Agriculture
Found in 77 Collections and/or Records:
Joseph Jeppe Larsen papers
Larsen's papers consist of correspondence (1910-1947), meeting minutes of the Newton Irrigation Company (1907-1945) and the West Cache Grain Growers Association (1935-1945), various papers concerning the Newton Project (a 1941 reclamation project to overhaul the Newton Reservoir and construct irrigation canals), and other papers.
Joseph Jeppe Larsen photograph collection
Loss Creek Irrigation Company records
This collection contains materials pertaining to the Loss Creek Irrigation Company, which operated in Sevier County during the early twentieth century. It contains correspondence, receipts, employee records, newspaper clippings, and legal documents.
Lund Utah Scrapbook photograph collection
The Lund Utah Scrapbook photograph collection consists of 249 images taken around Lund, Utah as well as the Utah Agricultural College (now Utah State University), Bear Lake, and Honeyville, Utah. The only identified person is Louis Sewald (Sevald?). The photographer may have been someone with the initials, H.R.H. The photographs also document a series of treatments made to orchard trees and agricultural fields probably with insecticides.
Mendon, Utah records
This collection contains financial and miscellaneous records of Mendon, Utah.
Noble Nielsen papers
Marie Fuhriman Olsen oral history collection
This collection includes oral histories, original interview cassette tapes, brief bios of the interviewees, transcriptions, news clippings, essays and photographs related to Marie Fuhriman Olsen's fieldwork and Cache Valley cities and residents (boxes 1-5). It also includes personal research and writings by Marie Fuhriman Olsen (boxes 6 and 7).
Walter E. Peay papers
The Walter E. Peay papers consists of research papers and personal notes on insects, worms, and maggots that attack sugar beets, tomatoes, corn, and other crops.
Oliver L. Peterson diaries
Provo River Division reports
This collection contains seven reports on the Provo River Division compiled by E.O. Larson, a former associate state engineer for the Bureau of Reclamation. They date from 1928 to 1947.