
Contents
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Early History of the Reclamation Service Early History of the Reclamation Service
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The Structure and Organization of the Reclamation Service The Structure and Organization of the Reclamation Service
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Reclamation in the Interior Department and Congress, 1909–1912 Reclamation in the Interior Department and Congress, 1909–1912
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Franklin K. Lane and Federal Reclamation, 1913–1917 Franklin K. Lane and Federal Reclamation, 1913–1917
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Conclusion Conclusion
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4 An Administrative Morass: Federal Reclamation, 1909–1917
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Published:December 2002
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Abstract
This chapter concentrates on the slow degradation of the Reclamation Service and Reclamation Bureau after President Theodore Roosevelt left office. It begins with a discussion of the early history of the Reclamation Service, where it notes that federal reclamation suffered from the inexperience and the lack of vision and idealism of its leaders, defects in the Reclamation Act of 1902, and conditions in the West. This is followed by a section on the structure and organization of the Reclamation Service. A discussion of the Reclamation in the Interior Department and Congress is included. The chapter also introduces the Reclamation Extension Act of 1914, which gave the right to pass judgment on projects and project extensions proposed by the Reclamation Service, and Franklin K. Lane, the Democratic secretary of the interior. Lane is noted to be the first interior secretary to recognize that the problems of federal reclamation were psychological as well as economic.
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