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Cadillac Desert Mulholland's Dream merged files

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    >> I have no apologies. I was a crusader for the development of water. I was the
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    Messiah! I was the evangelist that went out and argued persuasively to develop
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    our rivers and water supplies for the benefit of the people.
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    >> In the American desert, we have built a great new civilization in less than a
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    century. Where none could possibly be in the natural order of things. We have
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    made the land wet where it was dry and dry where it was wet. We have lifted
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    great rivers out of their ancient beds and moved them over half a continent. Our
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    great cities stand in a desert that is drier than the plains of North Africa. It
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    would all be impossible without the breathtaking manipulation of water. We
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    fought over water, thrived on water, and finally we engineered the desert out of
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    existence.>> Next to God, there's water.>> Everybody is conscious of water. If
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    you head for the river with a bucket-- an empty bucket, you are liable to get
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    shot.>> Can you imagine today in American city acquiring an entire river?
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    >> The idea of subduing nature has captivated the whole country.
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    >> Congress cannot appropriate enough money fast enough to build more dams.
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    >> We built the dams for all the right reasons when they were desperately needed
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    with little thought to the consequences. The developing world watched and envied
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    our success.>> The engineering marvel that is inaudible dam inspected by Emperor
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    Haile Selassie of Ethiopia.>> Supplying water to the population growing that
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    fast is extremely difficult.>> It's a little bit like the sorcerer's
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    apprentice. You've got to have more water, more water, more water.
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    >> They are going to dam this canyon.>> There is no end to these people who had
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    plans to dam San Francisco Bay,pipelines beyond your wildest dreams. This wasn't
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    about curing oil. This was about carrying water.>> We have forgotten that the
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    natural West is barren and fatally dry. And that our new bountiful West is a
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    fragile construction. Here and there are reminders
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    of what happens when the water is turned off. Or when the water works fail.
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    >> Somehow the water stopped flowing. You have a desert again overnight.
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    >> The dam's gone.>> The whole thing is gone now?
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    >> The whole thing is gone. It rolled over about five minutes ago.
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    >> Okay.>> If you can give us any help on radio or whatnot get the people
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    started there out.>> All right. Where do you want the people evacuated?
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    >> Well, we would like to get them off the river in low-lying inaudible
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    >> Well, it's 6:22 at 710 Talk KMPC, I'm Dominic with Air Watch Traffic and I've
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    got to tell you the jackknifed big rig in Pasadena has the 210 eastbound in
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    trouble right at Rosemead where the right three lanes are out of commission, the
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    jackknifed big rig there and about a quarter-mile slow. On the westbound side
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    almost across the fence from it right at Sierra Madre. Right lane is blocked to
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    the inaudible so get ready it's slow from the 605 and how are things in Orange
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    County?>> Hey, Scott! inaudible>> -- in Ronald Reagan Freeway on the west
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    inaudible Reseda Boulevard inaudible Foreign Language Spoken
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    >> A car that spun out and hit the center divider and the two left lanes are
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    protected by CHP vehicles.>> Use alternate routes such as Laurel Canyon or even
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    Mulholland today.>> I think my grandfather has a vision with the city like
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    Dublin. Which was the city of his childhood. And it was a vision I think of a
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    19th century city. Where people ambled on streets and a new one another and
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    enjoyed the theater and the opera and the University. A civilized 19th century
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    city.>> No other Buick dealership in California has been best in its class for
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    seven years. That's because no other Buick dealership has sold more than 10,000
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    Buicks in the last 10 years. The list goes on and on. Right now we have lots of
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    traffic to talk about, too. First of all the KABC traffic alert--
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    >> The thing that you have to remember about Los Angeles is that it never really
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    had a reason to be there. It had no minerals, no metals, no forests, and other
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    words, everything that any major American city used to develop itself, LA
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    lacked. And above all it lacked water.>> Since the beginning of time this was a
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    place of earthquakes and perpetual drought. First claimed by the Spaniards, and
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    then conquered by the Americans.Virtually everyone here had come from somewhere
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    else. In 1878 William Mulholland arrived from the Green Hills of Ireland. He had
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    stowed away on a sailing ship worked as a lumberjack failed as a gold miner and
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    had walked across Panama to save $25 and train fare. He was fond of one armed
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    chin-ups and grand Opera.Mulholland found work as a ditch digger on the growing
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    town's dilapidated water system.>> LA was desperate to become a modern city. It
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    had been a backwater for so many decades.>> But its water system, on the other
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    hand, was pretty much the same old Jerry built thing. A bunch of old
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    waterwheels. The falling apart system.>> He worked hard, read Shakespeare, and
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    hydraulic engineering late into the night. Taught himself to keep the entire LA
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    water system in his head and climbed through the ranks. In 1886 when his boss
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    suddenly dropped dead, William Mulholland found himself superintendent of the LA
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    water system. The little desert Pueblo had grown to 100,000 people thanks to the
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    Chamber of Commerce and a new railroad. And by 1903 LA had sucked dry the tiny
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    Los Angeles River. It's only source of water.>> My mother would tell me these
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    stories of growing up without water. One bath a week on Saturday night and I
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    washed in a big zinc tub that was dragged into the
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    kitchen and water heated and Poppa got the first bath, mama got the second and
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    the kids-- mother told me you know they were not what you would call white trash
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    but she told me she never had a bath in pure clean water. Now I was raised with
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    a real sense that water was a precious item and not to be squandered.
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    >> Superintendent Mulholland tried to make Los Angeles live within its means.
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    But growth sabotaged everything he did. By 1903, the chief knew that LA would
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    have to stop growing or he would have to find a new source of water. His friend,
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    Mayor Fred Eaton and told him of a great Valley 200 miles to the north.
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    Pomacentrus phonetic Paiutes had lived along the Owens River. White settlers who
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    colonized Owens Valley found Paiutes irrigating natural grasses with several
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    miles of small irrigation canals.>> My grandmother told my only sister that when
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    the whites came they started to push the Indians up into the rocky places where
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    the water was scarce because they wanted the other for their cattle and things.
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    And they came in and they fenced everything up. They start saying if you want to
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    use my water, you have to have special permission and the Indians always let the
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    water run. It was never something that belonged to one individual person. It
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    belonged to the whole community.>> By 1904, settlers from New England,
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    Switzerland, and Scotland had taken the Indians land, established farms in a
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    dozen towns and a steamboat service on the age old Owens Lake. They dug and
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    elaborate irrigation system diverting the Owens River into hundreds of miles of
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    ditches. Former Mayor Fred Eaton convinced Mulholland to set out northward
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    across the Mojave Desert in the fall of 1904 toward Owens Valley.
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    >> They went by Buck boy phonetic which was the only way you can go it took them
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    about two weeks to get there. I think there was a trail of whiskey bottles all
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    the way out.>> In two weeks, Mulholland and Eaton were on the banks of the Owens
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    River.>> At certain times of the year, in what years, anyway, you can get a
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    little glimpse of what the river must've been like then and how it must have
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    impressed Mulholland. The Owens Valley is one of the most dramatic places in the
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    world.You have on the one side the Sierra Nevada, virtually every mountain over
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    14,000 feet, and then you have a drop of 2 miles to the valley floor and then a
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    rise of almost 2 miles up to the White Mountain range. Because the mountains
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    stop virtually all weather, it is in the rain-- and there is no rain in the
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    Owens Valley. It is a true desert looking up onto huge snow-covered peaks. And
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    through the middle of it comes what you almost could call a-- Mississippi River
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    given the setting. It is so improbable in this harsh desert to see River that
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    used to be as engorged-- And not only was this river that could take care of the
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    next 20, 30, probably inaudible 50 years of population growth in LA but it could
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    flow all the way by gravity.Inaudible>> -- so full of enthusiasm he said you
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    know I've seen something here-- water that will last us into the next century.
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    >> And I think Mulholland suddenly must have changed and he saw himself as a
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    sort of a builder of a Roman masterwork as somebody who kept a great hydraulic
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    engineering tradition alive. I can't tell you what went through his head, but
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    suddenly he was a convert. Having been more of an efficiency guy and a
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    conservationist, suddenly he became an empire builder almost overnight.
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    >> And now, they were going to capture a river. The only River that kind of
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    accidentally flowed through this desert and they were going to move the whole
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    river across this 200-plus miles of terrain that they just covered at some risk
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    probably to their lives.>> The problem facing Mulholland was at the river was
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    owned. All the water rights were owned by farmers who were irrigating something
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    like 60,000 acres.This was a thriving agricultural area at the time and it was
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    being further developed by the Bureau of reclamation. Now how in the world were
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    you going to arrest that water away from these farmers and the federal
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    government? That was the dilemma.>> Can you imagine today and American city
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    acquiring an entire River for its future? Of course. It goes without saying. It
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    could be done but it was done then.>> inaudible his ages for a federal project
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    meant to irrigate Owens Valley Holland's men went to the county courthouse.
