Jim Andrew revisits the exhibit designed by his father, James H. Andrew, a long-time Greene County farmer. This Farm Drainage Tiling exhibit is housed at the Greene County Historical Society\u2019s museum in Jefferson, Iowa.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\nThe region\u2019s extensive swamps and sloughs were remnants of the last glacier, which loosened its icy grip on Iowa approximately 12,000 years ago. \u201cThere was a lot of water and nowhere for it to go,\u201d Otto said. \u201cDrainage ditches had to be dug and tile lines had to be laid before the sloughs and swamps of Iowa could be farmed. This started around 1880 and picked up speed in the early 1900s as drainage technology became more advanced.\u201d<\/p>\n
Ag leaders like Civil War veteran and pioneer farmer Jesse Allee, who settled in the Newell area in 1871, knew ag drainage would be essential to the development and prosperity of the region. \u201cHe was far-seeing with the unshakable belief in the future of the community\u2019s farm land,\u201d stated the 1969 Newell centennial history book on display at the Allee Mansion south of Newell. \u201cJesse worked hard educating the public to the necessity of proper drainage if this area was to be a leader in agriculture.\u201d<\/p>\n
Settlers in Greene County faced a similar situation. \u201cBy 1880, many landowners realized underground drainage tile was needed to remove the excess water,\u201d wrote James H. Andrew, a long-time Greene County farmer who created the Farm Drainage Tiling exhibit at the\u00a0Greene County Historical Society\u2019s museum\u00a0in Jefferson before he passed away in 2014.<\/p>\n
As more settlers moved into Iowa and demand for tile drainage grew, tile kilns and factories popped up across the state, Otto noted. Greene County, like many Iowa counties, had multiple firms manufacturing clay tile. These businesses used locally-sourced clay, including the Jefferson Cement Products Co., which was located just north of the Greene County Fairgrounds and operated until about 1930, and Lawton and Mass, which produced concrete tile at Cooper for a number of years, starting in 1895.<\/p>\n
\u201cThere were also small machines made for farmers to mix concrete and scoop it into a manually-cranked device that used metal forms to make various sizes of tile,\u201d wrote Andrew, who was known as \u201cMr. History.\u201d \u201cThey advertised you could make your tile at home for half the cost of commercial tile. But it\u2019s doubtful if this was very successful, since the proper steaming and curing of concrete tiles is important.\u201d<\/p>\n
Drainage districts take shape<\/strong> \nAg drainage in Iowa took a major leap forward in 1904, when state legislation provided for the formation of drainage districts. \u201cFarmers could always drain their own lands if they wanted to, but to truly manage drained water meant cooperation with your neighbors,\u201d Otto said.<\/p>\nA group of farmers could petition for a drainage district. An engineer would survey the land to establish the boundaries of the area, and a feasible drainage plan would be developed.<\/p>\n
If approved, a contract would be drawn up, with the cost paid by assessing each landowner for his or her fair share, considering his needs and the acres involved. The county acted as the administrator of the drainage district and assessed taxes against the land, as needed, to pay for the initial cost and later for the maintenance of the drainage district. Many times, the money would be borrowed by issuing bonds, and the landowners would make payments on a 10-year plan, Andrew noted.<\/p>\n
\u201cThe drainage district plan provided the larger tile needed for the main arteries of the system,\u201d Andrew wrote. \u201cIndividual landowners were responsible for installing and paying for the lateral tile lines installed on their respective farms to complete the drainage plan.\u201d<\/p>\n
From 1904 to 1919, an average of 10 new drainage districts were created per year in Greene County. \u201cThat\u2019s a new district about every five weeks,\u201d Andrew wrote.<\/p>\n
The 1910s became the golden age of ag drainage when most of Iowa\u2019s public drainage systems were built, Otto added. \u201cBy 1912, Iowa\u2019s farmers had spent more money on drainage then the U.S. government spent to build the Panama Canal.\u201d<\/p>\n
A Greene County drainage district created in 1916 to drain 998.7 acres using approximately 3.5 miles of tile ranging in size from 10 inches to 22 inches cost of $9,135, [more than $218,640 in today\u2019s dollars], said Michelle Fields, drainage clerk for Greene County. \u201cA drainage district created and installed in 2013 drained 865.5 acres using around 2.38 miles of tile ranging in size from 15 to 24 inches at a cost $532,500,\u201d she added.<\/p>\nThis unique clay ag drainage tile dated 1885 is on display in the Greene County Historical Society\u2019s museum in Jefferson. The message carved around the exterior of the tile reads, \u201cWe the men who started the tile work did so with a motive to benefit the town and country. Signed T.P. LaRue of Scranton, Iowa.\u201d<\/figcaption><\/figure>\nRecalling the life of a ditch digger<\/strong><\/p>\nBy 1920, the formation of ag drainage districts in Iowa slowed down as the post-World War 1 ag depression hit rural America. Still, the work continued.<\/p>\n
