A History of the San Joaquin County
Resource Conservation District
Research and writing by: Bonnie McInturf
Edited by the San Joaquin County Resource Conservation District
With Special Thanks to Mario Milani, NRCS
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"The soil is the one indestructible, immutable
asset that the nation possesses. It is the one resource that cannot
be exhausted; that cannot be used up"
U.S. Bureau of Soils announcement, 1909
"If we are bold in our thinking, courageous
in accepting new ideas, and willing to work with instead of against
our land, we shall find in conservation farming an avenue to the greatest
food production the world has ever known - not only for the war, but
for the peace that is to follow."
Hugh Hammond Bennett," Father of Soil Conservation"
, 1943
1934: The Dust Bowl
Dust storms had always been a constant threat, especially in the Midwest,
and it was well-known that erosion of the topsoil could decrease a farm's
productivity. By the early 1930's, the soil of the southern Great Plains
had become powder-dry due to a combination of overgrazing, a 7-year
drought and the removal of native grasses to plant wheat. The addition
of wind to this mix completed the recipe for disaster. The first major
wind storm in 1934 swept away nearly 350 million tons of topsoil. Windstorms
continued stripping away the dry soils through 1938, damaging nearly
100 million acres of farmland forcing many to leave the Great Plains
for the West. Once viewed as simply beneficial, conservation was now
seen as a necessity upon which the economy and the nation's welfare
depended.
1935-1938: Soil Conservation Service and Soil
Conservation Districts
The economic devastation caused by the Dust Bowl prompted the federal
government to declare the erosion problem a menace to the national welfare
and establish the Soil Conservation Service (SCS) in 1935 . The primary
mission of the SCS was to assist farmers in reducing erosion and protecting
soil. Soon after the formation of the SCS, came the establishment of
Soil Conservation Districts (SCDs). Formed in 1938, to respond quickly
to local needs, SCDs were controlled by local boards of directors, and
were empowered to manage soil and water resources for the purpose of
conservation. In 1971, SCDs were given the additional responsibility
of assisting in the conservation of "related resources" in
addition to soil and water and were renamed Resource Conservation Districts,
or RCDs. Today, there are approximately 3,000 conservation districts
throughout the United States referred to by several names under different
state laws:
- Resource Conservation Districts in California
- Soil Conservation Districts in most of the Northern Plains
- Soil& Water Conservation Districts in much of the Southeast/Midwest
and Hawaii
- Conservation Districts on the East Coast
- Natural Resources Districts in Nebraska
- Land Conservation Departments in Wisconsin
The San Joaquin County Resource Conservation District is one of 103
Resource Conservation Districts in California.
1954-1956: Stockton Soil Conservation Service
Office Opens & San Joaquin County's First Soil Conservation Districts
Form
The Stockton Soil Conservation Service opened its doors in 1954 in
response to the Flood Protection and Prevention Act of 1954. This
Act authorized the Secretary of Agriculture to work with state and
local agencies to plan and implement projects conserving the nation's
soils. To assist in this endeavor, the first of seven Soil Conservation
Districts (later Resource Conservation Districts) was formed in San
Joaquin County in 1956. Here is the story of a few of the county's
original conservation districts (please refer to the map below for
locations of each former district)

(1) 1958 - Liberty Soil Conservation District
Formed in response to flooding from Dry Creek and tributary creeks
in the area, the Liberty SCD also dealt with irrigation and drainage
improvement of farmland. Early Names from the Liberty SCD: Bruce DeVinny
(President); Herbert Buck, Jr.; Eldon Emslie; Lloyd Vizelich; Jim
Lind

