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History
- Electric Department
The
Early History …
With the
permission of the Kirkwood Historical Society, the following
excerpts on the beginnings of the Kirkwood Electric Department
are provided from “A History of Kirkwood,” by June Wilkinson
Dahl, published in 1965 by the Kirkwood Historical Society of
Kirkwood, Missouri, pp. 182-187.
Highlights:
v
When the
voters of Kirkwood went to the polls on July 21, 1900, they cast
237 votes authorizing the issuance of the bonds for the
construction of the electric generating plant with only 8 votes
being cast in opposition.
v
Construction of the electric light plant in 1900 cost $2,138.
v
In 1902,
electric current for “fan service” was provided
v
In 1902,
the furnaces in the plant reportedly consumed about 50 bushels
of coal each day in order to generate the necessary power. There
were more than 1,00 lights in private residences by 1902. The
streets of Kirkwood were lighted by 250 electric lights – no
small accomplishment for a plant in operation only slightly more
than a year.
v
By 1911 so
many request for electric service had been received from person
living outside their range of the original wire than an
“Electric Light Extension Fund” was established and $10,000 in
bonds were issued to cover the cost of extending the wires to
new customers
v
Following
the country’s entry into World War I, on December 6, 1917, the
aldermen found it necessary to light only half of the “white
way” lights on Webster (Kirkwood Road) and Main Street (Argonne
Drive) each night in order to reduce the amount of coal used at
the light plant.
v
In July,
1918, Judge Sam Hodgdon, Fuel Administrator of St. Louis County,
advised the Kirkwood Board of Aldermen to close its municipally
owned and operated electric plant and purchase current from the
Union Electric Company as a patriotic action to reduce coal
consumption during wartime. The city complied.
v
In 1921
the city leased the generating plant building to the Kirkwood
Ice Cream Company
Full
Text:
… The first
aldermen were anxious to provide various services to residents
as quickly as possible so they began to work on several problems
simultaneously. The desire of a number of residents for
electricity in their homes brought this matter to the attention
of the aldermen soon after their organizational structure had
been completed. It will be recalled that electric street lights
had been installed and had been in operation in Kirkwood since
1896, in accordance with a contract between Kirkwood and the
Suburban Electric Light Company. However, only a very few
residents had contracted for electricity for their homes.
In May, 1900, a
special committee was set up by the Board of Aldermen
(consisting of Theodore Bopp, Maurice Cronin, W.F. Warner and
Mayor W.M. Daly) to consider the problem of the need for a
municipal water supply and an electric light plant. Because both
of these services were highly technical, Mr. Owen Ford was
retained as a consultant and supervisor to work with the
aldermen. The special committee asked Mr. Ford “for the
necessary surveys…plans and specifications for the equipment of
a plant sufficient to meet then [electrical] requirement of the
City…” While these specifications were being drawn, the aldermen
sought information from several cities which owned their own
“lighting plants” to determine whether they felt that municipal
ownership was superior to private ownership. When the replies
were received, it was obvious that they were favorable to public
ownership, because the Special Committee on Public Lighting
recommended the submission of a proposition to the voters of
Kirkwood to issue $17,000 in city bonds to run for twenty years
for the establishment of an electric lighting plant.
When the voters of
Kirkwood went to the polls on July 21, 1900, they cast 237 votes
authorizing the issuance of the bonds for the construction of
the electric generating plant with only 8 votes being cast in
opposition. With this overwhelming mandate from the residents,
the special committee proceeded with the selection of a suitable
site for the plant. The committee members recommended to the
Board of Aldermen that the lot on the southeast corner of Monroe
and Taylor Avenues be purchased form Francis McMullen for
$2,000. Mr. McMullen agreed to hold the lot for the city until
the bonds, authorized by the voters on July 21, could be sold.
While arrangements
were being made for the sale of the bonds, Owen Ford was
employed to supervise the construction of the electric plant. By
October 15, 1900, the bonds had been sold and the lot on Monroe
and Taylor was purchased from Mr. McMullen. Thereafter, work
proceeded quite rapidly. Mr. P.C. Bopp, being the lowest bidder,
was awarded the contract for the construction of the electric
light plant at a cost of $2,138. The St. Louis Electrical Supply
Company, lowest bidder for the equipment to be placed in the
plant, was awarded that contract on October 15, 1900. Except for
the normal delays in construction work due to winter weather,
work continued on the plant and by the middle of March, 1901,
the aldermen were ready to employ operating personnel. James
Martin was hired as the first fireman at the plan and C.C.
