Overview of the Collection
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Repository Name:
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Washington State University Libraries
Manuscripts, Archives, and Special
Collections
New Holland Library Pullman, WA 99164-5610 USA (509) 335-6691 http://www.wsulibs.wsu.edu/holland/masc/masc.htm
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Collection Number:
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Cage
30
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Creator:
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Dam Brothers
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Title:
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Dam Brothers Papers
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Dates:
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1910-1939 (inclusive)
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Quantity:
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7 containers. 3.5 linear feet of shelf space. 5500 items.
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Languages:
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Collection materials are in
English
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Summary:
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Correspondence, notes, clippings, maps,
and printed matter, 1910-1928, of the Dam Brothers investment brokerage, a
partnership of Everett and Milton Dam of Seattle; and correspondence,
1928-1929, of Oscar Dam, Assistant Collector of United States Customs at
Seattle, with Everett and Milton and British investors in a large hydroelectric
dam, an associated industrial complex, and an irrigation project all to be
located at Priest Rapids on the Columbia River in Grant County. Also
correspondence and descriptive materials concerning the Pasco Reclamation
Company, 1925-1928, and the Washington Hume Concrete Pipe Company, 1925-1928;
as well as personal correspondence for Everett Dam, 1920-19
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Biographical Note
Oscar Windom Dam (b. 1883), Everett Stephen Dam (b. 1885) and Milton
Emery Dam (b. 1886) were the sons of Alton S. Dam, an early developer of large
scale irrigation in the Yakima Valley. After attending the University of
Washington, the oldest brother, Oscar, became a Federal Service employee with
the United States Customs Service in Seattle, while the two younger brothers
formed a Seattle brokerage firm, which they named Dam Brothers. Although these
occupations provided their livelihoods, the over-riding concern of all three
brothers was the promotion of a large hydroelectric dam at Priest Rapids on the
Columbia River.
The Priest Rapids project was first envisioned by Alton S. Dam in
about 1910 and his sons were to spend the next twenty years in a vain effort to
make it a reality. They were able to interest the General Electric Company and
the related Electric Bond and Share Company, as well as such exponents of large
scale electrification as Sidney Z. Mitchell. Together with these large eastern
interests, they formed a corporation to finance the construction of the dam.
This corporation, the Washington Development and Irrigation Company, was headed
by General Electric’s Henry H. Pierce, and held the license for the project but
received little financial backing from the parent companies. Consequently, the
firm of Dam Brothers undertook to arrange financing for the dam. They were met
with opposition from the investment community and the regulatory authorities,
both insisting that a market for electric power must be a part of the overall
development. Thus, the Dam brothers found themselves promoting nitrate,
fertilizer, and aluminum plants at Priest Rapids, as well as the dam. They also
approached the Northern Pacific Railroad with a proposal to electrify and
relocate its tracks across the Columbia River at the Priest Rapids Dam.
Additionally, the brothers sought to develop an irrigation project on a large
tract of land which they owned. As they stood to gain much from the increase in
land values promised by the irrigation project, this element of the scheme,
which was known as the Priest Rapids Highlands Project, received considerable
attention from all three brothers.
The repeated inability to arrange financing of the project caused the
two younger brothers to depart Seattle in February of 1928 and to spend the
next three years trying to find financial backers for the Priest Rapids
project. Their affairs in Seattle were left in the hands of Oscar Dam, who by
then had risen to be one of the higher level officials at the Seattle Customs
Office. Although the efforts of Dam Brothers took them around the United States
and Canada in 1928, 1929 and 1930 and brought them into contact with British
and American bond-buying syndicates and industrialists such as Henry Ford, they
were unable to induce investors to back so large a project. Ultimately, in June
1930, the Federal Power Commission refused to renew the license for the Priest
Rapids dam. Milton Dam then returned to Seattle and was later involved in real
estate development in Central Washington. Everett Dam remained in New York as a
securities trader.
Content Description
The papers of the Dam brothers consist of those items which were left
in the possession of Oscar Dam at the time the two younger brothers left
Seattle in 1928, and of Oscar Dam’s correspondence with his brothers during
their efforts to finance the Priest Rapids dam. The papers which the brothers
left in Seattle are principally concerned with hydroelectric and irrigation
matters and prospective investors. Some items date from as early as 1910, when
the brothers were involved with the Pasco Reclamation Company’s financing, but
most date from the mid-1920s and relate to aspects of the Priest Rapids
project. The series of papers also contains considerable reference to the
brothers’ involvement with the Washington Hume Concrete Pipe Company.
That series of papers which consists of the correspondence of Oscar
Dam is comprised of letters received by Oscar Dam and carbon copies of his
letters to his brothers and their business associates. The correspondence is
lengthy and contains reports of the brothers’ progress with the Priest Rapids
loans, while Oscar Dam reports in detail on the brothers’ affairs in Seattle.