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    There they convinced clerks to show them these, maps, and records the stream
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    flows. Within days, Eaton was quietly buying property and water rights.
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    Inaudible-- to a local irrigation project but to the city of Los Angeles.
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    Without telling Mulholland, former Mayor Fred Eaton about the only dam site in
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    Owens Valley for himself.>> Once the city knew who had the best water rights and
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    who was likeliest to sell those rights, it was basically a done deal.
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    >> It didn't take very long for them to capture most of that river.
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    >> Two people who had ultimately benefited and who knew the whole story of this
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    scheme were the publishers of the Los Angeles times. Harrison Gray Otis and
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    Harry Chandler. They were the big promoters and boosters but they were sworn to
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    secrecy as this was going on. They did not let the cat out of the bag until they
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    couldn't help themselves and finally under a headline that said Titanic project
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    to give the city River they talked about how the whole thing had gone. And you
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    know when you read that today and imagine a major city newspaper just kind of
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    gloating over the triumph of you know it's artifice and chicanery, it makes you
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    real in a sense. But that was what Los Angeles was like in those days. It was--
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    the climate was one of just getting what you want any way you can get it.
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    >> The Owens Valley paper saw the future differently. The still secret aqueduct
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    route would pass through the San Fernando Valley on its way to LA. And someone
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    was buying up near worthless land in the San Fernando. Now, another cat out of
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    the bag. It was a real estate syndicate that would make millions of Owens River
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    water irrigated their newly acquired San Fernando Valley land.
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    >> What was happening all the while these water rights in the Owens Valley were
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    being acquired was that the San Fernando Valley is being bought up by a
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    syndicate of people who represented the power structure of Los Angeles with the
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    kind of exquisite sense of proportion.>> I suppose you could make a case for
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    this being this incestuous cabal of hidden you know Jonathan inaudible
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    California inaudible oligarchy. Old boys' wasp network-- no Jews, darks,
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    Blacks, Mexicans allowed.>> Quietly, the entire San Fernando Valley was bought
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    up by the arch capitalists of Los Angeles for the purpose of irrigating it when
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    the Owens River finally arrived because Los Angeles would need all that water
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    for a long time.>> If water could be brought to the San Fernando, from the Owens
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    Valley, that rangy grassland that semi-arid terrain could be turned into an
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    absolute Inaudible>> With all the cats out of all the bags, citizens would now
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    vote on the inaudible. Mulholland campaigned with a vengeance. Opponents spread
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    rumors that he was secretly dumping water at night to create a shortage but in
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    the middle of a drought, with the temperature climbing toward 105, the people of
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    LA voted 10 to 1 to pay for Mulholland's aqueduct to bring them the river they
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    had just purchased.>> I think one thing that gets overlooked in discussing the
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    aqueduct is that it was a popular move from the President of the United States
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    down to the voters in the city of Los Angeles. This was highly approved project.
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    >> Pres. Theodore Roosevelt citing the greatest good for the greatest number
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    made Owens Valley off-limits to further development by surrounding it with a
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    national forest.>> It suddenly became part of the Inyo National forest the only
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    national forest in America with hardly any trees. The only trees were the
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    orchard trees that were being irrigated and were about to die.
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    >> With the law and the president on his side, Mulholland set out in 1905 to
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    build his aqueduct across the desert.>> It was a great drama. It was a great
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    epic drama the building of that aqueduct. You had kneeled teams and you had
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    men. And they were working in desert heat, arid conditions, water was a
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    problem. Ironically enough, here in this giant water project they had to worry
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    about adequate water for the working stock and the men.
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    >> It could be almost freezing at night and then 110 degrees in the daytime,
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    practically. Mulholland was there all the time.>> Chief engineer Mulholland had
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    no formal training in civil engineering. He had in fact never graduated from
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    grade school.>> The automobile had barely been invented. Clipper ships were
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    still sailing the seas and this was an engineering project the likes of which
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    the world had really never seen before.>> Mulholland ordered the 12 foot steel
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    pipe forged in Germany and shipped around the horn. 100,000 men and women worked
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    on the aqueduct but never more than a few thousand at a time because the
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    exhausting and dangerous work kept turnover so high. They had been farmhands,
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    cowboys and hard rock miners but now they were city employees civil servants
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    like the chief himself. With no air conditioning, no refrigeration, no
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    hardhats, in 110 degree heat they crossed the Mohave in five years with a pipe
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    big enough to hold a locomotive.>> This was, you know, and aqueduct that would
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    have reached all the way across Massachusetts and then almost all the way back.
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    Through a desert with mountains.What they were really building was the world's
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    largest garden hose.>> Surveyors said they could build the aqueduct simply by
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    following the trail of whiskey bottles Mulholland and Eaton has thrown off the
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    back of their buckboard in 1904. In the end, the chief and his lieutenants
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    finish the job under budget and ahead of schedule. William Mulholland built his
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    original aqueduct so well that to this day it still carries the Owens River to
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    the people of Los Angeles.>> The phrase grandpa's aqueduct were among my first
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    words. The day of the dedication of the aqueduct was without a doubt the high
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    point of my grandfather's life.>> A crowd of 30,000 to 40,000 Los Angelenos
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    phonetic had gathered at the base of the spillway. There was a formal program
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    but once the water spilled down the Cascade the formal program was abandoned
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    because thousands of people rushed with their tin cups to drink the water.
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    >> When the water came cascading down, Mulholland who was really exhausted at
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    the time gave what I think is the most concise dedication speech in history. He
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    unfurled an American flag he turned to the water and he said, there it is. Take
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    it.>> Based on Mulholland's predictions, it was four times more water than Los
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    Angeles could use.>> Oh, so slow from oso parkway. If you are on to San Diego
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    South at Magnolia that accident clear to the right shoulder. We are clear back
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    to the Westminster Mall with bumper-to-bumper through the beat cities. And you
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    are going to be making your way on the 91 freeway--
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    >> That moment actually has to be seen not just in terms of human history
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    however brief human history is. It has to be seen in terms of geological time.
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    Here you have the eons-old environment now being profoundly changed by the
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    changing course of the river and that water in effect created contemporary Los
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    Angeles.>> It's your earthquake damage repair at remodeling headquarters.
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    >> This week get inaudible to Honolulu for only 199+ tax round-trip. Sun trips
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    your pipeline to paradise. With air watch traffic--
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    >> One of the big banquets in the city celebrating this great event he made a
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    speech and made the very interesting observation he said we are doomed to
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    success. Might be a motto for the city, do you think?
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    >> When water came after 1913, it prepared for an absolute golden age of
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    building and construction that lasted through-- Inaudible
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    At one point in the early 20s there was some 67 lumber ships at the San Pedro
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    Harbor lined up just waiting to get the wood off so they could keep the
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    construction going. You also had the beginnings of the great Hollywood figures
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    coming out-- DW Griffith, Cecil B DeMille coming just a few months after the
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    water. At nowhere as you moved to Los Angeles were you not in the presence of
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    lawns, hedges, palm trees-- great palm trees which sway above Los Angeles now
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    like nodding giraffes are taken as the signature of the city. Palm trees were
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    not native to the region they were planted by the hundreds in the hundreds in
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    this era. Here you had a semi-arid region where coyotes roamed where tumbleweeds
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    were blown by the wind which in a very short time was turned into arguably the
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    most exquisite invented garden in history. Now if you link that with the
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    adjacent citrus groves, which were still in full bloom in the teens and 20s, I
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    wasn't there, but it must've been wonderful.>> You had a general sensibility of
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    that time of turning the desert into and Eden.>> Charlie Chaplin and Alice
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    Huxley came from England. William Faulkner from Mississippi. Frank Lloyd Wright
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    from Wisconsin. Everyone came from everywhere.LA was suddenly growing 11 times
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    faster than New York. Faster even than Calcutta. A million people by 1922 of
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    whom 31,000 were licensed real estate agents. Now over Mulholland's objections,
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    Los Angeles began annexing 52 surrounding communities. Soon the city limits
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    would cover 400 mi.? more than any city in America.
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    >> There are going to be a lot of irate citizens when they find out that they
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    are paying for water that they are not going to get.
