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Back in print for the first time in over ten years, this classic
account of the numerous struggles - national, state, and local -
that have occurred over western American water rights since the
late 1800s is thoroughly expanded and updated to trace the
continuing battles raging over the West's most valuable, and
contentious, resource.
Minutes before midnight on March 12, 1928, the St. Francis Dam
collapsed, sending more than twelve billion gallons of water
surging through Southern California's Santa Clara Valley, killing
some four hundred people and causing the greatest civil engineering
disaster in twentieth-century American history. In this carefully
researched work, Norris Hundley jr. and Donald C. Jackson provide a
riveting narrative exploring the history of the ill-fated dam and
the person directly responsible for its flawed design-William
Mulholland, a self-taught engineer of the Los Angeles municipal
water system. Employing copious illustrations and intensive
research, Heavy Ground traces the interwoven roles of politics and
engineering in explaining how the St. Francis Dam came to be built
and the reasons for its collapse. Hundley and Jackson also detail
the terror and heartbreak brought by the flood, legal claims
against the City of Los Angeles, efforts to restore the Santa Clara
Valley, political factors influencing investigations of the
failure, and the effect of the disaster on congressional approval
of the future Hoover Dam. Underlying it all is a consideration of
how the dam-and the disaster-were inextricably intertwined with the
life and career of William Mulholland. Ultimately, this thoughtful
and nuanced account of the dam's failure reveals how individual and
bureaucratic conceit fed Los Angeles's desire to control vital
water supplies in the booming metropolis of Southern California.
The story of "the great thirst" is brought up to date in this
revised edition of Norris Hundley's outstanding history, with
additional photographs and incisive descriptions of the major
water-policy issues facing California now: accelerating
urbanization of farmland and open spaces, persisting despoliation
of water supplies, and demands for equity in water allocation for
an exploding population. People the world over confront these
problems, and Hundley examines them with clarity and eloquence in
the unruly laboratory of California.
The obsession with water has shaped California to a remarkable
extent, literally as well as politically and culturally. Hundley
tells how aboriginal Americans and then early Spanish and Mexican
immigrants contrived to use and share the available water and how
American settlers, arriving in ever-increasing numbers after the
Gold Rush, transformed California into the home of the nation's
preeminent water seekers. The desire to use, profit from,
manipulate, and control water drives the people and events in this
fascinating narrative until, by the end of the twentieth century, a
large, colorful cast of characters and communities has wheeled and
dealed, built, diverted, and connived its way to an entirely
different statewide waterscape.
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