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In 1917, Utah Construction Company was awarded the seven million dollar O'Shaughnessy Dam contract, a controversial project that impounds the Tuolumne River in the Hetch Hetchy Valley of California 's Sierra Nevada mountains. Success with the O'Shaughnessy Dam convinced the Wattis brothers to bid on more dam projects. In 1922, Utah Construction Company formed a partnership with the Morrison-Knudsen Company of Boise, Idaho. With Frank Crowe as the chief engineer, the MK UC partnership successfully built dams throughout the American west. In 1931, the Wattis Brothers spearheaded the formation of Six Companies to build the Hoover Dam which was the largest construction project ever tackled by the US Government up to the time. Including the Hoover Dam , Utah Construction built 58 dams between 1916 and 1969. In 1942, several weeks after the Japanese Bombing Of Pearl Harbor , Japanese warships were sighted in Alaskan waters. No overland route existed connecting Alaska with the contiguous United States. This situation spurred the American Government to plan and build the Alaskan Army Highway, later renamed the Alaska Highway . US Army and civilian contractors, led by Utah Construction, completed the arctic highway in just seven months and 17 days. In the 1950s, Utah Construction diversified into mining. These ventures included the Marcona copper mine in Peru, the Lucky Mc Uranium mine in Wyoming , and the Navaho coal mine and power plant in the Four Corners Area Of The United States Southwest . Utah Construction also diversified into land development. Through a series of aquistions, Utah Constructioned purchased the Moraga Ranch in the San Francisco Bay Area. This 3,000 acre (12 km&2) ranch was developed into Moraga, California . Utah also filled in of the San Francisco Bay to create much of the area of present day southshore in Alameda, California . The 1960s brought further military construction with Utah Construction the lead contractor for the US Minuteman Missile Hardened Silos throughout the United States . In 1969, Utah Construction went public on the New York Stock Exchange with the symbol UC. The construction business was sold to the Fluor Corporation in 1969. In the 1971, the company changed its name to Utah International. The Wattis brothers received funding from the David Eccles , Thomas D. Dee , Joseph Clark and James Pinegree family. Thomas D. Dee served as the first president of Utah Construction until his death in 1905, David Eccles served as the second president, and David Eccels son Marriner Stoddard Eccles became the president of Utah Construction concurrently with being the Federal Reserve Chairman. The shareholders and Val A. Browning acquired the shares of Warren Wattis in the 1940s. Utah Construction merged with the General Electric company in 1976 for a value of over $2.2 billion, the largest corporate merger in history at that time. The Wattis Brothers original $8,000 investment in 1900 grew to $478 million after the 1976 acquisition by the General Electric company. REFERENCES
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