Directors and Cooperator visit stock water
and irrigation reservoir holding 45 acre feet of water, with a 40
acre adjoining wildlife habitat area. July, 1959
(2) Venice Island Soil Conservation
District
Encompassing all of Venice Island, its main concern was with maintaining
levees. It was also responsible for related irrigation and drainage
work. Early names from the Venice Island SCD: Dante
"Dan" Nomellini (President), P.E. Mulcahy, Joe DiNapoli,
Richard DiNapoli
(3) 1958 - King Island Soil Conservation District
Formed originally for the maintenance of levees around King Island,
the district also addressed irrigation and drainage work associated
with levee maintenance. Some of the Founding Directors of the
King Island SCD: E. "Dick" Marchetti (President),
Victor Leonardini, Gino Pellegri, Fred Piacentini, Jack Klein
(4) 1956 - Tracy Soil Conservation District
Formed in response to farmland flooding from Corral Hollow Creek in
1955, the Tracy SCD was instrumental in the formation of the Corral
Hollow Creek Flood Control Zone by San Joaquin County. Tracy SCD also
facilitated the Jerusalem Drainage Project which installed a 31-mile
pipe collector system to provide a drainage outlet for flooded farmland.
This project saved 12,300 acres of orchards and other crops from the
damage that would have resulted from a high water table. The Tracy
SCD also was responsible for irrigation improvements on farmland within
its boundaries. Some of Early Names from the Tracy Soil Conservation
District: Arthur P. King (President), John O. Paulson, John
C.Currier, Manuel R. Furtado, Ernest J. Pombo

Water table
level investigations are being made by the directors and SCS engineers
preliminary to the development of specifications for placing of tile
drains. Cooperators have installed about 3 miles of tile drains in
1959.
A
drainage tilting project is being completed in a field bordering the
west side of Patterson Pass Road. Some 6,400 feet of six-, eight-
and 10-inch pipe is being laid in a 160-acre field farmed by Tony
Furtado and Manuel Costa and a 100-acre field owned by Mary Brown
and farmed by Bob Patterson. The pipe, laid in a sleeve of gravel
will carry water from the high water table field to a West Side Irrigation
District drainage ditch east of Patterson Pass Road. Shown at the
tiling operation, left to right: Ike McElvaney, contractor from El
Centro; Bob Stroud, engineer with the U.S. Soil Conservation Service;
Manuel Furtado, president of the Byron-Bethany Irrigation District
and director of the Tracy Soil Conservation District; and Mario Milani,
soil conservation engineer. Tracy Press Photo.
(5) 1956 - Bear Creek Soil Conservation District
The first Soil Conservation District in San Joaquin County, formed
in 1956, in response to flooding along Bear Creek and in North Stockton
during the winter of 1955. Some of Bear Creek's First Directors:
Vernon Lehman (President), Dahl Burnham, R.E. "Ray" Burson,
W.B. Parker, W.B. "Bert" Kitto, Cecil House, Earl Swain,
Peter Robustelli secretary), Joe Furtado (current member, San Joaquin
RCD)
(6) 1958 - Farmington Soil Conservation District
Formed to serve the farm area around the town of Farmington in East-Central
San Joaquin County, its major accomplishments included improving irrigation
and drainage structures.
Some Names Associated With the Farmington SCD: Albert
Honthaas (President), Virgil Groves, Alfred Sorrenti, Ellis R. Orr,
Thomas V. Erle.
(7) Walthall Soil Conservation District
Eldrid Brown spearheaded the formation of this district, which formed
in 1957. It was southwest of Manteca along the east side of the San
Joaquin River. The main challenge it faced was flooding along Walthall
Sough from the San Joaquin River. It also provided assistance to farmers
in the form of land leveling to improve water distribution and the
improvement of irrigation systems. Some Early Walthall Directors:
Fred Picchi (President), Emil Filippini, Thomas Kell, Charles W. Hunt,
Joe Vieira, Ralph Burson
Today: The San Joaquin County
Resource Conservation District
Today, the San Joaquin County Resource Conservation District is the
only RCD in San Joaquin County. Formed in the early 1980s, our Resource
Conservation District encompasses all of the unincorporated regions
of San Joaquin County and includes those areas formerly found within
the original soil conservation districts.
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