Introduction | Historical Background | Chronology | Geography | Biography | Technology | Ownership and Financing | General Bibliography |
North
Central States |
Michigan | Grand Rapids |
Grand Rapids was founded in 1826.
The first water system in Grand Rapids was built in 1848 by Canton Smith and Joseph J. Baxter, who installed pump logs bored by Lucius A. Thayer to distribute water from a spring. They petitioned the legislature for incorporation, and the Grand Rapids Hydraulic Company was incorporated in 1849 by George Coggershall, Thomas Sinclair, Charles Shepard, Canton Smith and James M. Nelson "for the purpose of conducting a plentiful supply of pure, wholesome water to the said village, for the use of the inhabitants of said village, and to supply reservoirs for extinguishing of fires." The company expanded and rebuilt the system over time, but it was primarily for domestic use and competition from the city forced it into receivership in 1893, although the company survived.
After several serious fires, the city proposed to build its own water works, and on July 30, 1873 people voted 1,540 to 183 in favor of the proposal. The first part of the system was operating by the end of 1873, but was not fully operational until 1875. The city and the Hydraulic Company made several attempts to buy each others system. The state legislature revoked the charter of the Hydraulic Company in 1905, which was upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1910. The city bought the system in March, 1919, but had failed to secure a favorable vote and the purchase was overturned. On April 5, 1920, a vote of 14,596 to 4,389 authorized the city to purchase the Hydraulic company's property for $30,000, which was its original capital.
Water is provided by the City of Grand Rapids.
References
and Timeline
1849 An act to incorporate the Grand
Rapids Hydraulic Company. April 2, 1849.
1850 An act to amend an act to incorporate the Grand Rapids Hydraulic Company. March 5, 1850.
1873 An
act to authorize a board of Public Works in and for the city of Grand
Rapids. March 22, 1873.
Sec. 13. Said board of public works is hereby authorized and empowered to
cause the city of Grand Rapids and its inhabitants to be supplied with
water.
1875 Report of the
City Engineer, Grand Rapids, Mich. May 1st, 1875
Pages 26-74: Water
Works
Pages 75-76: Grand
Rapids Hydraulic Company, by Joseph Penney.
1881 Grand Rapids, Engineering News, 8:294 (July 23, 1881)
1882 Grand Rapids from "The Water-Supply of Certain Cities and Towns of the United States," by Walter G. Elliot, C. E., Ph. D.
1888 "Grand Rapids," from Manual of American Water Works, Volume 1.
1890 "Grand Rapids," from Manual of American Water Works, Volume 2.
1891 "Grand Rapids," from Manual of American Water Works, Volume 3.
1891 History
of the City of Grand Rapids, Michigan, by Albert Baxter
Page 161: 1872. In June the Grand Rapids Hydraulic Company made an offer
to the city of its franchises and properties for $65,000, and in addition
to put down a well to yeld 2,000,000 gallons of water daily. This
proposition was referred to the Committee on Water Works, but the city did
not buy.
1873. The Common Council, February 1, passed a resolution that a
system of water works embodying the reservoir plan, with Grand River as a
source of supply, be adopted as suitable and most reliable for supplying
the city.
Peter Hogan, an engineer from Albany, N. Y., employed to investigate our
water sources here, made a report to the Council, April 5, recommending
the use of Carrier and Coldbrook Creeks, and accompanied his report with
an elaborate plan for distributive pipes through the city, and an estimate
of their cost.
July 30 the electors of the city adopted the proposed system of water
supply and with it the proposition to raise the necessary funds by the
issue of bonds to the amount of $250,000. The vote stood 1,540 in
its favor to 183 opposed. In October and November the water mains
were laid in Canal, Monroe and Bridge streets.
Page 162: 1864. The water system was tested on November 10,
and proved efficient and satisfactory.
Page 165: 1886. October 11 the Grand Rapids Hydraulic Company made a
second offer to purchase the water works of the city, and to pay therefore
$465,066.39; or to lease and perfect them at an annual rent of $25,000 for
thirty years. The proposal was referred to a committee who reported
it adversely to the Council.
Pages 206-213: Chapter
XXIV. The Water Supply.
1895 Callahan v. Crow, Case on Appeal, New York Supreme Court, General Term - First Department. Briefs and exhibits for case involving bonds of the Grand Rapids Hydraulic Company
1895 Callahan v. Crow, 91 Hun. 346, 36 NY Supp. 225, New York Supreme Court, General Term - First Department
1897 "Grand Rapids," from Manual of American Water Works, Volume 4.
1906 "The City Water Supply," from History of Grand Rapids and Its Industries, Volume 1, by Dwight Goss
1910 Calder v. Michigan, 218 U.S. 591, December 12, 1910
1915 "Hydraulic Co. Will Sell to City," Michigan Manufacturers and Financial Record, 15(13):28 (March 27, 1915)
1918 "Public Works, Buildings, etc.," Grand Rapids and Kent County, Michigan: History and Account of Their Progress from First Settlement to the Present Time, Volume 1, by Ernest B. Fisher
1919 Schurtz v. City of Grand Rapids, 208 Mich. 510, 176 N. W. 421, December 23, 1919, Supreme Court of Michigan
1926 "Water Supply," from A Citizens' History of Grand Rapids, Michigan, Compiled and Edited by William J. Etten
2010 Public
Health Reports 125(5):625 (September-October 2010)
A Message from the Editor, Laurence D. Reed, Captain, U.S. Public Health
Service (Retired)
This year is a landmark for public health—the 65th anniversary of
drinking-water fluoridation in the United States. On January 25, 1945,
Grand Rapids, Michigan, added fluoride to its municipal water system,
marking the beginning of community water fluoridation. Since then,
Americans have benefited from this important public health intervention
with its well-known effectiveness in preventing and controlling tooth
decay and tooth loss, with each successive generation experiencing better
dental health than the previous one. The benefits of fluoridation now
reach more than 70% of the U.S. population served by community water
systems.
© 2016 Morris A. Pierce