Vision in the Desert: Carl Hayden and Hydropolitics in the American Southwest
by Jack L. August, Jr.
Set in both the arid lands of Arizona and the political backdrop of
Washington, D.C., Vision in the Desert documents the life and career
of longtime Arizona senator, Carl Hayden. One of the most powerful
figures in the United States Congress, Hayden's public service career,
centered on water and its distribution, is inseparable from the history
of the West and the development of arid lands.
Elected to the House of Representatives in 1911, Hayden began a
fifty-seven-year career in the U.S. Congress, serving as a Democratic
House Representative for fifteen years and then as a Senator from
1927 to 1969.
The issues of the development of the Colorado River occupied the
majority of Hayden's congressional work. The authorization of the
Central Arizona Project (CAP) in 1968, at the end of the senator's long
career, highlights all of Hayden's efforts concerning this lifestream of
the Southwest, making possible the distribution of water to the growing
urban areas of Phoenix and Tucson.

Historian, Fulbright scholar, and native Arizonan, JACK L. AUGUST,
JR., is director of the Arizona Historical Foundation and has served as
a professor of history at Arizona State University and Prescott College.
August has published extensively on the American West.