Unruly River
Two Centuries of Change Along the Missouri
Robert Kelley Schneiders
328 pages, 57 photographs, 17 maps, 6 x 9
Development of Western Resources
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-1188-1, $19.95
Over the course
of two centuries, Americans have tried to tame the Missouri River.
First explored by Lewis and Clark, this once free-flowing river
has in modern times been dammed, dredged, and channelized until
it now barely resembles its former self. Yet the Missouri remains
beyond complete human control.
Writing in a new tradition of environmental history, Robert
Kelley Schneiders takes a long historical view to reconstruct
the Missouri Valley environment before Euro-American settlement
and then trace the environmental transformations resulting from
the development projects of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
He tells how the mighty Missouri has been transformed from a
shallow, meandering stream to an engineered waterway with over
a dozen dams, thousands of stone pile dikes, and seemingly endless
miles of rock bank line--and how the river has reacted to the
disruption of its original hydrologic and ecological processes.
Schneiders explores the reciprocal relationship between people
and the natural world as he examines the political origins of
Missouri River development plans. Bringing together much of the
previously fragmented history of the river, he describes the
environmental changes caused by the construction of a barge channel
below Sioux City and by dam and reservoir construction in Montana
and the Dakotas. Contrary to the conclusions of several other
water historians, Schneiders argues that the development of the
river was guided by neither federal elites nor local interest
groups acting alone but by the two working in cooperation; while
the Corps of Engineers built dams and channelization structures,
private citizens cleared the lower Missouri Valley for agriculture,
industry, and housing.
Although Schneiders claims that Missouri River development
was undertaken primarily to benefit agriculture, he holds that
in the long run the river has foiled these management attempts--and
that despite the investment of technology and money, the public
may have been better off if the Missouri had been left alone.
Rich in geographical and topographical information and featuring
both historic and contemporary photos, Unruly River shows
that despite humanity's herculean efforts, the Missouri continues
to be the principal actor in its own life story.
"Unruly River tells a complicated story without
oversimplifying politics or nature. Schneiders looks at the Missouri
as a living entity: a product of the geology that created it,
the soil that surrounds it, the marine creatures that live in
it, the plants and animals that adjoin and border it, and the
birds that fly over it. It is, as the author says, 'ever-changing
and forever wild.'"--Donald J. Pisani, author of
Water, Land, and Law in the West
"A major contribution to environmental history and Missouri
River historiography that deserves a wide audience."--William
E. Lass, author of From the Missouri to the Great Salt
Lake and A History of Steamboating on the Upper Missouri
River
"An exceptional history that deals with real communities
and real people, rather than just nameless bureaucracies."--John
E. Thorson, author of River of Promise, River of Peril:
The Politics of Managing the Missouri River
ROBERT KELLEY SCHNEIDERS grew up in Sioux City, Iowa,
and currently serves as an adjunct professor of history at Texas
Tech University in Lubbock, Texas.
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