Table
of Contents
Land
of Two Rivers
"All
The Water for All the
Land"
Remaking
Community:
McNary Dam
Making
Way for
John Day
Umatilla
Today and Tomorrow

forward
|
Consequences
of McNary Dam
From
Now on, it'll be "full throttle" ahead in this county. East
Oregonian, Diamond Anniversary Edition, April, 1950
. . . they had so much crops on the Columbia
Basin that if they put any more crops over here the farmers would have
went broke. So all of the sudden agriculture for McNary Dam was not
there. . . even though the tube was under there to spill water. . .
here, it was never used until five years ago. . . The only reason they
did it five years ago is now they are trying to save the salmon from
the Three Mile Dam. But that was back there in '48. But because of what
happened at Moses Lake and all those places, agriculture water became
a third choice. Power and transportation became one and two. My father
went to meetings - they were opposing it. . . Sam Nobles, Umatilla
resident since 1943, talking about the original 1948 Umatilla Basin
Project, 1999
McNary
Dam brought many people to Umatilla and to the region. George Hash, mayor
of Umatilla in 1998, came to Umatilla to teach school in the 1950s. He
liked the town because jobs were available and neighbors knew one another.
Employment with Standard Oil brought Roy and Evie Gunsolley to Umatilla
in the 1950s. They later built a successful family-owned drive-thru restaurant
and became active members of the community. McNary also increased diversity
in the region as Hispanic people like Jose and Maria Rodriguez came to
work on farm lands irrigated by the Columbia River. Despite optimism,
Umatilla's boom days soon ended and by the 1970s the community faced the
negative effects of three decades of comprehensive Columbia River Development.
Above. Beavers near the McNary Dam nature trail, 1993. Photo courtesy
of Roy and Evie Gunsolley
Some other results that
followed the construction of McNary Dam included:
Relocation
of the Union Pacific Railroad terminal from Umatilla to Hinkle
Studies of the effects of turbines and spillways on fingerling
salmon
Recreational opportunities on Lake Wallula - swimming, boating,
and trails
Justification for other mid-Columbia projects, including John Day
Hermiston
Herald article - "Effect
of McNary Dam on Fingerlings Draws Study"
Hermiston
Herald article - "Group seeks
full utilization of McNary Features"
Report
to Hearing Conducted by Reclamation Bureau and Corps of Army Engineers,
May 20, 1955, by Elmer Dodd

forward
Photo
Archive * Documents Archive
Oral History Archive
Bibliography & Web Resources
|