• With disasters rocking the state, California needs to remember the St.

    From Travis McGee@21:1/5 to All on Fri Nov 16 21:36:46 2018
    With disasters rocking the state, California needs to remember the St.
    Francis Dam failure
    By Erik Altenbernd and William Deverell
    Nov 16, 2018 | 3:05 AM

    With disasters rocking the state, California needs to remember the St.
    Francis Dam failure

    There is a quiet campaign underway in northern L.A. County that deserves
    the support of people across California.

    The Santa Clarita Valley Historical Society is pushing for the site of
    the St. Francis Dam to be declared a national memorial. The designation
    would commemorate both the dam and the more than 400 lives that were
    lost when it collapsed, the worst man-made disaster in California history.

    The St. Francis Dam was squeezed into San Francisquito Canyon, about 20
    miles north of what is now the city of Santa Clarita. Construction began
    in early 1925 and was completed in May 1926. Built to hold back some 12
    billion gallons of water, the structure was more than 200 hundred feet
    tall and more than 1,200 feet wide.

    About two years after it was finished, on March 12, 1928, just before
    midnight, the dam failed. Water had saturated a portion of the
    foundation underlying the dam, causing “uplift,” which expanded and destabilized its main concrete structure.

    California has much to learn from the terrible legacy of the St. Francis
    Dam, particularly at a moment when disasters are once again rocking the
    state.

    When the dam gave way, it let loose a 100-foot wall of water that raged
    for hours through the Santa Clara River Valley, blasting through Saugus,
    Piru, Bardsdale, Fillmore, Santa Paula, Ventura and other communities.
    The torrent morphed quickly into a flood not just of water but of
    concrete, asphalt, railroad rails and ties, farms, cars and homes. This gargantuan flow of debris was an equal-opportunity killer.

    The first victims were city of Los Angeles employees. Lilian Curtis, who
    was several months pregnant, narrowly escaped after climbing a nearby
    hill while carrying her 3-year-old son. Her husband, Lyman, who worked
    for the Bureau of Power and Light, and two young daughters were all
    carried off.

    A 12-year-old boy named Louis Rivera experienced something similar near
    Castaic Junction. Awakened by the rumble of the approaching water, he
    managed to grab his younger brother and sister and get them to higher
    ground. He watched helplessly as his mother and older brother got swept
    away.

    There are dozens more stories like these. And there are no stories at
    all for the many victims who remain unidentified more than 90 years later.

    The St. Francis Dam calamity has largely been forgotten, even though it
    is part of a larger saga that Los Angeles cannot help but remember.

    The dam was built as a vital extension of the Los Angeles Aqueduct, the lifeline that continues to bring water more than 200 miles from the
    Owens Valley.

    The project was the brainchild of William Mulholland, who at the 1913
    opening of his “Big Ditch” said famously of the water that came
    cascading through its sluice gates: “There it is, take it.”

    After the dam burst — an engineering failure for which Mulholland was
    largely responsible — he uttered a similarly terse statement during a coroner’s inquest: “The only ones I envy about this thing are the ones
    who are dead.”

    In history and popular culture (most notably in the film “Chinatown”),
    the main victims of L.A.’s thirst for unbridled growth are the residents
    of the Owens Valley, the people whose water and land the city acquired
    by hook and by crook.

    But the Santa Clara River Basin made sacrifices every bit as worthy of commemorative recognition.

    The St. Francis Dam calamity is an event of national importance as well.
    The accident imperiled the Boulder Canyon Project Act — the legislation
    that authorized the building of the Hoover Dam.
    Enter the Fray: First takes on the news of the minute from L.A. Times
    Opinion »

    To secure passage of the bill in the wake of the tragedy, California
    Gov. C.C. Young and other Hoover Dam boosters waged an effective
    campaign that the country needed more, not fewer, dams like the St.
    Francis. They stressed that its failure was an aberration, the result of specific engineering errors made by Mulholland. Progress in California
    and the American West, they argued, meant learning from — but also
    forgetting about — the collapse of the St. Francis Dam.

    Today, a different piece of legislation, the Saint Francis Dam Disaster National Memorial Act, could ensure that the episode is better
    remembered. The bill was passed by the House of Representatives last
    year. Should it pass in the Senate, where it was recently advanced by
    the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, it will return to the
    House for a second vote. Then it will need to be signed by President Trump.

    Living in California means living close to the beauty and power of
    nature. It also means understanding that we will pay a price when our
    supposed control of nature fails.

    California has much to learn from the terrible legacy of the St. Francis
    Dam, particularly at a moment when disasters are once again rocking the
    state. Congress and the president should move quickly to make the bill law.

    Erik Altenbernd is an assistant professor of history at College of the
    Canyons in Santa Clarita. William Deverell is a professor of history at
    USC and the director of the Huntington-USC Institute on California and
    the West.

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  • From sdn45478@gmail.com@21:1/5 to Travis McGee on Mon Nov 26 10:59:47 2018
    On Friday, November 16, 2018 at 6:36:48 PM UTC-8, Travis McGee wrote:
    With disasters rocking the state, California needs to remember the St. Francis Dam failure
    Interesting article. I wonder where the H everyone went?
    Back in the old days this group (as many) was hard to keep up with.
    Now it needs a shot of adrenalin from somewhere.
    Steve

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  • From Jean-Paul Turcaud@21:1/5 to Travis McGee on Sat Dec 1 20:14:17 2018
    On Saturday, November 17, 2018 at 3:36:48 AM UTC+1, Travis McGee wrote:
    With disasters rocking the state, California needs to remember the St. Francis Dam failure

    Sure Travis, California and the others need to remember the lessons from the past, but none do.
    Have you had a look at the increase of all quakes world wide, say from 2010 to now, this from the USGS reports? x5 !
    These are the facts, but what important to know is Why ?

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  • From Jean-Paul Turcaud@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 5 20:26:22 2018
    CORRECT !

    In 2010 approx 20 000 / year
    In 2018 probably over 150 000 / years

    Data from the USGS.

    Unfortunately the present fraudulent geology has no answer to that one (and other as well )

    Sailing visual in full fog without navigation instruments ! Normal to expect drama around the corner !

    By the way California fully deserves its fate as most of the Colorado river is diverted to the Sin City, Vegas. Hence by a chaining of event, the drought is in fact man-made! Nature is a mother !

    Jean-Paul Turcaud
    Exploration geologist
    Australia Mining Pioneer
    Founder of the True Geology

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