company and established the Provo Bench Irrigation District (the area served by the canal). The Company soon constructed a new canal to carry the increased allocation of water. The new canal was three feet deep and seven feet wide with one-third slope on each bank. The Provo Bench Company reached an agreement with the North Union Irrigation Company to provide water from the canal for distribution by the latter company. The North Union Irrigation Company's canal separated from the Provo Bench Company's about one and a half miles from its source and ran towards the towns of Pleasant Grove and Lehi. Today there are seven hundred stockholders representing two thousand shares (32 shares equal one second-foot of water). Most of the stockholders are independent fruit farmers who rely heavily on the waters of the Provo Bench Canal. Small fruits, especially strawberries, raspberries and apples, are the district's most important crops. But many farms have been subdivided and have given up acreage to residential construction; water once utilized primarily for agricultural purposes is now increasingly diverted for industrial and culinary use. The Provo Bench Canal and Irrigation Company is one of the few companies still existing which has spanned the entire period from original settlement through the present. Thus, the company's records are an excellent primary source in documenting Utah's water development. Content Description +/-The Utah State Historical Society acquired the records of the Provo Bench Canal and Irrigation Company as the result of a survey of private water companies in 1979. The Provo Bench Company's records were stored in a large trunk and had been relatively undisturbed for many years. Thus, the material is in remarkably good condition, although of limited scope and quantity. No one is certain what happened to other records which may have existed. The collection includes the company's constitution and by-laws, correspondence, minute books, stock and financial ledgers, material pertaining to adjudication of water rights and miscellaneous other types of material, all dating from the early 1860s through the present. The original collection comprised approximately thirty linear feet of material. Almost half of the material -- primarily duplicates and non-historical records -- were returned to the company. Most of the material returned consisted of old stock certificates (examples of the different types were retained). It was not necessary to retain the certificates themselves, because stock ledgers, include information on stock acquisitions, transfers, cancellations, assessments, etc. A variety of published materials of a general nature was also removed from the collection and made a part of the library's general holdings. A list of that material is included. Collection Use +/-Restrictions on Access: Restrictions on Use Administrative Information +/-Arrangement: Creator: Provo Bench Canal and Irrigation Company. Language: English. Sponsor: Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA) grant, 2007-2008 Quantity: 12 boxes (6 linear ft.) Language of the Finding Aid: Finding aid written in Englishin Latin script EAD Creation Date: 1999. |