Take It
“The West was settled without logic. People settled where
they wanted to settle, with no regard whatever to the ecological
consequences or the ability of the land to support them. Los Angeles is
probably the preternatural example of a place being where it has no
business being. There's absolutely nothing in the immediate environs to
support it. But people wanted to live in Los Angeles. And they depleted
the ground water in Los Angeles over several decades, to the point
where they had to go elsewhere for water in order to continue
supporting the city that had no business being where it was."
T. H. Watkins
Between 1890 and 1904, the population of Los Angeles
quadrupled, to nearly 200,000. There was already too little water in
dry years. It seemed clear that Los Angeles could not grow much further
without some new source of supply. And Los Angeles had to grow -- its
whole economy was based on frenzied boosterism.
If Los Angeles runs out of water
for one week, the city within a year will not have a population of
100,000 people. A city quickly finds its level, and that level is its
water supply.
William Mulholland
But the nearest water was in the Owens River
Valley, 233 miles to the northeast. And it was already being used
by someone else -- small farmers who were irrigating their apple
orchards and fields of hay and alfalfa with snow-melt from the Sierras.
Then, in September of 1904, two strangers arrived in the Owens Valley.
They were careful not to identify themselves, but one was Fred Eaton, a former
mayor of Los Angeles.
The other was William Mulholland,
the Irish-born head of the Los Angeles Water Department. He believed
rivers existed only to be used: If it were left up to him, he once
said, he would have the Yosemite Valley carefully photographed and
then"build a dam from one side... to the other and stop the goddamned
waste." Mulholland believed he could build a system of aqueducts and
siphons and tunnels that would take Owens River water right through the
Sierras and all the way into Los Angeles.
But the brand-new federal Bureau of Reclamation had already
promised to improve the irrigation system for the people of Owens
Valley. Eaton hurried to Washington and quietly talked the government
out of it: The water, he argued, would benefit many more people if it
could be moved to Los Angeles.
"They were helped by the federal government. Teddy
Roosevelt decided it made more sense to have a strong city on the
western flank of America, that city being Los Angeles, than it did to
have 50,000 acres of apples growing in the Owens Valley. So they
actively helped Los Angeles get its hands on that river."
Marc Reisner
Posing as an eccentric but enormously wealthy rancher, Eaton
went back to the Valley and began buying up land and water rights. With
inside information he and some wealthy friends also quietly bought up
desert land around Los Angeles, knowing that once Mulholland's aqueduct
was built it would be worth a fortune. Then, Mulholland and Eaton
persuaded the city's voters to pass the largest bond issue in the
history of the United States -- twenty-three million dollars.
"They set their sights on that river; no city in history
had ever done anything like it, gone two hundred miles across the
desert and imported an entire river by aqueduct, by siphon, by tunnel.
They stole it, but they stole it fair and square."
Marc Reisner
At last, William Mulholland could get to work. Neither
personal profit nor politics ever interested him: once, asked if he
wanted to run for mayor, he answered that he'd sooner give birth to a
porcupine -- backwards. He lived only to build, and now faced an
engineering challenge that rivaled the Suez and Panama Canals.
Fifty three tunnels had to be
blasted through the mountains; 500 miles of trails and roads; 120 miles
of railroad track. Five to six thousand men had to be fed and housed
and doctored while they inched their way across the Mojave desert. The
110-degree heat spoiled food moments after it was cooked. Blowing sand
destroyed 28 caterpillar tractors that had to be replaced by 1,500
mules. Forty-three men died in the six years it took to finish the job.
The West had seen nothing like it since the building of the
transcontinental railroad.
"At the reservoir in Los Angeles in 1913, William
Mulholland, before a crowd of thousands, turned to one of his engineers
at the last pump and gave the indication to turn the great wheels, open
the floodgates, and down the water came, dancing and sparkling in the
sun, and started spilling into the reservoir, and Mulholland turned to
the dignitaries and said, 'There it is, gentlemen, take it.'"
T. H. Watkins
Los Angeles got its water, and because of it soon surpassed
San Francisco as the biggest and most powerful city in the West. The
Owens Valley never recovered.
 "If you go to the ancient Anasazi dwellings in
the southwest, and you stand there, and try to listen to the wind, and
hear what the stories might be from there, what I hear is that people
don't always accept what the environment tells them. You want to say,
didn't they get it, this is a desert, you know, why would you try to
build a huge city here? And when I see a place like Chaco Canyon, I
think that maybe two thousand years from now, someone's going to be
standing in what was once Los Angeles or Phoenix, Arizona, and ask the
same question. And it's the same story that arcs from five hundred
years ago to a thousand years into the future. Didn't they get it?"
Dayton Duncan
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