• "Act to Improve Rivers and Harbors for fiscal year ending June 30, 1869 and 1870", (16 Stat. 44), passed April 10, 1869, appropriating $2 million. Work on the
Warrior-
Tombigbee River in Alabama is authorized for development; in 1872 the
Monongahela River in Pennsylvania, the
Houston Ship Channel, and the
Delaware River are authorized for development. The act was passed over President Arthur's veto. • River and Harbor Act of 1884, (23 Stat. 133), passed July 5, 1884. • River and Harbor Act of 1892, (27 Stat. 88), passed July 12, 1892. • River and Harbor Act of 1902, (32 Stat. 331), passed June 13, 1902. • River and Harbor Act of 1927, passed January 21, 1927, ordered the Corps of Engineers to conduct the surveys costed out in RHA1925. It also directed the Corps to build a dam at
Hastings, Minnesota, to increase the water depth of the Mississippi River to 9 feet in spite of the fact that the
Chief of Engineers General Taylor refused to say whether the cost was commensurate with the benefit gained. • River and Harbor Act of 1930, July 3, 1930, ch. 847, 46 Stat. 918 •
Rivers and Harbors Act of 1935, , was passed August 30, 1935, after months of debate. Although other projects were included with then-standard documentation, the House of Representatives had insisted on voting separately for
Grand Coulee and
Parker dams. These dams were planned for broader purposes and different funding, which include "controlling floods, improving navigation, regulating the flow of the streams of the United States, providing for storage and for the delivery of the stored waters thereof, for the reclamation of public lands and Indian reservations, and other beneficial uses, and for the generation of electric energy as a means of financially aiding and assisting such undertakings..." •
River and Harbor Act of 1938, , June 20, 1938, Authorizing the construction, repair, and preservation of certain public works on rivers and harbors, and for other purposes, the most significant being construction of the
Bonneville Dam in the
Columbia River. •
River and Harbor Act of 1940, , October 17, 1940, authorizing improvements of certain rivers and harbors in the interest of national defense and for other purposes. • Rivers and Harbors Act of 1945, , March 2, 1945 • Rivers and Harbors Act of 1946, , July 24, 1946 • Rivers and Harbors Act of 1948, , June 30, 1948 • Rivers and Harbors Act of 1950, , May 17, 1950 •
River and Harbor Act of 1954, Title 1 of , September 3, 1954, Authorizing and appropriated funds for the construction, repair, and preservation of certain public works on rivers and harbors for navigation, flood control, and for other purposes, to include
beach erosion. Title 2 of PL 83-780 was the
Flood Control Act of 1954. • Rivers and Harbors Act of 1956, , March 29, 1956, authorized (among other things) the construction of the
Mississippi River Gulf Outlet Canal, a shortcut between the
Mississippi River and the
Gulf of Mexico. MRGO has been considered a contributory factor in the flooding of
New Orleans during
Hurricane Katrina. •
River and Harbor Act of 1958, , July 3, 1958 • Rivers and Harbors Act of 1960, , July 14, 1960 • Rivers and Harbors Act of 1962, , October 23, 1962 •
Rivers and Harbors Act of 1965, , October 27, 1965 •
River and Harbor Act of 1966, , November 7, 1966, authorizing navigation and beach erosion projects.It also created an Interstate Compact between
Illinois and
Missouri for a commission for the Jefferson-Monroe Bridge and an Interstate Compact between
Kansas and
Oklahoma on the
Arkansas River. Title 2 of PL 89-789 was the
Flood Control Act of 1966. • River and Harbor Act of 1968, • River and Harbor Act of 1970, , December 31, 1970 NOTE: Titling of these
acts over the years has been inconsistent. If the act itself is not self-titled, the convention used here ("River and Harbor Act of 19xx") is only for consistency of reference only with the US Code in the recognized database at the Legal Information Institute at
Cornell University. ==See also==