Welcome To Our Museum
The concept of building a dam, evolved and grew
until in 1919, a dam was proposed that would impound two to three million
acre-feet of water. The American Falls project
was formally authorized by the Secretary of Interior on September 18,1920. The Falls were already being used by a small
hydroelectric facility owned by Idaho
Power, which had the priority water rights. When filled, the reservoir would
cover important agricultural lands and would extend twenty-five miles upstream,
covering 30,000 acres of Fort Hall Indian Reservation. The Oregon
Short Line Railroad ran its main line across a bridge at American
Falls and miles of track would be flooded and the bridge raised 22
feet higher. The dam was completed sixty days ahead of schedule on April 21,
1926. The dam's gates were shut and water from the spring run-off began to
collect in the reservoir. The giant grain elevators were not moved until late
May 1926. On July 29, 1926, the “moving road” across the Dam construction sitewas officially closed, ending the relocation of American Falls.









