http://www.heraldandnews.com/articles/2005/01/28/viewpoints/editorials/views.txt
A hundred years ago Klamath Falls wasn't
much, except to the people who lived here.
The railroad hadn't arrived yet, roads were
primitive and the population numbered in the hundreds.
But agriculture attracted people to the
area.
Such companies as the Linkville Water Ditch
Company, the Klamath Falls Irrigation Company and others brought water
to the town that was first known as Linkville and became known as
Klamath Falls in 1893. That name was made official when the city
obtained its charter in 1905, and there's a nice fistful of events
coming up this year commemorating the event.
There's another centennial coming up, too,
that had a lot to do with Klamath Falls' growth - that of the Klamath
Reclamation Project. Without it, Klamath Falls wouldn't have nearly as
much to celebrate.
The Project has 240,000 acres under
irrigation, and the revenues from them flow through the area creating
income, jobs - and towns.
The Project was authorized in 1905, and the
Bureau of Reclamation put private irrigation projects together with
canals and dams built by the federal government.
Plans are to commemorate the Project's
centennial with a history book due out in June, and booths and displays
during the year, coordinated with the city's celebrations.
Included in the city's centennial
celebrations for February is the Mayor's Ball Feb. 18. The ball has a
budget of $10,000, which is underwritten by the city, but is expected to
be covered by ticket sales. As long as it's not likely to lose money,
let the partying begin.
The centennial commemoration also ties in
with the Winter Wings Festival Feb. 17-20, which is a celebration of
Klamath's place in the birding universe. The festival grew out of the
long-running Bald Eagle Conference. Its primary sponsor is the Klamath
Basin Audubon Society.
Centennial events for the city and Project
will continue through the year. Some are one-time only events, such as
Mayor's Ball, while others are annual events with centennial tie-ins and
themes.
That the city and the Project centennials
occur the same year is a nice bit of historical symbolism that
highlights how much they're intertwined, as we'll be finding out through
2005.
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