Radabaugh was the first engineer employed there, the latter
receiving a salary of $65 per month.
By the time the
plant was ready to begin operating in the spring of 1901, the
contract which the Board of Trustees had signed with the
Suburban Electric Light and Power Company in 1896 was about to
expire. On June 17, 1901, the aldermen agreed to pay the
Suburban Company $325 “in consideration of a waiver of all
claims for compensation due the company under the contract for
street light.” As a consideration for the removal of all the
Suburban poles in the city, the aldermen agreed to permit the
company “to put one cross arm upon any or all municipal poles
upon payment of a rental of 5 cents per month.” This arrangement
was apparently satisfactory to both sides.
The “Light
Committee,” as the members of the Board of Aldermen who handled
all matters concerning electricity were called, established and
published in February, 1901, the rates consumers would be asked
to pay. That the supplying of electricity to Kirkwood residents
was an almost instant success is revealed by the fact that in
1902, a year after the plant began to operate, the Light
Committee reported that it felt able from a financial point of
view to offer customers an opportunity to contract for “fan
service.” This meant that customers contracting for this service
would pay a lower price for the extra electricity used by a fan.
An affluent resident who could afford an electric fan would not,
therefore, have to depend entirely on an all-too-infrequent
breeze to give some relief from the hot, humid weather of July
and August. Of course, in comparison with full-house air
conditioning, considered so essential by many of the younger
generation, one stationary electric fan scarcely conjures up
visions of comfort, but then many of the present younger
generation have also missed the opportunity which every young
man once gladly accepted – to wield the palm-leaf fan for the
young lady sitting next to him at any public function. Nor does
the present generation remember the use of highly decorated
cardboard hand fans bearing almost as wide a variety of
advertising as modern matchbook covers! The stationary fans at
least created some air circulation. The use of a little later of
oscillating fans created additional circulation of air on those
summer days ”when not a leaf moved.”
Unfortunately, no
record of the number of subscribers for electricity or summer
fan service has come to light but the editor of the Kirkwood
Argus, which was part of the Clayton Argus, reported
to his readers on June 27, 1902, that Kirkwood’s electric plant
covered about 9,500 square feet and was composed of three parts
– the shop, the electric room and the boiler room. The plant was
equipped with two complete sets of machinery so that if there
should be a breakdown in one, the other could be put into
operation to avoid any interruption in electrical service. The
furnaces in the plant reportedly consumed about 50 bushels of
coal each day in order to generate the necessary power. The
editor also reported that there were more than 800 lights in
private residences by 1902, an additional 200 lights had been
installed the week before his paper went to press. The streets
of Kirkwood were lighted by 250 electric lights – no small
accomplishment for a plant in operation only slightly more than
a year.
As soon as the
plant began to operate, it became apparent that its continued
functioning would require a great deal of the aldermen’s time.
The purchase of coal and the arrangements for hauling it from
the railroad cards to the light plant, supervision of the
maintenance and operational personnel, authorization for the
purchase of new machinery as needed – all required the attention
of the aldermen. However, the matter of setting charges for
service, complaints from customers, cases of liability,
delinquent bills and requests for installation of street lights
were far more time consuming than the mechanical problems. In
April 1906, for example, the Light Committee reported to the
Board of Aldermen that a number of customers were using more
electricity than they were authorized to use at flat fee rates.
They also reported a number of cases of illegal connections
being made with the city electric wires without the use of a
meter!
When Mr. H.A.
Kreig’s horse was struck by an electric wire in 1907, he asked
the Board of Aldermen for damages. Alderman J.P. Schmitz and
City attorney Albert Chandler investigated the case thoroughly.
After three months of checking and deliberating, they awarded
Mr. Kreig $50 for his horse. In 1910 the Aldermen were
confronted with another problem to which they did not know they
answer. Judge Enos Clarke asked the price of electricity with
which to operate his new automobile. Unfortunately, no record
was made of the price quoted but the aldermen took the matter
under advisement along with numerous complaints that year from
customer who felt that their bills were too high because their
electric meters were not measuring accurately the amount of
electricity being used. Each such complaint was handled
individually and a “compromise,” as the settlements were called,
reached. In June, 1910, another type of request was received
from Mrs. Louise P. Forsyth who complained that the electrical
wiring in her home had been damaged by an overcharge o
electricity passing through the wires. She asked the Board of
Aldermen to pay the cost of repairs. The complaint was referred
to City Attorney Powell, who studied the matter carefully before
advising the aldermen that he did not believe the city was
liable for the damage.
