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History.
San Angelo Project History
The Concho River area was
first settled around 1870 by cattlemen and followed soon after by
farmers. Although much of the area is still devoted primarily to
grazing, most of the land now cultivated was first broken and farmed
between 1880 and 1910. The last of the State-owned lands went into
private ownership soon after 1910. In the 2000 census the City of San
Angelo was estimated to have a population of 88,439. Except for San
Angelo the Concho River watershed is still sparsely settled. The City
owes its origin to the establishment in 1868 of the Fort Concho
military post, for protection against Indians. The settlement which
became San Angelo developed at the same time across the North Concho
River from the military post.
Construction of the first
major water project in the area was begun by the Corps of Engineers.
In 1939, the Corps of Engineers reported favorably upon the
construction of the O.C. Fisher Dam and Reservoir on the North Concho
River for the primary purpose of flood control. Construction of the
reservoir by the Corps of Engineers was authorized by the Congress in
the Flood Control Act of August 18, 1941, and construction of the
reservoir was completed in 1952.
Subsequent to the 1939
report by the Corps of Engineers, Reclamation initiated investigations
for developing an irrigation plan for using Concho River water in
excess of the municipal and industrial needs of the area.
Reclamation completed a
draft of a report on the North Concho Unit of the San Angelo project
in July 1946. This report set forth a plan for irrigating 12,000
acres of land. During the discussions of this plan with local
interests and the Corps of Engineers in June and July 1946, the City
of San Angelo requested that a portion of the conservation storage be
reserved to furnish municipal and industrial water to the City. The
investigations by Reclamation were then directed primarily toward
determining the amount needed by the City and the water supply that
would remain available for irrigation use.
In September 1954, the
San Angelo Water Supply Corporation, acting for the City, asked
Reclamation to reopen the investigations of the water resources
potential of the Concho River to recognize recent local developments.
The Reclamation studies which resulted proposed a dam and reservoir on
Middle and South Concho Rivers at the Twin Buttes site that could
offer virtually full regulation of the South and Middle Concho
watershed above Nasworthy Reservoir. The reservoir was projected to
yield, when operated jointly with the O.C Fisher Reservoir, sufficient
water to meet all foreseeable municipal requirements and also provide
sufficient water to irrigate 10,000 acres of land.
On the basis of these
findings, the San Angelo Project was authorized for construction.
Construction of Twin Buttes Dam was begun in 1960 and completed in
1963. Construction on the main canal and lateral was done at the same
time; all facilities were complete in 1963. After a soil survey of the
entire area determined what land was irrigable, the land owners were
contacted and it was then determined who would be willing to repay the
United States Government for the construction of the canal. The
direction of the canal was determined based on the surveys taken by
the Soil Conservation Service and somewhat on the willingness of the
willingness of individual farmers to agree to repay the Federal
Government for construction of the irrigation facilities.
Following completion of
construction, severe drought conditions prevailed in the Twin Buttes
Dam watershed until April through August 1971, when above normal rains
broke the drought and brought substantial inflow to Twin Butts
Reservoir. The San Angelo Project original brought 10,000 acres of
land under irrigation: however, because of the severe drought
conditions experienced following completion of construction, it was
not possible to start irrigating until March 1972. Before the first
irrigation water was delivered, the farms generally had rows laid out
on the contour. When the irrigation began the rows were changed to
parallel to accommodate flood irrigation and some terraces had to be
removed in order to irrigate the fields properly.
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