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    >> Oh, that's all taken care of. See, Mr. Gitts phonetic, either you bring the
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    water to LA or you bring LA to the water.>> What he simply meant was that you
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    would bring the water to where you wanted to bring it and call that place LA and
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    therefore you could get Los Angeles taxpayers to pay what in effect were a cabal
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    of real estate speculators to have the city pay millions of dollars for them to
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    pump water down to land that was not in fact part of the city and then cause
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    them to vote that is part of the city and thereby increase the value of that
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    land which they had purchased and held 1000 fold. So they were causing one city
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    in effect to pay for them to develop another city by-- and then saying well,
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    it's really same city.>> As the Owens River was finally being relocated across a
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    quarter of the state of California, it became immediately obvious that there was
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    way more water than Los Angeles needed. And so because the water was coming in
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    to the San Fernando Valley, it ended up irrigating the San Fernando Valley. It
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    was basically an artificial imported River for agriculture there rather than the
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    agriculture that had been essentially put out of business in the Owens Valley.
  • 29:03 - 29:12
    >> A syndicates arid tracks in the San Fernando Valley blossomed into orange and
  • 29:12 - 29:18
    lemon groves, peach orchards, fields of winter tomatoes by 1920, LA County was
  • 29:18 - 29:26
    the most productive farm county in America.>> It may have been legal, but move a
  • 29:26 - 29:32
    whole River ostensibly for public good and end up making a bunch of capitalists
  • 29:32 - 29:37
    even richer than they already were by giving them brand-new water supply was
  • 29:37 - 29:42
    really a kind of a remarkable feat.>> They are conning LA into building it but
  • 29:42 - 29:45
    the water is not going to go to LA.It's coming right here..
  • 29:45 - 29:50
    >> What?>> Everything you can see. Everything around us. I was at the Hall of
  • 29:50 - 29:59
    records today.>> The original title for Chinatown I actually had-- was going to
  • 29:59 - 30:06
    call it water and power. Because you know that's what it came. And water was
  • 30:06 - 30:19
    power. It was money. And those who knew how to manipulate it like much more
  • 30:19 - 30:22
    directly than anybody could ever manipulate a stock market could make money off
  • 30:22 - 30:29
    of it. And you could see it. It was a palpable thing. Running through your
  • 30:29 - 30:35
    movie. You know? I mean just a river of greed.>> Do you have any idea what this
  • 30:35 - 30:41
    land would be worth with the study water supply? About 30 million more than they
  • 30:41 - 30:47
    paid for it.>> The syndicate began plowing under their newly developed San
  • 30:47 - 30:53
    Fernando orange groves for tract homes. Advance guard of the largest subdivision
  • 30:53 - 30:59
    in history. The value of their land had gone up tenfold.
  • 30:59 - 31:04
    >> This is a great age of salesmanship. Because these were masters of the art of
  • 31:04 - 31:10
    encouraging people to envision on an empty hillside the great cities, the towns,
  • 31:10 - 31:14
    the schools, the churches, the synagogues, which would one day be there had they
  • 31:14 - 31:19
    but the faith that the salesman had. Owning your own home in this region was
  • 31:19 - 31:24
    given an almost quasi-religious value that your children would not be delinquent
  • 31:24 - 31:27
    if you had a home. That your marriage would be happy but many of the ills of our
  • 31:27 - 31:33
    society were due to the fact that people lived in cities and rented.
  • 31:33 - 31:38
    >> Mulholland himself did not profit directly from the syndicates dealings but
  • 31:38 - 31:44
    he was now the highest-paid public employee in California. The University of
  • 31:44 - 31:48
    California gave an honorary degree to a doctor Mulholland the penniless
  • 31:48 - 31:52
    immigrant who never finished grade school but could keep the entire LA water
  • 31:52 - 32:00
    system in his head. LA now had a Mulholland school, Mulholland dam, Mulholland
  • 32:00 - 32:09
    reservoir. And it named its new winding scenic drive the Mulholland Highway.
  • 32:09 - 32:13
    >> Every kid in LA knew-- it was one of the first names you learned when you
  • 32:13 - 32:17
    hit-- when you were old enough to get a junior operator's license because that's
  • 32:17 - 32:24
    where you parked your car to make out. You know? So you know that's one
  • 32:24 - 32:29
    association with Mulholland is where you took your girl.
  • 32:29 - 32:33
    >> The men in the family that was a staple of conversation-- waterworks. There
  • 32:33 - 32:38
    was always a Dodge to get the family to go out and it was usually either to see
  • 32:38 - 32:43
    the wildflowers in the spring but it somehow always ended up that we were
  • 32:43 - 32:50
    standing in front of some big turbine or waterworks and with the men discussing
  • 32:50 - 32:56
    all of just the way you know I had to discuss impressionist paintings with a
  • 32:56 - 33:02
    friend at the County Museum.>> The city which never had a reason to be now had
  • 33:02 - 33:08
    1000 oil wells, its own automobile and airplane factories, and before long, 90%
  • 33:08 - 33:15
    of all the worlds movies would be made in LA. The imported Owens River allow the
  • 33:15 - 33:19
    city to expand and three times the rate Mulholland had used in his aqueduct
  • 33:19 - 33:25
    calculations.>> It wasn't a prophet. He couldn't foresee that LA would grow the
  • 33:25 - 33:28
    way it did.And that's what upset a lot of the balance.
  • 33:28 - 33:34
    >> A inaudible committee tried to nominate William Mulholland for mayor. He said
  • 33:34 - 33:38
    he would rather give birth to a porcupine backwards than the mayor of Los
  • 33:38 - 33:45
    Angeles.>> It was a scramble. I mean the city kept growing and the Chamber of
  • 33:45 - 33:50
    Commerce kept booming and there were all these marvelous come-ons from to the
  • 33:50 - 33:54
    railroad companies and from the Chamber of Commerce and he used to joke and say
  • 33:54 - 33:58
    that he thought the only thing that can stop LA from growing was to kill Frank
  • 33:58 - 34:03
    Wiggins and Frank Wiggins was the president of the Chamber of Commerce who spent
  • 34:04 - 34:10
    his lifetime booming LA all over the country. And encouraging more people and so
  • 34:11 - 34:17
    it was a little bit like the sorcerer's apprentice. You start the process going
  • 34:17 - 34:21
    and you got to have more water and more water and more water. And you, the
  • 34:21 - 34:26
    father of the city's water system are supposed to continue to provide this
  • 34:26 - 34:30
    water. It's a terrible place to be. And you've got to be ingenious and inventive
  • 34:30 - 34:38
    and come up with new ideas for getting water.>> Now there were 60,000 realtors.
  • 34:38 - 34:42
    The Chamber of Commerce sent millions of promotional brochures to the Midwest
  • 34:43 - 34:50
    and New England to Guatemala City and Paris. Only 10 years after Mulholland
  • 34:50 - 34:55
    finished his great aqueduct with a fourfold surplus, LA was running out of
  • 34:55 - 35:03
    water. And he was pondering new sources.The Colorado, Mono Lake, or the Sierras.
  • 35:03 - 35:08
    >> Maybe the best example of the metamorphosis of Mulholland into an obsessive
  • 35:08 - 35:15
    water seeker was described to me by Horace Albright who was back in the 20s a
  • 35:15 - 35:20
    superintendent at Yosemite national Park. And he was at a banquet table with
  • 35:20 - 35:26
    Mulholland and Mulholland started waxing eloquent about how beautiful the valley
  • 35:26 - 35:31
    is and then he said what he would do if he were in charge is he would send
  • 35:31 - 35:37
    photographers into the valley and let them photograph all day long all night
  • 35:37 - 35:42
    every season and just have the most astounding collection of Yosemite
  • 35:42 - 35:46
    photographs that you could ever imagine. Put them in books and send them free to
  • 35:46 - 35:52
    every library in the world and then he would go in there and build a great big
  • 35:52 - 36:22
    dam and stop the God damned waste.>> Just to the north of Yosemite, late John
  • 36:40 - 36:48
    Muir's beloved Hetch Hetchy Valley.Here, LA's rival San Francisco was in fact
  • 36:48 - 36:54
    planning a dam which would soon permanently submerge Hetch Hetchy under 300 feet
  • 36:54 - 37:03
    of water. Owens Valley had in fact gotten off easy compared to Hetch Hetchy.
  • 37:03 - 37:07
    Mulholland's aqueduct had only dewatered the southern half of the valley.
  • 37:07 - 37:12
    Leaving the northern towns and farms to flourish during World War I.
  • 37:12 - 37:16
    >> Well, Owens Valley was an absolute you might say showplace. It produced
  • 37:16 - 37:21
    fruit-- of the people from LA would go nuts over to get this fruit from here. I
  • 37:21 - 37:25
    can remember when the sky would get black with flights of ducks. This was one of
  • 37:25 - 37:30
    the major flyaways. Oh, absolutely black with them. I mean that. The sky would
  • 37:30 - 37:34
    be black and even for a day or two or for hours and hours.
