
THE
ORIGIN AND HISTORY OF THE WEST SHORE WATER PRODUCERS ASSOCIATION
One April day, the
16th to be exact, in 1931 a group of 37 water works men, representing
11 Lake Shore Cities, gathered at the Hotel Racine to organize a permanent
association of water works men. They represented the Cities along the West Shore of Lake
Michigan which use the lake as their source of water supply. A newspaper clipping, from the Racine-Journal-Times,
dated April 17, 1931, records the proceeding of this meeting and states “For
some time past there has been talk of getting all the water superintendents,
chemist and filtration experts together and organizing an association, the
purpose of which will be to exchange ideas on the purification of water
supplies. Supt. W.A. Peirce, of the
local water department, and Dr. J. J. McCarthy, City Chemist, decided that the
time was ripe for some action on the matter so they invited colleagues from
Evanston, Lake Forest, Highland Park, Glencoe, Winnetka, Kenilworth, Waukegan,
Kenosha, Sheboygan and Milwaukee to come here.”
Actually the
original idea and preliminary steps for the Racine meeting were formulated at
the St. Louis meeting of the AWWA in 1930.
While attending this meeting Dr. McCarthy was urged by Walter Peirce of
Racine and Jim Ashworth of Waukegan, to contact all of the water works men along
the West Shore of Lake Michigan to determine their feeling on such an
organization. Personal contacts
were made during the summer and fall of 1930.
All of the men contacted were favorable to the suggestion of an
organization meeting. On March 31,
1931, Dr. McCarthy sent a form letter to all Superintendents along the west
shore requesting a meeting date of the week April 13th and suggesting
that at least three interested men from each plant attend the meeting.
As previously stated
the first meeting was held April 16th at Racine.
At this time it was decided to form an organization of superintendents,
chemists and filter operators from water plants along the West Shore of Lake
Michigan who would hold informal monthly dinner meetings to exchange ideas,
personal experiences and to discuss individual problems of its members.
Dr. McCarthy was named temporary chairman and a second meeting date was
set up for May 13th at Highland Park, Illinois.
Attendance and
enthusiasm increased at the second meeting and as a result a name was approved
for the organization, namely, The West Shore Water Producers Association.
A committee was set up to nominate officers, pick a date and location for
the third meeting.
The third meeting
was held at Kenosha, Wisconsin on January 13, 1932, and a this meeting the
following water works men were elected as the first officers to hold office in
the new organization:
Chairman – Walter A. Peirce, Racine, Wisconsin
Vice-Chairman – P. J. Hurtgen, Kenosha, Wisconsin
Recording Secretary – Jerome C. Zufelt, Sheboygan, Wisconsin
Corresponding Secretary – George B. Prindle, Highland Park, Illinois.
The choice of
George Prindle as corresponding secretary at this time was with a doubt, the
best move ever made by the members of the association.
In this position George guided and was responsible for the destiny of the
organization for almost 25 years. Without
his untiring enthusiasm, his unlimited experience and his classic meeting
notices this organization would never have survived the depression and war
years. Our present corresponding secretary Horace R. Frye sums up
the membership feeling toward George Prindle in a memoriam dedicated to our
beloved friend as follows: “Each
of us will remember George Prindle in his own way but of one thing we can be
sure, he wanted the organization to live, with mutual help, exchange of
knowledge of water supply as the basic purpose, it will live.”
Since
its inception, the organization has held slightly over one hundred meetings, at
which time subjects covering almost the entire field of water purification and
distribution were discussed. A
short run down on a few of the more interesting discussions may help to indicate
the type and caliber of the meetings. They
are as follows: Water Rates by
Howson, The Economic Replacement of Pumping Equipment by h. P. Binder, Typhoid
Fever Outbreaks by A.E. Gorman, Short Filter Runs and many other subjects by J.
R. Baylis, Bacteriological Media by R. E. Noble, Sewage Treatment by Dr. F. W.
Mohlman, Hydraulics by Professor Dawson, Filter Efficiencies by H. E. Hudson
Jr., Threshold Odor Methods by O. Gullans, Silicates as Aids to Coagulation by
H. H. Gerstein, American Water Works Association by H. A. Jordan, Water Isn’t
H2O by Dr. A. M. Buswell and many many more subjects of equal
interest to the water works profession. Since
1948 the attendance at meetings is always between 80 – 100 water works men
representing 30 lake shore cities all the way from Green Bay, Wisconsin to
Michigan City, Indiana.
The
West Shore Water Producers Association has developed into an organization which
far exceeded the expectations of the charter members. It has served as a clearing house for the exchange of ideas,
experiences and the solution of water works problems common to water plants
along the West Shore of Lake Michigan. Above
all the organization has promoted cooperation and lasting friendship among the
water works engineers and operators who make up its membership.