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Los
Angeles
Introduction
Los Angeles
is located in the middle of a desert. While other cities are
located near mineral deposits, rivers, harbors-natural resources
that are useful for humans-Los Angeles has none of these nearby.
Most importantly it has no water. The story of Los Angeles is the
story of unimaginable growth and the ruthless hunt for
water.
The Spanish
settled in Los Angeles because it was in a convenient place not far
from Mexico. In addition, the Spanish did not know of San Francisco
Bay, one of the best ports in the world. The Spanish saw Los
Angeles as a good location to farm with irrigation. In 1848, Los
Angeles had a population of about sixteen hundred-mostly Spanish
and Indian, yet there were a few Americans in the town. San
Francisco, which was only half the size of Los Angeles in 1848,
soon outpaced the southern city. When gold was found in the north,
San Francisco became one of the hottest destinations in the world.
The only advantage that Los Angeles offered was a place to escape
from one's past. After the Civil War many veterans moved across the
continent and established themselves in Los Angeles. The city was
not destined to remain a haven for the unscrupulous; water would
change everything.
The Path to a Metropolis
Soon after
the Mormons-widely known as some of the best irrigators in the
world-established themselves in Utah they sent an exploratory party
to the Pacific Coast. A group of Mormons set up a large
establishment in the Los Angeles basin. They were able to do quite
well and provided most of the valley with food. When federal troops
arrived in Utah all of the Mormon settlements were shut down and
the Mormons in Los Angeles returned home. They had a lasting
effect, though. Soon a number of communities sprouted up to replace
the Mormon establishment. They included Presbyterians, Quakers, and
Germans. The warm coastal climate allowed almost anything to be
grown in the basin-from corn to oranges. Soon the San Franciscan
capitalists noticed and the Southern Pacific built a spur from San
Francisco down to Los Angeles. Los Angelinos went to the 1884
World's Fair in New Orleans and hawked the basin to amazed
onlookers. No one could imagine oranges and dates being grown in
the United States.
Hordes began
arriving in Los Angeles. A competitor of the Southern Pacific built
a line connecting Kansas City and Los Angeles. Soon a fare war
erupted and the cost of traveling west dropped to an amazingly low
amount. A huge real estate boom began. Fraud followed the boom,
though. Unknowing people bought lots that lay in the bed of the Los
Angeles River, which is only a trickle during most of the year-
however, during the winter it overflows its banks. Some people
unwittingly bought property on the summit of the San Gabriel Ridge.
The boom died down soon and population dropped by half, but soon an
oil boom followed. By now Los Angeles was the size of San
Francisco. But how could the city provide the water to sustain all
these people?
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