  • 37:34 - 37:41
    >> It was a great time to live up here. It was a very close knit community. You
  • 37:41 - 37:42
    know? Every Saturday night they would keep the opera house open all night and
  • 37:42 - 37:48
    they would show the movie and when the movie was over they would push the chairs
  • 37:48 - 37:51
    back and everybody would dance all night. Then they'd have a breakfast and
  • 37:51 - 37:55
    everybody would go home back to their branches at sunup, you know? Did this
  • 37:55 - 38:08
    every Saturday night and it was a great time to live in the Owens Valley.
  • 38:08 - 38:16
    >> What few people knew was that William Mulholland was about to turn his
  • 38:16 - 38:23
    attention to what remained of the Owens River.>> This growing city of Los
  • 38:23 - 38:29
    Angeles becomes like a vampire making a direct connection to the major artery of
  • 38:29 - 38:34
    the Owens Valley which is the Owens River. And of course imagine those ranchers
  • 38:34 - 38:38
    who were initially told that Los Angeles would be their partner, their friend,
  • 38:38 - 38:42
    that they would grow and prosperity along with the city began to see that the
  • 38:42 - 38:46
    vampire was sucking the lifeblood and that their fertile fields were becoming
  • 38:46 - 38:52
    parched and nonproductive.>> In the wet years since 1905, relations between the
  • 38:52 - 38:58
    city and the Valley had been surprisingly cordial but now there was drought. The
  • 38:58 - 39:03
    city sunk 52 turbine wells into the valley floor to pump groundwater into the
  • 39:03 - 39:07
    aqueduct crippling surrounding ranches.>> What people resented here is they
  • 39:07 - 39:11
    didn't have the option. They didn't have a choice. And the pressure that had
  • 39:11 - 39:15
    built over 20 years and the inaudible was done and this whole water we're
  • 39:15 - 39:21
    talking about they could care nothing about this property.
  • 39:21 - 39:25
    >> On Sunday my mother would take me for drives and she would always talk about
  • 39:25 - 39:31
    apple orchards and peach orchards. And it wasn't until years later that I
  • 39:31 - 39:34
    realized because growing up in Bishop, there was always a-- we were surrounded
  • 39:34 - 39:39
    by sagebrush. It was always dry. It was always dusty. There was always dust in
  • 39:39 - 39:44
    the air. And I couldn't even imagine what my mother was talking about. I
  • 39:44 - 39:50
    couldn't imagine. And it took me until a young adult to realize that it was much
  • 39:50 - 40:02
    different at one time. I would have liked to have seen what my grandparents saw
  • 40:02 - 40:07
    there. I'd like to see the green. I'd like to see the orchards. It must've been
  • 40:07 - 40:11
    gorgeous. It must've been gorgeous. I mean I think that the Owens Valley is
  • 40:11 - 40:19
    beautiful now. I grew up there. And is beautiful now. So can you imagine what it
  • 40:19 - 40:24
    was like when my grandfather was there? When my great-grandfather was there? It
  • 40:24 - 40:36
    could make me cry.>> Anger mounted as Mulholland's men cut ranchers canals. The
  • 40:36 - 40:41
    city bought more land, siphoned off more and more water. Half the crops were
  • 40:41 - 40:48
    gone by 1924.Schools and businesses began to close. Owens Lake went bone dry.
  • 40:48 - 41:00
    Rumors of resistance began to fly. Someone blew a hole in the siphon. And then,
  • 41:00 - 41:05
    just before Thanksgiving in 1924, the local bank president and 100 citizens
  • 41:06 - 41:14
    seize the aqueduct. They opened the floodgates and sent the entire flow of the
  • 41:14 - 41:27
    Owens River down a ditch and back into its ancient channel in the valley floor.
  • 41:27 - 41:31
    >> They organized a caravan of these old model T's that drove I think probably
  • 41:31 - 41:37
    dozens of cars down to the Alabama gates on the aqueduct where there was a
  • 41:37 - 41:40
    turnout valve will they could basically stop the flow of water to Los Angeles.
  • 41:40 - 41:46
    >> Talk about community involvement. I know that my grandfather was there. I
  • 41:46 - 41:52
    have spoken recently with my mother's cousin and she said that she remembers
  • 41:52 - 41:58
    that it was a party that her mother got her up early and got her dressed up and
  • 41:58 - 42:06
    she was only four. So, there was a-- I me that was a great step and those people
  • 42:06 - 42:13
    didn't move from the Alabama gates. They didn't move. That took a lot of
  • 42:13 - 42:14
    courage. That did.Inaudible>> There wasn't any guns involved. There wasn't that
  • 42:14 - 42:25
    type of thing. There'd only been a inaudible from there and he was sympathetic
  • 42:25 - 42:33
    to his inaudible if you will.So there was a whole bunch of oh, arbitration but
  • 42:33 - 42:44
    discussion but interest focused on this thing is mainly what they were after.
  • 42:44 - 42:46
    >> The crowd grew to 700 picnicking, singing Onward Christian Soldiers, playing
  • 42:46 - 42:58
    Enrico Caruso on a hand cranked phonograph. Superintendent Mulholland sent city
  • 42:58 - 43:28
    police to take back the water but the local sheriff stood between the officers
  • 43:29 - 43:30
    and the citizens.>> This news did travel around the world. This was a great big
  • 43:30 - 43:36
    story at the time. And it was embarrassing for Los Angeles. Because they were
  • 43:36 - 43:47
    being cast as the villain. And you know it was hard to see that any other way.
  • 43:47 - 43:52
    >> Mulholland saw this as number one an instance of civil insurrection but saw
  • 43:52 - 43:56
    that nothing less than the survival of Los Angeles itself was at stake and that
  • 43:56 - 44:02
    basically that had to be a cleansing of farmers from that region. That the two
  • 44:02 - 44:07
    communities were incompatible. And that they would have to be bought out.
  • 44:07 - 44:11
    >> And so they decided to try to sit down with some of the leaders of the Owens
  • 44:11 - 44:17
    Valley and negotiate some kind of a settlement.>> After week, the local bank
  • 44:17 - 44:21
    president told the Raiders that a Los Angeles consortium would negotiate a fair
  • 44:21 - 44:26
    price for the remaining water rights in Owens Valley. LA would even consider
  • 44:26 - 44:31
    sharing the water. With cheers and congratulations, the ranchers and their
  • 44:31 - 44:37
    families went home. Only to learn later that the deal had fallen through.
  • 44:37 - 44:43
    >> As these negotiations such as they were are going on, the city is busily
  • 44:43 - 44:49
    buying more rights, land and water rights in the Valley. Basically buying the
  • 44:49 - 44:55
    whole place up.>> While ranchers occupied the aqueduct, city agents had secured
  • 44:55 - 45:00
    legal options on virtually all remaining land and water rights in Owens Valley.
  • 45:00 - 45:09
    They bought whole towns. Even the county seat and County jail.
  • 45:09 - 45:15
    >> More trouble. And it's not the first time either. The last bombing was four
  • 45:15 - 45:21
    years ago and ranchers objecting to the city cutting across their property are
  • 45:21 - 45:27
    suspected. It's one of the main line pipes about 150 miles north of Los Angeles
  • 45:27 - 45:31
    that supplies water to the big town. It's a lucky Los Angeles has an emergency
  • 45:31 - 45:37
    watershed or this might have resulted in a terrible drought disaster. The police
  • 45:37 - 45:41
    are after the fiends who did this rotten job let's hope they get them. There is
  • 45:41 - 45:51
    no punishment too strong for them.>> They received a phone call and this is like
  • 45:51 - 45:56
    telling Leonardo da Vinci that someone has just slashed the Mona Lisa. I mean he
  • 45:56 - 46:09
    was just appalled outraged and furious and at that point, a certain ugly turn of
  • 46:09 - 46:15
    events occurred. The mood changed.>> Now, night after night, saboteurs dynamited
  • 46:15 - 46:20
    Mulholland's masterwork. The great aqueduct inaudible
  • 46:20 - 46:31
    >> They had numerous stories about my grandfather taking off and blowing up
  • 46:31 - 46:39
    dynamiting the aqueduct. It took great pride in the fact of that the many raids
  • 46:39 - 46:44
    to blow up the aqueduct.>> They would go along and dynamite sections and then
  • 46:44 - 46:48
    they'd go right off back up into the hills, would camp out for weeks and weeks
  • 46:48 - 46:53
    and weeks after they had bombed it they were afraid to come home and have them
  • 46:53 - 46:58
    have their wives and kids had to basically hold family and Fort together.
