Shoshone Project
The Shoshone Project is an irrigation project in the U.S. state of Wyoming. The project provides irrigation for approximately of crops in the Big Horn Basin, fulfilling the vision of local resident and developer Buffalo Bill Cody, who hoped to make the semi-arid basin into agricultural land. Buffalo Bill Dam on the Shoshone River impounds water for the project in Buffalo Bill Reservoir. In addition to its role in irrigation, the project provides flood control on the Shoshone and generates power, using the height of Buffalo Bill Dam, once a world record, and the considerable fall of the river through Shoshone Canyon to generate hydroelectric power. Chief crops in the Big Horn Basin are sugar beets, alfalfa, barley, oats, corn, and beans.
Establishment
At the end of the 19th century, Buffalo Bill Cody settled in his namesake town of Cody, Wyoming, buying much of the surrounding lands. Cody promoted a plan to use the waters of the Shoshone to irrigate the plains of the Bighorn Basin extending eastward from Cody. Franklin Wheeler Mondell, later U.S. Senator from Wyoming, filed for the first water rights in 1893 but was unable to follow up on his project. Cody and his partner, Nate Salsbury obtained a permit to irrigate using three canals, but were in turn unable to construct the necessary infrastructure. Cody and local promoters again obtained water rights to irrigate from the state of Wyoming in 1899 and attempted to build a private canal, but lacked sufficient resources. Following the passage of the Reclamation Act in 1902 the state urged the Department of Interior to take over the project. The federal government-backed Shoshone Project was authorized in 1904 by Secretary of the Interior Ethan Allen Hitchcock, based on the 1899 Cody-Salsbury permit. The project started the same year, administered by the Bureau of Reclamation. Work on Buffalo Bill Dam started in 1905. The small Ralston and Corbett dams were completed in 1908. Buffalo Bill Dam was completed in 1910 at a cost of $1.4 million, at a height of, then the tallest dam in the world. The dam's height was extended by another to in the 1980s, significantly expanding reservoir capacity.Land was opened for settlement near Powell in the Garland Division, with extensive agricultural development by 1918. The Frannie Division was opened at about this time. The Willwood Division was opened to development between 1927 and 1938, while the Heart Mountain Division was not opened until 1947.
Administration
The project is administered in four divisions:- The Garland Division, with of irrigated land, receives water diverted into the Garland Canal by the Corbett Diversion Dam on the Shoshone, downstream from Buffalo Bill Dam. The canal has a capacity of. The Garland Division is administered by the Shoshone Irrigation District, directed by local water users.
- The Heart Mountain Division, with receives seasonal output from the Heart Mountain Powerplant, which discharges into an inverted siphon crossing the Shoshone River. The Heart Mountain Canal transports the water to users at a rate of. Portions of the Heart Mountain Canal were built with labor provided by the Civilian Conservation Corps from camp BR-72. Japanese American internees from the Heart Mountain Relocation Center worked on the canal in from 1942 until May 1944. Work was finally completed in 1947.
- The Frannie Division, with receives water from the Garland Canal through a branch canal, the Frannie Canal, which is long and carries.
- The Willwood Division, with receives water from the Willwood Diversion dam on the Shoshone, downstream from the Corbett Diversion Dam. The Willwood Canal extends for and can deliver water at.