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Water
Is Gold
by
Doug French
by Doug French
DIGG THIS
Not many people
know anything about Boswell Land and Farming. The Boswell family
likes it that way. The reclusive family is the worlds largest
cotton and tomato grower, according to Yahoo Finance, growing and
milling cotton on 150,000 acres in California and 50,000 acres in
New South Wales, Australia.
This writer
owns a few shares of the company, along with reportedly 500 other
investors. But that doesnt mean we have any information. The
companys shares are traded infrequently on the over-the-counter
bulletin board under the symbol BWEL. But the company isnt
required to release financial data and it has no interest in providing
any.
To
learn about the Boswell farming empire takes a reading of Mark Arax
and Rick Wartzmans awarding-winning exposé, The
King of California: J.G. Boswell and the Making of a Secret American
Empire.
A book about
a big corporate farmer probably doesnt make the average reader
pine for a rainy day to dive into such a tome. But, this is a story
about much more than cotton and land. While building an empire,
the Boswells built a company town, affected the lives of thousands
of farm workers, changed the ecology of a massive area in central
California, took millions in farm subsidies from taxpayers while
publicly opposing such subsidies, and to give away the investment
punch line of the story, amassed billions of dollars worth of water
rights. As J.W. Boswell would say, Land is just dirt, but
the water is gold.
So while Nevada
and the other western states fret about providing water for future
growth, Boswell could at a minimum supply a city of 800,000 families
with water every year. According to Money Week, the company owns
400,000 to 2 million acre feet of water that could be drawn
up without damaging the environment. Water rights go for $10,000
per acre-foot, meaning that Boswells water is worth at least
$4 billion. The companys market capitalization is only $750
million. No wonder natural resources broker Rick Rule believes Boswell
is one of the most under-valued stocks in America, even though shares
trade for over $1,000 each. At a Las Vegas investment seminar a
couple years ago, Rule told the crowd he believed the shares were
worth $3,500 each, if the company quit farming and just sold water.
J.G. Colonel
Boswell started all of this from the back of a jitney in 1921, with
a little help from the money of his first wife Alaine. The Colonel
had just left the army after 17 years and only knew one other thing:
cotton. But, the boll weevil made it impossible for Boswell to return
to his native Georgia to start his business. Instead, his fortune
would be made at a place called Tulare Lake.
As the Colonel
grew his cotton empire in the 1920s and 1930s, the needed employees
came from places like Oklahoma which was being ravaged by the dust
bowl and depression. The town Corcoran became a thriving company
town, and the American Federation of Labor attempted to organize
Boswells workers. As if a National Labor Relations Board lawsuit
wasnt bad enough, Steinbecks The
Grapes of Wrath was published, portraying central Californias
big farmers as shameless profiteers.
But the Colonel
endured and continued to add to his empire. There would be constant
legal challenges and, of course, the biggest challenge of all to
agriculture the weather. Almost like clockwork, heavy spring
thaws in the Sierra Nevada range caused the Tulare Lake basin to
flood every 15 years: 1938, 1952, 1969, 1983 and 1998.
The federal
government stepped in with millions for flood control dams. And
the government largesse wouldnt stop there. The Colonels
nephew, Jim Boswell, told the authors that the company would never
accept government money, and had in fact sent money back to the
government, but according to CNN Money, Federal data compiled
by the Environmental Working Group, a Washington-based advocacy
group, shows that between 2000 and 2003, J.G. Boswell Co. got $16.8
million for cotton.
The
Boswell farms can now be farmed with only 300 employees. Long gone
are the cotton pickers who left Oklahoma, replaced by huge mechanized
cotton-picking machines that are as big as houses. The town of Corcoran
has died, known only as the prison town, where Charles Manson is
quartered.
Jim Boswell,
approaching 80, speculated with Arax and Wartzman that its
likely there wont be any cotton growing in California
10 years from now, setting the stage for the next generation
of Boswells to fallow the fields and sell water to Los Angeles.
This
article originally appeared in Liberty
Watch Magazine.
November
8, 2007
Doug
French [send him mail]
is executive vice president of a Nevada bank and associate editor
for Liberty
Watch Magazine.
He received the Murray N. Rothbard Award from the Center for Libertarian
Studies.
Copyright
© 2007 Doug French
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French Archives
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