  • 46:58 - 47:04
    >> The city named three women and 15 men as ringleaders. But could never win a
  • 47:04 - 47:09
    single conviction.>> They were heroes you know in your own mind. You know, those
  • 47:09 - 47:13
    guys are great for what they did and everything. But we always thought that you
  • 47:13 - 47:17
    wish we'd been there if we were kids, you know, but--
  • 47:17 - 47:22
    >> Interestingly enough, then he went on to be a California State Sen. So he
  • 47:22 - 47:26
    wasn't a crazy man. He was just a man on a mission and a purpose.
  • 47:26 - 47:35
    >> Mulholland and his colleagues said look, this can't go on. This is-- you are
  • 47:35 - 47:42
    threatening the water supply for a great city. This is criminal. And they sent
  • 47:42 - 47:47
    machine guns up there and it stopped.>> Train loads of them were going up to the
  • 47:47 - 47:51
    Owens Valley and basically imposing martial law. There were searchlights and
  • 47:51 - 47:57
    floodlights up and down that Valley sweeping across the aqueduct all night long.
  • 47:57 - 48:02
    >> Mulholland sent 600 heavily armed police to secure the city's water supply.
  • 48:02 - 48:08
    Backed by the full force of state and federal law, endorsed by the Chamber of
  • 48:08 - 48:16
    Commerce.>> As Jean Renoir said, everyone has his reasons. And I'm sure he had
  • 48:16 - 48:23
    his reasons and he justified it because he had to. I can see how it would've
  • 48:23 - 48:28
    been very easy to get carried away by powerful men saying see what you can do
  • 48:28 - 48:32
    for the city. You know? What a great man you will be. You know?
  • 48:32 - 48:40
    >> When I was a kid, you know, he was a bad guy. He was the guy with the black
  • 48:40 - 48:44
    hat. He was-- we all hated him, you know? I mean we all talked about a lot and
  • 48:44 - 48:51
    you know what evil guy he was, but he had a fantastic vision but he didn't care
  • 48:51 - 48:54
    who he stepped over to get it. He didn't care what happened to the Owens Valley.
  • 48:54 - 48:58
    >> I would say that when I was a little girl it was not good to be a Mulholland
  • 48:58 - 49:04
    in Owens Valley and I was never taken there and my folks if they should chance
  • 49:04 - 49:10
    to travel my mother told me they always registered at a hotel using her maiden
  • 49:10 - 49:17
    name. Because we were just not well liked in Owens Valley and it was not a good
  • 49:17 - 49:24
    name to carry.>> Well, Mulholland was a very honest man. Because he said that
  • 49:24 - 49:29
    everyone in Bishop was a son of a bitch and that there wasn't enough pine trees
  • 49:29 - 49:34
    to hang the natives on which they deserved whereas the rest of them they went
  • 49:34 - 49:38
    with the protocol and with inaudible and so on but not Mulholland.
  • 49:38 - 49:44
    >> He knew that it was a vein hope I mean to think that they could go back I
  • 49:44 - 49:50
    mean the water had been taken. It was the fait accompli. There was no turning
  • 49:51 - 49:56
    back. Owens Valley was not going to be reverted back to what it had been in
  • 49:56 - 50:01
    1905. That deed had been done.>> Somebody did put up a sign and that said Los
  • 50:01 - 50:07
    Angeles city limits way out in the Owens Valley as kind of a bitter joke. It was
  • 50:07 - 50:12
    really than everyone knew William Mulholland had triumphed. He had one the
  • 50:12 - 50:18
    Valley was really his.>> Before long, city bulldozers began knocking down
  • 50:18 - 50:26
    farmhouses and feeling and irrigation ditches.>> Well first we had the Valley
  • 50:26 - 50:29
    then the sellers came in and took away from us in the city of Los Angeles came
  • 50:29 - 50:44
    and they took it away from them.>> All Mulholland needed now was a place to
  • 50:44 - 50:49
    store water for the growing city.But former LA Mayor Fred Eaton owned the only
  • 50:50 - 50:54
    reservoir site in Owens Valley.And was demanding $1 million for it. So
  • 50:54 - 51:01
    Mulholland build a huge dam in the hills just 40 miles from downtown LA. It was
  • 51:01 - 51:06
    the largest arch support dam in North America. The final link in a decade of
  • 51:06 - 51:13
    triumph. By the spring of 1928, the reservoir in San Francisquito Canyon was a
  • 51:14 - 51:18
    full to the brim with a year's supply of Owens River water. Far from the scene
  • 51:18 - 51:25
    of battle. On March 12, workers noticed a small leak on the north side.
  • 51:25 - 51:33
    Mulholland inspected the leak pronounced the dam sound and went home to bed.
  • 51:33 - 51:39
    >> My grandfather was awakened from his sleep with a phone call saying the dam
  • 51:39 - 51:47
    had gone out. And his first response was he stumbled toward the phone was oh
  • 51:47 - 52:01
    please God don't let people be killed.>> There was no warning. There was no
  • 52:01 - 52:09
    warning system. And it started wiping out whole communities.
  • 52:09 - 52:19
    >> You had so much water in that dam. That there were 1000 ton blocks of
  • 52:19 - 52:27
    concrete riding the crest. It was not water at a certain point. It was trees,
  • 52:27 - 52:37
    homes, blocks of concrete, rocks, rubble. It was a semisolid wall advancing at
  • 52:37 - 52:54
    20 or 30 miles an hour 40 and 50, 60 feet high. You couldn't run from it.
  • 52:54 - 53:07
    >> I was five years old when the St. Francis dam broke. And with my limited
  • 53:07 - 53:11
    perceptions I realized some dreadful thing. It was like bringing a dark curtain
  • 53:11 - 53:20
    down over a lighted area. My father took me-- he was-- my father was stunned and
  • 53:20 - 53:26
    he took me in the car. My mother was not well at the time. And we drove up to
  • 53:26 - 53:34
    the dam site and on the way up, he taught me how to say San Francisquito Canyon
  • 53:34 - 53:39
    and we rehearsed it over and over as if it were some kind of a catechism lesson
  • 53:39 - 53:46
    of what it did for me was imprint that name forever in my mind as a scene of
  • 53:46 - 53:55
    some terrible fate which had befallen our family.
  • 53:56 - 54:08
    >> Mulholland surveyed the greatest man-made disaster in California history. His
  • 54:08 - 54:38
    St. Francis dam had killed as many people as the San Francisco earthquake.
  • 54:39 - 54:45
    >> I've always been moved all my life at the pictures that were taken of in the
  • 54:45 - 54:52
    morning that he was-- went up and surveyed the ruins of the dam failure. It's
  • 54:52 - 54:59
    like looking at the most stricken human being I've ever seen. It's a dead stark
  • 54:59 - 55:05
    look at his on his face as he stands amid the rubble of something he had
  • 55:05 - 55:11
    created. It was an engineer's most horrible fate any engineer could have to
  • 55:11 - 55:21
    build a structure that fails and also kills.>> So Mulholland was in a state of
  • 55:21 - 55:28
    shock. He made an initial effort really. It wasn't much of an effort-- to blame
  • 55:28 - 55:32
    the whole thing on dynamiters phonetic which was the term he now used
  • 55:32 - 55:35
    generically to refer to anybody in the Owens Valley.
  • 55:35 - 55:41
    But it was soon very obvious that the dam had failed by itself and nobody had
  • 55:41 - 55:48
    sabotaged it and that Mulholland had paid a visit to the dam just hours earlier
  • 55:48 - 55:56
    and said that the dam was fine. So his reputation which had-- he had been a God
  • 55:56 - 56:02
    figure in Los Angeles.>> Mulholland went from being of the father of the city,
  • 56:02 - 56:18
    the founder of the city to standing possible indictment.
  • 56:18 - 56:24
    >> The precise cause was never found. No criminal charges were ever filed, but
  • 56:24 - 56:30
    the coroner's jury held William Mulholland responsible. He accepted the blame.
  • 56:30 - 56:33
    Broke down in sobs and said that he envied the dead.
  • 56:33 - 56:51
    >> They kept slowly taking away the water from the canals and the ditches and
  • 56:51 - 56:55
    everything slowly but surely they got everything siphoned down and so the land
  • 56:55 - 57:00
    of the trees and the whole form says they all died off and all the old orchards
  • 57:00 - 57:03
    died off and they are all gone now all the houses are all gone. So they just
  • 57:03 - 57:12
    turned back into a desert as it was, basically.>> When we traveled to Los
  • 57:12 - 57:16
    Angeles we watched the aqueduct. My parents would
  • 57:16 - 57:24
    always say, there is our water. Girls, that water came from the Owens Valley.
