DAY 5
Fortune flowed into Southern California. The delivery of water encouraged more settlement in the LA region, and in response, more roads and infrastructure, hydroelectric plants and dams.
But Mulholland’s legacy was not to be untarnished. The glory of the Los Angeles aqueduct cost the residents of the Owens Valley their livelihood. The residents of Mariposa county would remember him as a robber, a member of a corrupt circle that encompassed Ben Eaton. Residents of the San Francisquito Canyon about 40 miles northwest of Los Angeles (close to what is now known as Santa Clarita) would remember him as a murderer.
Above the picturesque town of San Francisquito, a dam served to harness the abundance of water. (St. Francis Dam) By this time, Mulholland himself was the Superintendent of the MWD. In the wee hours of the night of March 12,1928, the St. Francis dam gave way, causing a catastrophe that killed close to 600 people as the megatons of water bulldozed canyon. The 120 foot high wave travelled at 18 mph, tossing electric lines, homes, and people. 5 1/2 hours later, the water had traveled 54 miles from the dam. As the current Superintendent and the chief engineer of that dam, Mulholland was devastated. He also happened to know that there was a growing crack in the dam two weeks prior. He had tried to address it, ordering repairs and diverting water away from the dam. But it was all for naught. There were no surviving witnesses. Mulholland would never recover from the guilt.
He did, however, continue to build aqueducts, bringing water from the Colorado River in 1941 via the Colorado River Aqueduct. His audacity inspired resource managers around the world to dare.









