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The earliest water rights along the BurntRiver date to 1862 and numerous ditches and canals were constructed to bring water to the region's mines, ranches, and farms.
The BurntRiver Project was found to be feasible by the Secretary of the Interior on September 25, 1935.
A repayment contract between the BurntRiver Irrigation District and the Bureau of Reclamation was signed on December 24, 1935.
Arthur Denny is reported to have been quite ill throughout the journey, but remained firmly the group's leader.
On July 6, 1851, they escaped unscathed from a battle with Indians at American Falls on the Snake River.
Some time in late July at BurntRiver in eastern Oregon, they encountered a man named Brock, who convinced Denny that Puget Sound would be a good place to found a town.