  • 57:24 - 57:32
    And as a child I remember feeling animosity towards Los Angeles. You always
  • 57:32 - 57:39
    knew. He always felt that they took our water.>> Mulholland resigned in
  • 57:39 - 57:44
    disgrace. His real achievements clouded by the disaster and by the suffering in
  • 57:44 - 57:49
    Owens Valley. His plans for still greater aqueducts lay on the drawing board but
  • 57:49 - 57:54
    to the people of LA he was an embarrassment. Officials began referring to the
  • 57:54 - 58:02
    Mulholland reservoir as the Hollywood reservoir. Owens Valley was history but
  • 58:02 - 58:07
    fantasy and folklore lived on.The myth of rampaging bullies destroying a
  • 58:07 - 58:10
    paradise, gallant ranchers defending their homes.>> These gentlemen bring word
  • 58:10 - 58:15
    from the capital. The inaudible Valley has been condemned.
  • 58:15 - 58:19
    >> Condemned?>> What do you mean?>> It seems that Metripol phonetic City needs
  • 58:19 - 58:24
    more water and power. So the state has decided to build a dam across cut stone
  • 58:24 - 58:28
    Canyon and turn the Valley into a reservoir.>> Just let them start trying to
  • 58:28 - 58:33
    build a dam around here.>> The state authorized me to build a dam. And it's
  • 58:33 - 58:38
    going to be built whether you like it or not.>> Take it easy, you don't know the
  • 58:38 - 58:54
    kind of people you're dealing with, Mister.>> But he will find out.
  • 58:55 - 59:00
    >> In 1934 using Mulholland's original plans, the Metropolitan water District
  • 59:00 - 59:04
    lasted a new aqueduct all the way to the Arizona State line to its second River,
  • 59:04 - 59:15
    the Colorado.>> Unless we take immediate steps to bring in water from an outside
  • 59:15 - 59:20
    source, the people of Southern California will be up against a serious water
  • 59:20 - 59:25
    shortage. But we are fortunate in having within our reach a water source capable
  • 59:25 - 59:31
    of supplying our needs. This source is the Colorado River.
  • 59:31 - 59:36
    Inaudible>> The governor of Arizona deployed his state militia to the river's
  • 59:36 - 59:45
    bank to stop Los Angeles from taking Colorado River water.
  • 59:45 - 59:58
    >> It was to no avail.>> Final resolution would not come until 30 years later
  • 59:58 - 60:01
    after one of the longest court cases in American history.
  • 60:01 - 60:06
    >> On the day when the waters of the Colorado River rushes into this aqueduct
  • 60:06 - 60:12
    the greatest engineering feat of its kind ever accomplished will take its place
  • 60:12 - 60:19
    among the wonders of the world.>> It is a wonderful thing to contemplate this
  • 60:19 - 60:24
    new conquest of the great Southwest were everything that man desires is
  • 60:24 - 60:30
    present. Everything except sufficient water. With sufficient water we can be
  • 60:30 - 60:38
    assured of a great and a stable civilization.>> Wow. What a day. I'm afraid
  • 60:38 - 60:43
    we're going to be busy. Hi, Greg. It was a high-speed pursuit earlier this
  • 60:43 - 60:46
    morning. They have the San Bernardino westbound on and off ramps at Atlantic
  • 60:46 - 61:09
    closed down because of a police investigation.Bumper to bumper to Puente.
  • 61:09 - 61:10
    Foreign Language Spoken>> -- we'd like to welcome you all aboard Universal
  • 61:10 - 61:13
    Studios Hollywood super trim presented by Texaco. Oh, yeah. Uh-oh. I think I
  • 61:13 - 61:28
    hear something. It might get a little bit wet.>> Hey, watch out for that tree
  • 61:28 - 61:37
    back there!>> He brought enough elements together, water, population, wealth so
  • 61:37 - 61:44
    that Los Angeles was now almost condemned to grow and grow and grow.
  • 61:44 - 61:55
    >> So after the 1920s, Los Angeles' history is almost defined by an obsessive
  • 61:55 - 62:03
    constant search for more and more water. Hoover dam was authorized in 1928,
  • 62:03 - 62:10
    finished by the mid-30s then Mono Lake which is north of the Owens Valley was
  • 62:10 - 62:14
    hooked up to the aqueduct. And began draining all the streams that feed this
  • 62:14 - 62:20
    irreplaceable natural wonder out there.>> Mulholland had long had his eye on
  • 62:20 - 62:26
    Mono Lake, 100 miles north of Owens Valley. In 1936, his successors dusted off
  • 62:26 - 62:31
    his plans and pushed the aqueduct north to mono seeking again the greatest good
  • 62:31 - 62:35
    for the greatest number.>> People really shouldn't have any problem with our
  • 62:35 - 62:40
    water system and take it for granted or the water people are doing their job
  • 62:40 - 62:47
    well. I always felt that I was working for a good purpose. I wasn't doing
  • 62:47 - 62:54
    something that in my view really didn't basically benefit society. I felt that I
  • 62:54 - 62:59
    was working on something that was a fundamental benefit to society. I was proud
  • 62:59 - 63:04
    of that.>> The people of LA could not depend on water from ancient streams
  • 63:04 - 63:16
    feeding Mono Lake.>> This is the desert. This is the grim waterless waste that
  • 63:16 - 63:20
    covered most of Los Angeles even within the memory of living men. Here between
  • 63:20 - 63:21
    the mountains and the sea, Los Angeles was built. Here is a living breathing
  • 63:21 - 63:26
    proof that energy and vision can build a metropolis almost overnight. Angelenos
  • 63:26 - 63:33
    phonetic are likely to live on a ranch still within city limits. Perhaps a few
  • 63:33 - 63:37
    years ago they were residents of Iowa, Illinois, New Jersey. Here they quickly
  • 63:37 - 63:42
    abandon old conventions of inaudible. Dress as they please make the most of
  • 63:42 - 63:48
    their mild seductive climate. The inaudible introduction to this promised land
  • 63:48 - 63:55
    of exotic people, sunshine, stucco, money, optimism. Success is her pattern.
  • 63:56 - 64:10
    This is LA.This is America.>> The rise of Nazis in Germany and the fleeing of
  • 64:10 - 64:11
    all that talent have the creation of a euro Southern California. Otto Preminger
  • 64:11 - 64:14
    who was of course fleeing the Nazis was at the Hillcrest country club and people
  • 64:14 - 64:17
    playing cards and people were talking. And these two people started talking in
  • 64:17 - 64:22
    Hungarian and they were talking white Hungarian phonetic. Otto Preminger said,
  • 64:22 - 64:24
    what's the matter, he says, why are you talking in Hungarian? This is Los
  • 64:24 - 64:39
    Angeles. He said, talk German.>> From Berlin, New York, Alabama, from all over
  • 64:39 - 64:46
    the world people flooded into Southern California. They said it was just like
  • 64:46 - 64:58
    everyone else only more so.>> There was a new paradise. It's something like--
  • 64:58 - 65:01
    you know love and good health. You really miss it by its absence very often. I
  • 65:01 - 65:07
    mean it just wasn't aware-- I was never aware growing up, but how wonderful it
  • 65:07 - 65:21
    was until it was gone and that was the air itself. The air was wonderful. If you
  • 65:21 - 65:28
    stop and think about the mean temperature of the climate here year-round, it's
  • 65:28 - 65:33
    probably the most perfect climate to you know, sort of walk around and with
  • 65:33 - 65:48
    almost no clothing because the air you just feel that is almost an extension of
  • 65:48 - 65:49
    your own skin. It doesn't-- it's not too hot, it's not too cold.
  • 65:49 - 65:52
    >> The machinery of water acquisition overworked the Owens River, the Colorado,
  • 65:52 - 65:59
    and the Mono basin. In 1964, the Metropolitan water District proposed diverting
  • 65:59 - 66:03
    the Columbia River to Southern California. The future had arrived.
  • 66:03 - 66:09
    >> Somebody finally decided rather than just go after another source of water
  • 66:09 - 66:13
    every 10 or 20 years, why don't we go to where there's so much water we will
  • 66:13 - 66:19
    have enough for 200 years. And where was that place? Alaska. It would have
  • 66:19 - 66:25
    brought this water down in huge jolts, irrigated Nevada, irrigated Eastern
  • 66:25 - 66:28
    Oregon on the way. Some of it would've gone all the way to Mexico. It was going
  • 66:28 - 66:34
    to go to Arizona, it was going to go to Texas.>> Nobody really blinked. There
  • 66:34 - 66:37
    were lots of people in the business who thought well, yeah. It's maybe a little
  • 66:37 - 66:40
    premature, but this is going to happen someday because it has to.
