San Joaquin Light and Power Corporation

The San Joaquin Light and Power Corporation was a utility company that provided electricity to seven counties in the San Joaquin Valley of California.[1] The company is one of several utilities acquired by the Pacific Gas and Electric Company during the 1920s and 1930s to form the modern PG&E system.[2]

San Joaquin Light and Power Corporation
TypePrivate
IndustryElectricity
Founded1895
HeadquartersFresno, California, United States
ProductsElectricity

History

The company was first organized as the San Joaquin Electric Company on April 1, 1895 by engineer James Samuel Eastwood for the construction of the hydroelectric San Joaquin Powerhouse No. 1, located 37 miles from Fresno on Willow Creek, a tributary of the San Joaquin River.[3][4] The company later became the San Joaquin Power Company in 1905 and then the San Joaquin Light and Power Corporation in 1910.[5] By 1920, the company had 11 powerhouses.[3]

San Joaquin's early business was challenged by the competing Fresno Gas and Electric Company, controlled by Fulton G. Berry, owner of Fresno's Grand Central Hotel.[6][7] Berry used riparian claims filed on water upstream from San Joaquin Electric Company's intake flume to divert water away from the company's powerhouse through a mile-long ditch.[4] Combined with several years of drought, this diversion of water forced San Joaquin Electric into bankruptcy in 1899.[7]

Despite the company's bankruptcy, San Joaquin Electric continued to operate. Bondholders, seeking to protect their investment by providing the company's powerhouse a steady source of water, financed the 1901 construction of what would become the hydraulic fill Crane Valley Dam and the reservoir of Bass Lake.[7]

San Joaquin Electric Company was purchased out of bankruptcy in 1902 by William G. Kerckhoff, a lumber magnate and president of Pacific Light & Power, and reincorporated as the San Joaquin Power Company. Under Kerckhoff, San Joaquin Power Company purchased the electric system of the competing Fresno Gas and Electric Company in 1903 for $25,000.[3][8]

San Joaquin Power also reached a separate 1903 agreement with the California Gas and Electric Company—which would merge with the San Francisco Gas and Electric Company two years later to create PG&E—setting territories for electrical service, drawing a line that extended roughly from the southern border of Santa Cruz County east to the southern border of Mono County.[9][3]

San Joaquin Light and Power Corporation was acquired in 1924 by the Great Western Power Company, a subsidiary of The North American Company.[2] North American subsequently sold its interests in the combined utilities to the Pacific Gas and Electric Company in 1930 in exchange for $114 million in PG&E stock, creating a single consolidated utility serving most of Northern and Central California.[3][2]

References

  1. "San Joaquin Light & Power Corporation Building". National Register of Historic Places Registration Form.
  2. Brewer, Chris; Museum, Kern County (2001). Historic Kern County: An Illustrated History of Bakersfield and Kern County. HPN Books. ISBN 9781893619142.
  3. Coleman, Charles M. (1952). P. G. and E.: The Centennial Story of Pacific Gas and Electric Company, 1852-1952. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc. pp. 186–199, 291–295.
  4. Freedman, Marcia Penner (2013-04-16). Willow Creek History: Tales of Cow Camps, Shake Makers & Basket Weavers. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 9781614239192.
  5. Fowler, Frederick Hall (1923). Hydroelectric Power Systems of California and Their Extensions Into Oregon and Nevada. U.S. Government Printing Office.
  6. Imperial Fresno: Resources, Industries and Scenery, Illustrated and Described. Fresno Republican Publishing Company. 1897.
  7. Jackson, Donald C. (2005). Building the Ultimate Dam: John S. Eastwood and the Control of Water in the West. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 9780806137339.
  8. "West Adams Heritage Association | in Historic West Adams, Los Angeles, California". www.westadamsheritage.org. Retrieved 2019-10-22.
  9. "PG&E Corporation | 150 Years of Growth and Change". www.pgecorp.com. Retrieved 2019-10-23.


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