William Mulholland

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William Mulholland (1855-1935)
William Mulholland (1855-1935)

William Mulholland (September 11, 1855July 22, 1935) was a water-services engineer in Southern California.

He was born in Belfast, Ireland (now Northern Ireland) and emigrated to New York City in the 1870s with his brother Hugh Mulholland and traveled to San Francisco in 1877. Mulholland worked as a miner in Arizona Territory before moving to the city that would build his reputation, Los Angeles.

A self-taught engineer, he took ditch-digging work in San Pedro with the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power and eventually became head of that agency. Few positions in local government have had such an effect on a metropolis—Los Angeles is a chaparral-covered desert that was transformed by sprinklers, pipes and Mulholland's public waterworks. Mulholland's offices were on the top floor of Sid Grauman's Million Dollar Theater.

The 233-mile Los Angeles Aqueduct, completed in November, 1913, took water from the Owens Valley in Central California in a project requiring over 2000 workers and 164 tunnels. Water reached a reservoir in the San Fernando Valley on November 5. At a ceremony that day Mulholland spoke his famous words about this engineering feat: "There it is. Take it."

The aqueduct drained the 100-square-mile Owens Lake absolutely dry by 1928, which started the California Water Wars (a fictionalized form of the story was the basis for the film Chinatown). The acquisition of water rights had been underhanded and Owens Valley farmers resisted violently, even dynamiting the aqueduct at Jawbone Canyon in 1924, by opening the Alabama gates and diverting the flow of water for four days, and raising prices. Los Angeles was forced to negotiate, and Mulholland was quoted as saying he "half-regretted the demise of so many of the valley’s orchard trees, because now there were no longer enough trees to hang all the troublemakers who live there."

Mulholland's career ended fifteen years later, on March 12, 1928, when his St. Francis Dam failed just hours after being inspected by Mulholland himself, and sent 12.5 billion US gallons (47,000,000 m³) of water flooding into the Santa Clarita Valley, north of Los Angeles. A 10-story wall of water rolled down the Santa Clara riverbed at 18 mph (29 km/h) towards the sea at Ventura, and the next morning revealed unbelievable catastrophe. The town of Santa Paula lay buried under 20 feet (6 m) of mud and debris; other parts of Ventura County were covered up to 70 feet (21 m). Disaster recovery crews worked for days, and the final death count stood at 450, including 42 school children. Mulholland resigned, took full responsibility for the worst civil engineering disaster in United States history, and during the inquest sobbed, "I envy the dead".

Mulholland died in 1935 and is buried at Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Glendale, California.

[edit] Legacy

[edit] Trivia

  • Mulholland was the favorite to become mayor of L.A. but when asked if he was considering it he replied "I'd rather give birth to a porcupine backward".
  • Mulholland worked on the Panama Canal, Hoover Dam, and the Colorado Aqueduct.
  • Mulholland kept offices on the top floor of Sid Grauman's Million Dollar Theater on Broadway, a space now restored, formerly occupied by actor Nicolas Cage and now divided into three penthouse apartments.

[edit] External links

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