By 1911 so many
request for electric service had been received from person
living outside their range of the original wire than an
“Electric Light Extension Fund” was established and $10,000 in
bonds were issued to cover the cost of extending the wires to
new customers. The aldermen also tried to fill as many requests
from residents for new street lights as possible. Some of the
members of the Business Men’s Credit Association were not
pleased with the street lighting in the business section of
Kirkwood. After the city established its own electric generating
plant, the street lights were lighted according to the old
“moonlight schedule” used by the town of Kirkwood before it had
contracted with the Suburban Light and Power Company for
all-night street lights in Kirkwood. After having all-night
service the businessmen no longer found the “moonlight schedule”
satisfactory so on November 5, 1910, they requested all-night
service on present Kirkwood Road from Monroe to Adams Avenues
and on present Argonne Drive from Kirkwood Road to Clay Avenue.
In June 1913, Mr.
Bennett, representing the Business Men’s Credit Association,
offered the Board or Aldermen $440 if it would install and
maintain 40 additional street lights in the central part of town
for three years. However, by this time the Board of Aldermen was
divided in its attitude toward the whole matter of supplying
electricity in Kirkwood. On March 15, 1913, a resolution had
been presented to the Board of Aldermen to sell the electric
plant and all its property to the Suburban Light and Power
Company. Although the motion had been opposed by some of the
aldermen, it was passed by a vote of nine to three even though
Mayor Joseph Matthews opposed the sale vigorously. The matter
was finally taken to court and those opposing the sale were
upheld with the statement that the “City of Kirkwood is
perpetually restrained from the sale of the light company to the
Suburban Power and Light, alias Electric Company, of Missouri.”
This ended the controversy but the problem of inadequate street
lighting continued for sometime. The “moonlight schedule” had
been changed and the street lights were lighted from sunset to
2:00 a.m. and from 5:00 a.m. until dawn. At the insistence of
the businessmen, that schedule was changed in 1917 to that
Webster Avenue (Kirkwood Road) from Monroe to Adams Avenue and
Main Street from Webster to Clay avenue were lighted all night
every night.
This satisfied the
unhappy businessmen but very shortly other problems in
connection with the electric light plant appeared. The United
States had become officially involved in World War I on April 6,
1917, and various measures for conversation of resources and
equipment soon became necessary as part o the total war effort.
On December 6, 1917, the aldermen found it necessary to light
only half of the “white way” lights on Webster (Kirkwood Road)
and Main Street (Argonne Drive) each night in order to reduce
the amount of coal used at the light plant.
This arrangement,
was of course, helpful in the conservation of coal which became
increasingly difficult to secure as more and more men were
called to active duty with the armed forces and as the various
branches of the armed forces required more coal for their own
use. In June, 1918, the aldermen discussed the possibility of
purchasing electric current form the Union Electric Company of
Missouri, which had purchased the Suburban Power and Light
Company. In July, 1918, Judge Sam Hodgdon, Fuel Administrator of
St. Louis County, advised the Kirkwood Board of Aldermen to
close its municipally owned and operated electric plant and
purchase current from the Union Electric Company. Shortly,
thereafter, Wallace Crossley, Federal Fuel Administrator, also
urged this action as a patriotic way to conserve coal. The
aldermen decided, therefore, to enter into a three-year contract
with the Union Electric Power and Light Company to supply
electrical current to the City of Kirkwood. A sub-station was
constructed immediately to receive the electric current and
Kirkwood’s own generating plant was closed. Because of the need
for machinery of all kinds during the war, the machines in the
generating plant were promptly sold.
During the balance
of the war, the aldermen compiled records to determine whether
it was cheaper for the city to operate its own generating plant
or buy the current form a large producer. When the ware was over
and coal again became available, the statistics kept by the
aldermen revealed that it was cheaper for the city to buy
electric current than to maintain its own generating plant. The
aldermen made no further effort to reactivate the generating
plant, and in 1921 they leased the building to the Kirkwood Ice
Cream Company for five years at $50 a month.
As the population
of Kirkwood increased, the use of electricity by individuals and
the city also increased. The businessmen urged the installation
of additional street lights in the business section of Kirkwood,
and in 1922 raised sufficient funds to cover the cost of them.
Residents also asked the aldermen for more street lights as the
geographical area of Kirkwood expanded during the 1920s.
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