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==History== New Plymouth was a colony town, bought and planned before it was settled. It was the combined project of a group of people purportedly dissatisfied with city life in [[Chicago]], who in 1895 formed what they called "The Plymouth Society of Chicago" and [[William E. Smythe]], who was the chairman of the executive committee of the National Irrigation Congress and a famous irrigation promoter. Mr. Smythe was determined to found a colony to serve as a striking argument in favor of his project - [[irrigation]]. He spoke throughout the east, urging young and old men to go west in colonies and develop the country with the help of irrigation. He wanted the first colony to be called New Plymouth β after [[Plymouth, Massachusetts]] β and wanted it located in southwestern Idaho in the Payette Valley, which he had found apt for his purpose because of the extraordinary water supply via the nearby [[Payette River]]. The Plymouth Society of Chicago selected a committee to investigate the irrigated Payette River Valley in the five-year-old state of Idaho, and another site in [[Colorado]], to be purchased for the colony. The present city of New Plymouth was on the drawing boards in Chicago, designed as a town able to be self-reliant through the use of irrigation, solidly built on an agricultural and railroad economy. In February 1896, each colonist purchased 20 shares of stock at $30 per share, which entitled him to {{convert|20|acre|m2}} of land and a town lot. He was to clear the land of sagebrush and plant fruit trees, preferably apples. The town was [[plat]]ted with a horseshoe shape with its open end facing to the north, toward the railroad and the river. This area was planned as an industrial zone, and the acre tracts around the horseshoe were the residential lots. The homes were to be built on the street side and the balance of the acre for garden and pasture for the family cow and the driving team. Two streets, separated by an {{convert|80|ft|m|adj=on}} park, curve around the town in a horseshoe shape. This mile-long (1.6 km) park and the streets that enclose it were called "The [[Boulevard]]." The park was planted with grass and shade trees. Plymouth Avenue, the main street and principal business thoroughfare, was surveyed (16 feet off the section line) down the center of the horseshoe from the railroad on the north through the Boulevard on the south. The community was at first called the New Plymouth Farm Village and was governed by a colony board of directors until it incorporated as a [[village]] in 1908, dropping the last two words in the name. [[Image:Welcome to New Plymouth.JPG|thumb|Sign that welcomes you into New Plymouth coming from the south.]]
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