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structures, inundating the entire system and damaging the fields. The lack of resources, both labor and <br />financial, were to blame. <br /> <br />Later as more neighbors combined their efforts they constructed slightly larger and longer ditches and <br />diverted water out of the river bottom. In few cases did the early ditch builders have to make a cut of more <br />than five feet in order to place the bottom of their ditch level with the bottom of the stream. They seldom <br />constructed diversion dams. A temporary structure made of bags of sand, downed trees or a combination <br />of stones and brush, required only a few hours to be built. Head gates were an exception rather than a rule. <br /> <br />Community Effort <br />The next period of development, known as the community effort, started in 1870. Settlers began to pool <br />their labor, horses and funds and formed mutuals or colonies. They took out even longer ditches than their <br />predecessors, to convey the water to the bench lands that in many cases were over thirty miles or more <br />from the headgate and the river. <br /> <br />Corporate Era <br />Next came the “corporate era” , companies like the English Company and Traveler’s Insurance Company, <br />which built big irrigation ditches in almost every major river drainage in Colorado, to encourage people to <br />move to Colorado to live on lands located under the irrigation ditches that they constructed. T. C, Henry <br />worked for Traveler’s Insurance and he knew that little could be accomplished without large canals. He <br />eventually was involved in the construction of 12 large ditches throughout Colorado in the South Platte, <br />Arkansas, Rio Grande and Colorado River Basins. <br /> <br />Reservoir Era <br /> <br />Many of the streams on the eastern slope became over appropriated by the late 1870’s and early 1880’s. <br />The potential of capturing the runoff from the snow in the mountains and spreading it out over the summer <br />months was seen as additional source of water. This ushered in the era of reservoir and dam building in the <br />late 1800’s. The reservoirs were usually very junior in the priority system and only stored water during the <br />non irrigation season or during periods of high runoff in the spring or summer following intense <br />rainstorms. <br /> <br />Many of the first irrigation water storage structures were constructed under existing irrigation systems. <br />The reservoirs were mostly constructed by those who had junior water rights, without it, they couldn’t <br />irrigate their farms directly from the river for long before they were called out by senior rights holders. <br />Almost without exception, the first reservoirs were constructed for the purpose of supplementing the direct <br />diversions from the river by making direct releases to downstream calling senior water rights and then <br />diverting a like amount of water as a result of the exchange that occurred. Many of the first reservoirs that <br />were constructed by these ditch companies were the result of enlarging natural lakes. <br /> <br />In 1882 the building of relatively large reservoirs was begun with the construction of Chambers Lake in the <br />channel of the upper reaches of the Cache la Poudre. Many large reservoirs followed that were constructed <br />not only to meet the needs of the farmers but also to meet the needs of the cities. Cheesman Reservoir <br />constructed in 1905 was constructed for the City of Denver. <br />