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Sellout Crowd Revisits 1928 Tragedy


The Santa Clarita Valley Historical Society hosted a presentation at Heritage Junction Saturday, followed by a bus tour to the St. Francis Dam. The tour completely sold out the first two weeks it was offered. And it was a smashing success.

Local historian Philip Scorza opened the festivities by showing a film he created with fascinating old footage and historical photos from the early 1900s. Phil was followed by an engaging and in-depth historical account of the quest for water in Los Angeles, the key characters involved in obtaining that water, the water wars that followed, and the eventual arrival of precious water in Los Angeles. This portion of the program was narrated by the brilliant Dr. Alan Pollack, president of the Historical Society. I spoke about the nearly forgotten personal stories - the people who lived, the people who died, the hopes and dreams that were lost in a wall of water that ravaged the Santa Clara River Valley. The date was March 12, 1928.


Contemporary photos by Dianne Erskine-Hellrigel except as noted; click each to enlarge.

In the earliest days in Los Angeles, the Los Angeles River was enough to sustain the small pueblo of inhabitants. Water was carried from the river to the population of the region by ditches called zanjas. A man named Fred Eaton became the superintendent of the Los Angeles City Water Co. He would become one of the principal figures involved in bringing water to Los Angeles, along with an Irish immigrant named William Mulholland.


Fountain dedicated to the zanja madre in downtown Los Angeles — the mother ditch.

William Mulholland was a brilliant man. Despite having no formal education, he was able to learn geology and engineering. He memorized everything he read, and he excelled at everything he put his mind to. He managed quickly to memorize the entire water system of Los Angeles.

Mulholland and Eaton became friends. Mulholland quickly rose up the ladder in the L.A. Water Co. When it became apparent the Los Angeles River was an inadequate source of water for a growing Los Angeles, the search for water was underway.


Fred Eaton, L.A.'s 24th mayor.

Mulholland and Eaton went to the Owens Valley where they discovered the mighty Owens River. If they could somehow capture the clear, clean water from this fast-flowing river, all of the water problems Los Angeles faced would be washed away. So, Eaton and Mullholland decided to see if they might be able somehow to divert this river to Los Angeles.


Mulholland turns the first shovel full of dirt on the new aqueduct.

The idea of an aqueduct from the Owens Valley to the San Fernando Valley was proposed. But the city didn’t have the water rights. So, Mulholland and Eaton set about buying up all the riparian land along the river that they could. They pretended they were going to use it for a reclamation project, or perhaps for cattle ranching.

Eventually, they acquired the rights to more than 50 miles of the riparian corridor. They now had enough land under their control to begin building the aqueduct.

Mulholland ceremoniously posed for cameras, holding the first shovel full of dirt. The project was underway.

Two hundred and thirty-three miles of aqueduct were constructed. The entire pipeline was downhill all the way from the Owens Valley intake to the San Fernando Valley, where it drained into a reservoir. Theus, no pumps were needed to transport the water. Gravity took care of the transportation.


Mulholland gives his famous "There it is — take it" speech at the opening of the aqueduct in Sylmar in November 1913.

Mulholland became a celebrated hero to the people of Los Angeles. The city thrived and grew.

But the Owens Valley withered. When the people of the distant valley realized they had been duped and that Eaton and Mulholland had virtually stolen their water, the water wars began.

Attacks commenced on the aqueduct, and ultimately it was blown up with dynamite. The intake and spillway were damaged, and Mulholland and Eaton realized they needed to store water in various locations around the Los Angeles basin or run the risk of running out of water for a new, thirsty Los Angeles.

The last of these dams was the St. Francis, built in San Francisquito Canyon. Many mistakes were made in the construction of the dam.


Investigators look over a would-be saboteur's sticks of dynamite.

On the east side, the dam was built upon a Paleolithic landslide. The rock on the east side of the dam was Pelona schist.

The western abutment was red Sespe conglomerate that crumbled when wet.

The dam was raised in height twice by 10 feet each time, without increasing the diameter of the foundation.

Each of these mistakes played a role in the failure of the dam. The height of the dam increased the capacity, which also increased the weight of the water impounded behind the dam. This caused a phenomena called hydro-lift.

Under the added water weight, the face of the dam began to lift. The Paleolithic landslide shifted and began to slide, and the Pelona schist crumbled. The Sespe conglomerate on the west side of the dam then crumbled, leading to the ultimate failure of the dam.


On the east side, the dam was built atop a Paleolithic landslide that became apparent after the collapse.

The center section remained standing. Curious visitors to the ruins of the dam called this monolith The Tombstone.

A 180-foot wall of water left the dam, ravaging property and killing every living thing in its path. When all was said and done, at least 431 people were dead, and the property damage was horrendous.

A few people in the flood plain managed to survive. Lilian Curtis, her little son Danny and their dog managed to escape up a hill as the water washed away her husband Lyman and their two daughters.

At least one man was saved by clinging to a rooftop being carried away by the raging water.


The jumble of Edison workers' cars shows the ferocity of the flood at the time it hit the camp.

Edison workers camped near Blue Cut on Highway 126, just this side of the Los Angeles-Ventura county border, were asleep in their tents when the water approached their camp. Eighty-four of the men died as the water and debris enveloped their tents, trapping them.

There were a few survivors at this location. The men who had tightly fastened their tents up floated on top of the whirlpool of debris.

The flood continued to maim, kill and destroy property all the way to Ventura. The flood was two miles wide at this point, and bodies, bits and pieces of people’s lives, and debris entered the Pacific Ocean at Montalvo.

Fred Eaton died in 1934, nearly a pauper. Mulholland died a year later, in 1935, a broken man, a recluse. The dream of water destroyed both men.

After the failure of the S. Francis, dam safety and regulations across the country were scrutinized. The way we built dams after that was influenced in part by what was learned from the St. Francis.

Members of the SCV Historical Society is working toward the passage of federal legislation to designate the St. Francis Dam Disaster site a national memorial. If you would like to help, we are collecting letters to send to our congressman in support of this legislation. Please contact me at the email address below, and I will supply you with a sample letter to support this bill. Thank you.


©2016 SCVTV/SCVHistory.com | Dianne Erskine-Hellrigel is executive director of the Community Hiking Club and president of the Santa Clara River Watershed Conservancy. Contact Dianne through communityhikingclub.org or at zuliebear@aol.com.



Los Angeles in 1871, just four decades before the aqueduct was built.

Photo: Halie Cook/SCVTV

Photo: Halie Cook/SCVTV


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