|
Los Angeles
The
Owens Valley
The Paiute Indians
learned irrigation from the Spanish and began to irrigate the valley.
When whites arrived they began to push the successful Indians away.
Soon violence broke out and the whites murdered over 150 Paiutes.
The Indians were eventually forced out of the valley and the whites
took over. A prosperous community established itself in the valley.
The United States Reclamation Service-now known as the Bureau of
Reclamation-had been started a few months before and wanted to prove
itself to a skeptical Congress. It began surveying the Owens Valley
with the intention of building its first project there. The residents
were very supportive and with talk of building a railroad spur to
the Owens Valley they were bound to get rich, or so they thought.
Los
Angeles Steals the River
Eaton and Mulholland
had other plans for the valley. Those plans did not include the
Reclamation Service, but instead, the city. The two drove 250 miles
over the desert by car to reach the valley. When Mulholland saw
the luscious valley, he suddenly changed. Before he had preached
conservation, but after seeing all that water and realizing what
it could mean to Los Angeles, he saw himself as a builder and a
conqueror. He realized that water-the river-could flow to Los Angeles
in an aqueduct by gravity alone. He and Eaton faced a big challenge
though. The current residents of the valley had been there a long
time and owned all the water rights. It would be challenge, not
to mention illegal. By doing consulting work for the Reclamation
Service, whose manager of the California area, J.B. Lippincott,
was a Los Angelino, Eaton gained access to the archive of water
and land rights in the county courthouse. In addition, Los Angeles
hired Lippincott as a consultant. His job was to determine what
the city's options in water sources were. In return for his work,
Lippincott was paid $2,500, an amount high enough to be more of
a bribe than a payment. Eaton, using his own money, began buying
up as much of the lower valley as possible. After much work, he
managed to convince the owner of the only dam site in the valley
to sell. He secretly bought that site for himself. Soon the city
owned most of the water rights in the lower valley. Otis and Chandler
were big promoters of the plan, but they were forced to keep it
secret. They could not keep it to themselves though and soon the
plan was announced on the front page of the Times. The people of
Owens Valley found out, but it was too late. Not only was it too
late for them to stop the aqueduct, but it was also to late to save
the valley-it had already begun its spiraling descent toward oblivion.
With help from
Eaton and Mulholland's friends in the federal government, the Reclamation
Service project in the Owens Valley was forgotten. Theodore Roosevelt,
one of their big supporters, placed a national forest around Owens
Valley, preventing any new development in the area. Despite the
fact that it is a national forest, Inyo National Forest hardly has
any trees within its boundaries.
All Mulholland
and Eaton had to do now was get the support of the Los Angeles voters.
Rumor had it that Mulholland had his employees dump water from the
city's reservoirs into the ocean at night. Whether or not it actually
happened, an artificial shortage was not necessary. A mixture of
amazingly high temperatures and a big drought coerced the voters
into approving the aqueduct. It passed ten-to-one and was highly
approved by all-at least all the Los Angelinos.
|