\u201cSteam power (and later gasoline) engines moved steel and iron machines that could move a lot more dirt around than could horse-drawn scrapers and plows,\u201d Otto said.<\/p>\n
Around 1923, after most Greene County drainage districts were in place, the first tiling machines started to be used, although hand digging continued for many years, Andrew noted. In the spring, summer and fall, men could find a job \u201cin the ditch\u201d if they wanted to work. \u201cMany immigrants coming to the USA found their first jobs digging canals, and later drainage ditches. You didn\u2019t have to know English to be a good man in the ditch,\u201d added Andrew, who noted that many of these workers were from Sweden and Ireland.<\/p>\n
The early tilers typically lived in tents or small, portable shacks next to the wet land they were draining. They often cooked their own meals and lived off the land by catching frogs for fried frogs\u2019 legs and snapping turtles for turtle soup. They shot ducks, geese and rabbits for meat. Sometimes bullheads and other fish could be caught in the larger ponds, Andrew noted. For water, including drinking water, the men would take a post auger and dig a hole 3 to 4 feet deep and would set in an old farm pump.<\/p>\n
\u201cDitch digging was well organized, and the men were paid by the rods of ditch dug by each man,\u201d Andrew wrote. \u201cNo work\u2014no pay. And of course, workmen\u2019s compensation, health insurance and so on were unheard of.\u201d<\/p>\n
\u201cGenerous gifts\u201d<\/strong> \nBy the 1970s, corrugated plastic pipe was introduced, which gradually phased out clay tile as the most efficient way to drain land. Today, Greene County has nearly 3,000 miles of drainage district tile and pipes, ranging from 4 inches to 48 inches in diameter. This distance would roughly equal a tile ditch spanning from New York to San Francisco.<\/p>\n\u201cNote that the 3,000 miles is just a measure of the district tiles,\u201d Fields said. \u201cThat number would be exponentially larger if you included private tile lines.\u201d<\/p>\n
As ag drainage issues have increasingly become intertwined with debates about conservation and water quality, it\u2019s important to keep the line of communication open, Otto said.<\/p>\n
\u201cI think the harsh reaction against ag drainage that\u2019s happened in the past few years is due in part to people suddenly wanting to engage in drainage matters, but unsure of what drainage is and does, who administers it and what powers they have. On the other side of the coin, the people trusted to manage the public\u2019s interests in drainage have a responsibility to break down barriers, explain misconceptions and guide the conversation to a common ground.\u201d<\/p>\n
That\u2019s a big reason why Andrew documented the history of ag tiling, counting it as one of the most important events in local history and the settlement of the region, noted his son, Jim Andrew of Jefferson.<\/p>\n
\u201cThink of the men and the effort it took to dig the clay, form and cure the tile, haul the tile to the jobsite, the survey crews working in ponds and swamps, the drainage plans made by the drainage engineer proving drainage was practical, the legal problems of objections and disputes, letting the bids, and, most important, the hundreds of men with strong backs who worked digging the ditches, laying the tile and filling the ditches,\u201d wrote James H. Andrew.<\/p>\n
\u201cYet, the tile is hidden underground, and the \u2018Iron Men\u2019 tilers are all deceased,\u201d he concluded. \u201cAs time passes, there is little appreciation for the cooperative efforts that drained Greene County and made it so productive. Only when these old tile systems fail and have to be replaced at great expense will many people realize the generous gifts we\u2019ve received from the drainage district system.\u201d<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"
Post originally appeared on Darcy Maulsby & Co blog by Darcy Maulsby If there were a \u201cMysteries at the Museum\u201d television series geared towards agriculture, this item would be ideal […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[86],"tags":[188,129,191],"class_list":["post-2196","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-editorial","tag-history","tag-iowa","tag-water-drainage"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\n
The Untold Story of Iowa's Ag Drainage System - Iowa Water Center<\/title>\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n\t \n\t \n\t \n