Grand Canyon & Colorado River, 1987 ©eop
After our meeting today, I got questions from several people about books on the arid west of the United States. In class I commented on three titles:
Webb, Walter Prescott. 1931 (original publication, there were several subsequent editions, the most recent appears to be 1983). The Great Plains. (Austin: University of Texas). Webb was professor of history at the University of Texas and during his lifetime was a greatly influential voice in the study of American history, especially that of the west. He wrote widely on water related topics, particularly as they related to Texas, and his 1954 work More Water for Texas prompted that state to look more carefully at its use of a scarce resource. A 1957 article in Harper's Magazine "American West: Perpetual Mirage" was one of the seminal works in the formation of the environmentalist movement. He has been dead since the 1960s, and his books are a little dated, but they are immensely readable and recommended to anyone with an interest in water and the American West.
Wallace Stegner, who many consider one of the finest American writers, was best known as a novelist, but he also wrote a fine piece of history Beyond the Hundredth Meridian: John Wesley Powell and the Second Opening of the West. It is still in print and also available for Kindle readers. Once again a great read for anyone with an interest in water, American history and the settlement of the west.
John Wesley Powell was a Civil War hero, he lost an arm, and is best known for his epic journey in 1869 through the Grand Canyon. His influence on this country was much greater than that single journey, for he was the effective founder of the profession of geology in the US and of the US Geological Survey (USGS). His Report on the Lands of the Arid Region of the United States published by the USGS has been a touchstone in discussions of the arid regions of the west since it was first published in 1878. He noted that types of agriculture and land management common east of the Mississippi were simply not feasible in the west and made suggestions of possible alternatives. The Report is available in a rather cumbersome form from the American Memory project of the Library of Congress (did not have time to locate other online versions, but I suspect there may be one or more).
There are many, many more good books (not to mention articles) on the arid portions of the U. S. West. A few suggestions:
1. Meinig, Donald. 1968. The Great Columbia Plain. (Seattle: University of Washington Press).
2. Reisner, Marc. 1986. Cadillac Desert. (New York: Viking).
3. Limerick, Patricia Nelson. 2000. Something in the Soil: Legacies and Reckonings in the New West. (New York: W. W. Norton & Company).