  • 66:40 - 66:47
    >> This is not a mirage. But rather a preview of an atomic Marvel of tomorrow. A
  • 66:47 - 66:53
    milestone in man's development. A nuclear powered Agro industrial complex. With
  • 66:53 - 66:59
    a nuclear reactor as the energy source, and a D salting plant as the fresh water
  • 66:59 - 67:04
    source, the desert may be transformed into a nuclear powered Agro industrial
  • 67:04 - 67:12
    complex.>> There were plans to last so you know icebergs and tell them down. You
  • 67:12 - 67:19
    know,it was like the flimflam man. I mean there was no end to these people who
  • 67:19 - 67:28
    had plans to dam San Francisco Bay, to pipelines beyond your wildest dreams.
  • 67:28 - 67:32
    These-- and this wasn't about carrying oil. This was about carrying water. This
  • 67:32 - 67:39
    is water.>> When these reactors are coupled to a desalting plant, approximately
  • 67:39 - 67:42
    1 billion gallons of fresh water will be produced per day.
  • 67:42 - 67:51
    >> Of course at the time, nobody was challenging the idea of using 8 gallons of
  • 67:51 - 67:59
    water per flush in a toilet. Or irrigating your lawn to the point where it's
  • 67:59 - 68:03
    standing an inch deep in water. Nobody thought about conservation. People only
  • 68:03 - 68:08
    thought about supply.>> The city had long since exhausted supply from the tiny
  • 68:08 - 68:17
    Los Angeles River and cemented over its channel by 1960. The DWP built a
  • 68:17 - 68:21
    reservoir to store supply of Owens River water near the center of Los Angeles.
  • 68:21 - 68:24
    >> The Los Angeles city police helicopter is here. The Los Angeles city fire
  • 68:24 - 68:31
    department helicopters here. The police are on the ground with motorcycles and
  • 68:31 - 68:36
    automobiles. Trying to effectively activate people from here so there can't
  • 68:36 - 68:42
    possibly be any more loss of life than there is. Property no telling how much
  • 68:42 - 68:50
    property has already been lost.>> A triangle shaped wedge tears out of the
  • 68:50 - 68:51
    asphalt and concrete lined wall of the earth-filled phonetic dam of the Baldwin
  • 68:51 - 68:52
    Hills reservoir. And millions of gallons of water raced down the canyon toward
  • 68:52 - 68:53
    the homes below in the community between downtown Los Angeles and International
  • 68:53 - 69:09
    Airport. Almost 300 million gallons of water in 77 minutes. An incredible
  • 69:09 - 69:20
    disaster.>> The Department of water and power had no choice but to carry on
  • 69:20 - 69:29
    since it now served 3 million people. In 1966, LA acquired its third River like
  • 69:29 - 69:33
    a giant version of Mulholland's Owens Valley project, the California State
  • 69:33 - 69:38
    aqueducts now brought the Feather River from 600 miles north. Enough water to
  • 69:38 - 69:47
    fill the Rose Bowl every 90 minutes.>> Los Angeles by the 70s was reaching 200
  • 69:47 - 69:52
    miles in one direction, 250 miles in another direction and 600 miles in a third
  • 69:52 - 70:01
    direction. For water. And it still wasn't enough.>> In 1970 the Department of
  • 70:01 - 70:06
    water and power using Mulholland's original sketches finished the second
  • 70:06 - 70:17
    barrel, a parallel aqueduct not far from the original. Sucking now twice as much
  • 70:17 - 70:18
    water from Mono Lake. The million year old Lake now fell 2 feet every year. It
  • 70:18 - 70:25
    was the only stop for a million migrating seabirds on their way from the Arctic
  • 70:25 - 70:31
    to Bolivia.>> You could see the lake going down and down and down. Pretty soon
  • 70:31 - 70:34
    it it was not even growing around the lake anymore. Everything was drying up all
  • 70:34 - 70:41
    the little springs were dying. You know. That was really devastating because we
  • 70:41 - 70:47
    thought the whole Lake is going to be like this. And when you think of God's
  • 70:47 - 70:51
    given like you think it should be like it was.>> The local people had already
  • 70:51 - 70:55
    resigned themselves to the fact that the lake was going to dry up or get to a
  • 70:55 - 71:06
    very small level. Just because of the adversary Department of water and power is
  • 71:06 - 71:07
    too big to fight. It was not anything that anybody can do.
  • 71:07 - 71:12
    >> Great alkali dust storms began boiling up off the exposed shores of Mono and
  • 71:12 - 71:17
    the dry bed of Owens Lake. By 1974, Owens Valley the Switzerland of America had
  • 71:18 - 71:24
    the worst particulate pollution in the country.>> The sense that somehow LA had
  • 71:24 - 71:32
    sinned against another people became a central imagery in this whole water
  • 71:32 - 71:36
    story. And one that I've always had a lot of trouble
  • 71:36 - 71:42
    with. Because I've always sympathized with the underdog but at the same time
  • 71:42 - 71:46
    I've been proud of my grandfather so it's given me a great deal of conflict to
  • 71:46 - 71:52
    have to come to terms with that.>> Why are you doing it? How much better can you
  • 71:52 - 71:54
    eat? What can you buy that you can't already afford?
  • 71:54 - 72:00
    >> The future, Mr. Gibbs. The future.>> And the crimes that they committed in
  • 72:00 - 72:07
    the name of the future, against the future is really the history of water in
  • 72:07 - 72:15
    California here in LA. I mean it's-- it's just the supreme irony.
  • 72:15 - 72:19
    >> See, Mr. Gibbs, most people never have to face the fact that at the right
  • 72:19 - 72:24
    time and the right place they are capable of anything.
  • 72:24 - 72:29
    >> Sometimes they are so monstrous that they can't figure out how to punish them
  • 72:30 - 72:35
    so they actually sort of reward them. And inaudible name is on the scenic route
  • 72:36 - 72:42
    of the city and inaudible of those names are on plaques as city founders. Rather
  • 72:42 - 72:49
    than in jail where they belonged.>> When I think of a movie like Chinatown as an
  • 72:49 - 72:55
    easy out it oversimplifies it's melodramatic. It's not true I may not literally
  • 72:55 - 73:03
    not true. But it provides a rather easy explanation of events and for people who
  • 73:03 - 73:15
    like to bash LA is perfect.New York Times loves to hold it up as a piece of
  • 73:15 - 73:21
    history.>> The movie Chinatown was bad at contorted history but it was powerful
  • 73:21 - 73:26
    myth.Rekindling violence against the Department of water and power. Now
  • 73:26 - 73:32
    headquartered in a building that cost as much as Mulholland's original aqueduct.
  • 73:32 - 73:37
    >> There was violence here before a long time ago back in 1924 angry farmers and
  • 73:37 - 73:43
    ranchers lined the wall armed with shotguns and rifles. They blew holes in the
  • 73:43 - 73:49
    aqueduct 17 times. This year it took this form a dynamite blast at the gates of
  • 73:49 - 73:54
    the first aqueduct the water for Los Angeles stopped briefly instead--
  • 73:54 - 73:58
    >> Resistance was futile. The Department of water and power by now had more
  • 73:58 - 74:04
    manpower than the population of Bishop more in fact than the entire population
  • 74:04 - 74:10
    of Owens Valley. But this time something had changed. David Gaines a young
  • 74:10 - 74:15
    biologist from LA and a dozen University of California students had begun a
  • 74:15 - 74:20
    careful study of Mono Lake's singular ecosystem. They found it on the brink of
  • 74:20 - 74:28
    collapse.>> We knew about Owens like of course. Now it's just a dry ditch you
  • 74:28 - 74:31
    know 100 miles to the south. We realized that Mono Lake could look like that
  • 74:31 - 74:37
    someday and once we realized both here, that all that would be lost we couldn't
  • 74:37 - 74:43
    let it just go down without making some effort to save it.
