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Beehive Archive: Building a dam

By Staff | Oct 5, 2022

Welcome to the Beehive Archive–your weekly bite-sized look at some of the most pivotal–and peculiar–events in Utah history.

With all of the history and none of the dust, the Beehive Archive is a fun way to catch up on Utah’s past. Beehive Archive is a production of Utah Humanities, provided to local papers as a weekly feature article focusing on Utah history topics drawn from our award-winning radio series, which can be heard each week on KCPW and Utah Public Radio.

“The Reservoir Can Go to Hell:” Building & Financing the Enterprise Dam The Enterprise Dam in Utah’s Washington County is an amazing example of how early Mormon settlers mastered the waters of the harsh desert using community effort.

But did you know the process of building it was bursting with controversy and deluged with drama? When Mormon settler Orson Huntsman tried to raise cotton in southern Utah during the late 19th century, he struggled to make a living. He wasn’t alone.

His neighbors in the town of Hebron near Shoal Creek, dragged water barrels around on makeshift sleds called “lizards” in order to water their crops. Convinced they could instead dam Shoal Creek, Huntsman urged his neighbors to move near the water and build a reservoir. Fittingly enough, he wanted to call the new town “Enterprise,” but the idea turned out to be a very hard sell and nearly ruined Huntsman’s life. In the 1890s, there were few reservoirs in Utah like the ones we know today.

The United States was in recessions and settlers saw dam-building as a lot of work and money. Nevertheless, Huntsman wrote, “I preach reservoir wherever I go” — to the point where people actually avoided him. His father-in-law urged him to provide for his family instead of “fooling with the reservoir.” Huntsman appealed to his religious leaders at the 1893 LDS Conference in St. George, but felt slighted when they wouldn’t see him. “I am done,” he steamed, “I will go home, take my family and go north… and the reservoir can go to hell.” But a group of church leaders at the conference eventually met with Huntsman to draft a circulating letter asking for dam financers.

They raised about $2 million in today’s money — but even then, Hebron residents did not relocate to Enterprise as Huntsman envisioned. Instead, they built ditches competing with Enterprise, and cobbled together their own reservoir below Huntsman’s. After church leaders would not pressure movement to Enterprise, it took an earthquake in 1902 to destroy most of Hebron’s buildings to finally do it.

Today, you can visit the Enterprise Dam and admire its craftsmanship and masonry. What you can’t see is Huntsman’s years of preaching, the strained relationship with his family, and two divided settlements. Today, the process of surveying land for a dam, funding its construction, and building it is the work of the federal government. But for Huntsman, it required community work, an appeal to religious authority, and some good old-fashioned desperation. Beehive Archive is a production of Utah Humanities.

This Beehive Archive story is part of Think Water Utah, a statewide collaboration and conversation on the critical topic of water presented by Utah Humanities and its partners. Sources consulted in the creation of the Beehive Archive and past episodes may be found at www.utahhumanities.org/stories. © Utah Humanities 2021

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