Steamboat Ditch is a roughly 34-mile-long irrigation canal dug in the late 1870s by Chinese laborers. It begins at the Nevada and California state line and joins Steamboat Creek in south Reno.[2]
This irrigation canal and adjoining access road is relatively flat with a slight declining grade of about 1/660[3] from its origin. The vast majority of the ditch is open earth and flanked by various specious of vegetation. The access road or "trail" flanking the canal is predominately dirt.
In 1877, the Truckee & Steamboat Irrigating Canal Company was organized to construct the Steamboat Ditch (Townley 1983: 13 7-138). Upon completion, it was the longest and most complicated ditch in the Truckee Meadows area. The total length of the ditch is 33–48 miles in length, depending on the source (cf., Angel 1958:634; Townley 1983: 138).
According to the Territorial Enterprise (17 May 1878:2), the ditch company awarded the construction contract to the Chinese firm Quong Yee Wo & Company of San Francisco, California, with a bid of $36,000. Other bidders included Chinese and European-American firms (Territorial Enterprise 17 May 1878:2). A conflicting report states that the San Francisco-based firm Lung Chung & Company received the contract to construct the ditch.[4]
At the start of construction in 1878, 115 Chinese laborers were employed, including approximately six European-American supervisors (Territorial Enterprise 24 August 1878:2; Townley 1983:138). The following year, the number of men increased to between 150 and 200 Chinese, with additional workmen expected. Due to incidental expenses, projected construction costs increased to $40,000. By that time, construction had progressed 10 miles from the ditch's head on the Truckee River. When completed, the ditch would terminate between Brown's Station and Steamboat Springs in south Truckee Meadows (Territorial Enterprise 1 March 1879:2).
Due to frozen ground in Verdi, west of Reno, the projected construction period was increased and the contract period extended for an additional two months to 1 August 1879. A contemporary news report claimed, "This ditch is one of the largest and most important of the entire system of irrigation of Washoe County" (Territorial Enterprise 3 July 1879:3). Angel (1958:634) states the Steamboat Ditch was not completed until 1880, at a cost of more than $50,000. Townley (1983:138) provides an estimated price of $40,000. He also notes the winter of 1878–9 was particularly hard, requiring the use of dynamite in places. The Steamboat Canal was formally opened on July 1, 1880.
In 1885, the Truckee & Steamboat Springs Irrigation Canal came into financial trouble, eventually selling its holdings via auction in 1886. For the sum of $15,750, which covered the amount due, John C. Hampton was granted the sale by J. T. Emmitt, Sheriff of Washoe County, who conducted the auction on 10 February 1886. Hampton served as the executor of C. P. Hubbell, deceased, in the case involving the Steamboat Ditch. It was heard in the Seventh Judicial District Court of Nevada, which ordered the sale. The plaintiff in the case was George M. Mapes. The other defendants, besides Hubbell, included J.P. Foulks. The ditch was described as beginning 4 miles south of Verdi at the border of California and Nevada and continuing 31.25 miles to end approximately 2 miles from Steamboat Springs. All the water rights, privileges and easements of the ditch were included in the sale (Washoe County Records, Deeds Book 11 :398-400).[3]
The Steamboat Canal and adjacent access road are now of mixed ownership among private landowners, homeowner associations, public utilities, private corporations, and state, city, county, and federal governments. The Steamboat Canal & Irrigation Co. has an irrigation easement to transport water through the ditch during the growing season.[5]
Large sections of the access road have remained open to the public since the canal's construction and have come to act as a de facto trail and urban green space. It is used by runners, walkers, bicycle riders, dog walkers, and bird watchers on a daily basis.[6] However, owners of portions of the access road have for decades prohibited public access to their private property.[7][page needed]
Hundreds of plant and animal species have been observed along the Steamboat Ditch Trail. The ditch serves as an important water source during the summer months, when it carries irrigation water through the relatively inhospitable northwestern Great Basin Desert climate.[8]