The correspondence begins in February 1928 and continues on a large scale until
June 1930, when the license for the Priest Rapids dam expired. After that date
the frequency of correspondence is much lower. It ends in December 1932 except
for a fifteen month period from late 1937 to early 1939.
Some material related to personal matters of Everett Dam is also
included among the papers.
Arrangement
The Dam brothers’ papers fall naturally into four series. One is
information and investor material, arranged in an alphabetical sequence. A
second series, the most important in the collection, is comprised of the
chronologically-ordered correspondence of Oscar Dam with his brothers. A short
third series consist of personal papers of Everett Dam, while the fourth is
made up of maps and drawings.
Administrative Information
Custodial History Roy Mundy of Ephrata had received the papers from a party who
purchased them at a storage sale in Seattle
Acquisition Information The papers of Oscar, Everett, and Milton Dam were deposited in the
Washington State University Library in November 1974 by Roy Mundy of
Ephrata.
Use of the Collection
Restrictions on Access This collection is open for research use.
Preferred Citation [Item Description]. Cage 30, Dam Brothers Papers
. Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections, Washington State University Libraries, Pullman, WA.
Subjects
This collection is indexed under the following headings in the online
catalog. Researchers desiring materials about related topics, persons, or
places should search the catalog using these headings.
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| Dam, Everett Stephen, 1885- |
| Dam, Milton Emory, 1886- |
| Dam, Oscar Windom, 1883- |
| Historical Map Collection waps |
| Mundy, Roy (donor) |
| Dam family--Archives (creator) |
| Pasco Reclamation Company |
| Washington Hume Concrete Pipe Company |
| Dams --
Columbia River--Design |
| Irrigation --
Washington (State)--Grant County--History |
| Priest Rapids
Dam (Wash.) |
| Dam
papers |
Detailed Description of the Collection
The following section contains a detailed listing of the materials in
the collection.
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Series 1: Dam Brothers
Brokerage
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Container(s)
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Description
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Series 1.1: Information and
Investors
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Advertising
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Allen, George W.
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Alunite
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Bank Stockholders and Bank
Statements
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Barnes, Earl J.
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Battle Creek Health
Sanitarium
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Becht, Karl
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Cassmore, Melvin J. (Los Angles
trip)
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Co-operative
Marketing
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Corey, J. C.
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Crop Values
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Crops for Highlands
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Engineers
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Employment
applications
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Fertilizers
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First National Bank Savings
Account
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Fishways for Dams
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Frost, J. E.
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Hallam, Arthur C.
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Hart, F. D.
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Highlands Corporation,
Financing
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Highlands corporation,
Lands
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Highlands Survey
Costs
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House
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Inquiries, Land
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Irrigation
Data-Washington
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Irrigation
Data-Oregon
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Irrigation
Data-California
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Irrigation
Data-Idaho
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Irrigation
Data-Montana
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Irrigation Data-Msc. Western
States
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Land and Farm
Statistics
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Land Sales
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Land Settlement
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Lytel, J. L.
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Meyer, Edward F.
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Mead, Dr. Elwood
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Milwaukee Railroad Executive
Officials
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Miscellaneous Men,
Financing
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Miscellaneous
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New York
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Nichols, W. R.,
Tacoma
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Orchard Costs
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Owensby, W. S.
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Power Maintenance
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Reames, A. E.
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Resorts, Dining
Places
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Russell, Edward J.
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Simpson, William J.
P.
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Subdividing Land
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University of
Washington
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U. S. Publications
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Williamson, Ralph
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Yakima Valley
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Series 1.2: Priest Rapids
Project
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Engineers' Reports, financial
plans, publicity, license applications, , 1912-1930
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30
items.
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Series 1.3: Pasco Reclamation
Project
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Correspondence, publicity,
clippings, maps related to the Pasco pumping plan (Strahorn project),
, 1910-1915
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30
items.
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Series 1.4: Washington Hume
Concrete Pipe Company
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Correspondence and enclosures
relative to the efforts of Dam brothers to organize a company to manufacture
concrete pipe on license granted to them by Hume Concrete Pipe Company,
, 1925-1928
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300
items.
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Series 2: Oscar Dam
Correspondence
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Container(s)
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Description
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Feb 1928 - Dec
1928
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Jan 1929 - Sept
1929
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Oct 1929 - June
1930
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July 1930 - Dec
1932
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Nov 1937 - Jan
1939
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Series 3: Personal papers of
Everett Dam
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Container(s)
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Description
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Miscellaneous notes, photographs,
, 1926.
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10
items.
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Correspondence, , 1928.
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100
items.
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Correspondence and documents,
some executed by Oscar Dam relative to divorce settlement with Norma Dam,
, 1920-1925.
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120
items.
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Series 4: Maps and
Drawings
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Container(s)
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Description
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Maps and drawings, , 1910 - 1930
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45
items.
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