  • 74:43 - 74:49
    >> By 1976, Mono Lake had fallen 40 feet. Exposing mineral towers which had
  • 74:49 - 74:56
    formed underwater over the ages. It had become three times saltier than the
  • 74:56 - 75:00
    ocean.>> What we are asking what Mono Lake is asking all of us is where we going
  • 75:00 - 75:05
    to draw the line? If we don't share some water with Mono Lake will be next? Will
  • 75:05 - 75:10
    it be like Tahoe, will be the Eagle River? The Yukon? Will it be on and on until
  • 75:10 - 75:14
    the last of our singing rivers and beautiful lakes are gone because we've taken
  • 75:14 - 75:19
    every last drop we watched the last waterfall and the last salmon follow the
  • 75:19 - 75:24
    California State emblem the California grizzly into oblivion? It is a
  • 75:24 - 75:29
    battleground in that sense. It's asking us how much are we going to share with
  • 75:29 - 75:36
    the Earth?>> Well it was very primitive. I mean there was 12 people only one or
  • 75:36 - 75:41
    two cars everybody else did their research via bicycle. They did take their
  • 75:41 - 75:44
    binoculars and their backpack and their lunch and then hop on their bikes and
  • 75:44 - 75:48
    they'd ride down the dirt roads and dump their bikes and hike out for a couple
  • 75:48 - 75:56
    miles and then walk through mud and you know they were really the quintessential
  • 75:56 - 76:00
    researchers out there braving the elements.>> All those college boys come over
  • 76:00 - 76:05
    they all want to look like professors you know they got big beers you know and
  • 76:05 - 76:11
    so Mr. Gaines he was one of them. You know?And he looked just like the rest of
  • 76:11 - 76:16
    them. You know? Kind of like a hippie I'd say but I don't want to say you know
  • 76:16 - 76:22
    he wasn't a hippie but he looked that way.But he was pretty smart that guy. He
  • 76:22 - 76:28
    would start a thing going-->> When I grew up in Los Angeles I never learned
  • 76:28 - 76:33
    where water came from. And it was only after doing some complex calculations
  • 76:33 - 76:38
    that we learned that if diversions continued this Lake will fall another 40 to
  • 76:38 - 76:45
    60 vertical feet. What we will be left with is an alkaline waste land a sterile
  • 76:45 - 76:49
    chemical sump where there is now one of the most beautiful and life productive
  • 76:49 - 77:02
    places on earth.>> Far more than natural beauty was threatened at Mono Lake.
  • 77:02 - 77:08
    >> What was at stake was a big aquatic ecosystem that was very simple but very
  • 77:08 - 77:13
    productive. I mean the numbers are astronomical. You got algae and then the
  • 77:13 - 77:16
    brine shrimp eat the algae and then you've got millions of birds coming every
  • 77:16 - 77:23
    summer to eat the brine flies and the brine shrimp. A far off dream was out
  • 77:23 - 77:28
    there but I don't think we gazed up at it too much. It might be too
  • 77:28 - 77:33
    discouraging. I mean to have a handful of biologists fighting the Department of
  • 77:33 - 77:38
    water and power of the city of Los Angeles with a multimillion dollar budget was
  • 77:38 - 77:44
    too big of a contrast.>> When William Mulholland took water from Owens Valley
  • 77:44 - 77:50
    and Mono Lake years before, no one questioned the damage to nature. But an
  • 77:50 - 77:55
    environmental movement had come of age in America. Along with powerful new laws
  • 77:55 - 78:01
    and a great shift in public opinion. Committees at Mono Lake and Owens Valley
  • 78:01 - 78:06
    together with the Audubon Society, went to court to stop the water conquest
  • 78:06 - 78:11
    Mulholland had set in motion in 1905.>> If you're angry and have nothing else--
  • 78:11 - 78:16
    no other recourse I think dynamite comes to mind. And they were ranchers. They
  • 78:16 - 78:22
    understood dynamite. We were college biologists. No experience with dynamite. We
  • 78:22 - 78:27
    knew facts and figures and we knew that we could you know we were educated
  • 78:27 - 78:32
    people and we could probably figure out how to find lobbyists to go to help us
  • 78:32 - 78:36
    in Sacramento and how to find lawyers.People were saying well, ask for a lot. Go
  • 78:36 - 78:41
    way high and then you compromise down with the politicians and the agencies and
  • 78:41 - 78:46
    we were all biologists and we kind of said that doesn't sound right. Why can't
  • 78:46 - 78:51
    we just start with what we know is the truth and it just stay there forever? And
  • 78:51 - 78:56
    that's what we did.>> The courts ruled that drying out the Owens River or
  • 78:56 - 79:03
    streams feeding Mono Lake was not in the public interest. In 1988, the state
  • 79:03 - 79:06
    forced the city to return water to Mono for the first time in half a century.
  • 79:06 - 79:12
    Los Angeles began water conservation on a scale never before seen in America.
  • 79:12 - 79:19
    And now shares the water in a fragile peace with Owens Valley and Mono Lake.
  • 79:19 - 79:25
    >> One local person said, if you guys say the lake I'll eat my hat. It turns out
  • 79:25 - 79:30
    that we saved the lake and we have the regulations and people seem much happier.
  • 79:30 - 79:35
    We see water running down the creek fish in the creek. Maybe some of them
  • 79:36 - 79:38
    remember the great numbers of ducks and geese that were down at the lake and
  • 79:38 - 79:46
    they look forward to that being in the future again.
  • 79:46 - 79:50
    >> I didn't think that they would succeed in persuading the inaudible to let the
  • 79:50 - 79:58
    water in again.>> What you think they would not succeed?
  • 79:58 - 80:05
    >> Well, how can you fight the city of Los Angeles? So really this is a victory.
  • 80:05 - 80:14
    A great victory.>> David Gaines did not live to see the victory. He had died a
  • 80:14 - 80:28
    year before in an automobile accident not far from Mono Lake.
  • 80:28 - 80:35
    >> And so finally, the machine that Mulholland had set in motion just kind of
  • 80:35 - 80:42
    began to fall apart. The whole posture of the Los Angeles Department of water
  • 80:42 - 80:48
    and power and the city changed. The city negotiated with Mono Lake folks and
  • 80:48 - 80:54
    decided to give more water back to the lake. It gave up on the idea of importing
  • 80:54 - 81:00
    Klamath River water or Columbia River water.>> I think ultimately, it was
  • 81:00 - 81:07
    people's feeling why bring more water in if it just encourages more growth that
  • 81:07 - 81:12
    forces us to bring more water in. You know?It's sort of a death vortex. It's the
  • 81:12 - 81:17
    red Queen in Alice in Wonderland running faster and faster just to stay in
  • 81:17 - 81:26
    place. And that mentality has sort of died a respectful death. And you know if
  • 81:26 - 81:31
    there's an occasional shortage well that's too bad. We are in a desert here. We
  • 81:31 - 81:38
    are not supposed to be like Miami all the time every day of the year to
  • 81:38 - 81:50
    infinity.>> After the dam failure, my grandfather underwent the most profound
  • 81:50 - 81:59
    change that you can imagine and-- but he had been a vigorous functioning
  • 81:59 - 82:06
    70-year-old man or 72-year-old man at the time the dam failed. And he simply
  • 82:06 - 82:12
    shriveled. He'd come out to the ranch and he sits in the living room with his
  • 82:12 - 82:18
    cigar and the conversation would go around and he would just shut his eyes. He
  • 82:18 - 82:31
    would sit there like some kind of a sleeping giant. I was so struck as a child
  • 82:31 - 82:38
    when I attended the funeral and his body lay in state and city hall and the
  • 82:38 - 82:44
    working men who came to pay their last respects to him. Some of them cried and
  • 82:44 - 82:48
    when I was 12 years old and that made a big impression on me because I'd never
  • 82:48 - 82:55
    seen grown men cry.And so, I derived from that that this was a man who had
  • 82:55 - 83:01
    commanded a lot of love and respect in his day. And I've spent a lifetime trying
  • 83:01 - 83:06
    to drive that with all the attacks that had been made on him by people who
  • 83:06 - 83:16
    didn't know him.>> Freeways are settling down, believe it or not. We check on
  • 83:16 - 83:20
    the 405 and the 101 leaving the Hollywood Hills. Not bad at all. No need to take
  • 83:20 - 83:24
    alternate routes such as Laurel Canyon, Coldwater Canyon, or even Mulholland
  • 83:24 - 83:36
    Drive. I'm Dr. Roadmap flying for Capt. Jorge inaudible 'copter 790.
  • 83:36 - 83:37
    Music
Title:
Cadillac Desert Mulholland's Dream merged files
Description:

Although produced about 15 years ago, this video on the history of bringing water the Southern California is still timely and important. This is a merged video file that contains all of the 9 segments of "Cadillac Desert: Mulholland's Dream." Each of the 9 segments, that run from 8 to 10 minutes, are separately available on YouTube. Here is a single file that contains all of the segments. It is possible that a few seconds at the beginning and the end of each segment merged into this single file are missing.

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
01:23:52

English subtitles

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