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"All The Water for All the Land" Remaking
Community:
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McNary and Community: Dedication Day
A flurry of activity absorbed Umatilla as it geared up for the first phase of McNary construction. On April 15, 1947, 10-12,000 residents of towns up and down the river met in Umatilla to view a parade of floats and marching bands. The day of festivities, riverside picnics, and speeches culminated with Mrs. Charles McNary, a recent widow, turning the first shovel-full of earth, heralding an "age of progress ahead and the happiness of a people." Governor Earl Snell, representatives of the federal government, dignitaries of three Northwest states, and leaders of the movement for a dam attended the ceremonies. Janis Paige, of Tacoma and Hollywood, was named Miss Damsite. Little did excited observors know that within a generation comprehensive development of the Columbia River would spark unforeseen consequences. By 1969, the lower half of the town of Umatilla was removed and by the 1990s conflict over endangered salmon and possible dam-breaching raged throughout the state. "Janis Paige" in the "Sage Hen," McNary Dam Newsletter, circa 1951 Ernabel Mittelsdorf recalls Dedication Day "dedication day" in the "Sage Hen," McNary Dam Newsletter, circa 1951 Photo
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