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FREE ESSAY ON OWENS VALLEY AQUADUCT

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Silicon Valley or Death Valley
A review of the US housing market in relation to the bubble concept. -- 675 words;

“The Stubborn Soil” by William A. Owens
This paper is a critical review of William A. Owens’s “The Stubborn Soil“, an autobiography originally published in the mid-1960s, which chronicles the coming-of-age of the author in East Texas. -- 1,860 words; MLA

"An Interpretation Of Existence" (Joseph Owens).
Reviews this metaphysical work on the nature of being. -- 1,350 words;

"Cadillac Desert" ( Marc Reisner )
Summary of work on use & abuse of water resources in the Western U.S. since the Civil War. Irrigation, Reclamation Act, Owens Valley, major projects & leaders. -- 2,475 words;

Water in Los Angeles in the 1920s
A look at the struggle between the city and Owens Valley over water rights. Includes land, planning, agriculture, drought, violence, construction of aqueduct and outcome. -- 2,250 words;

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OWENS VALLEY AQUADUCT

Two hundred and fifty miles north of the busy streets of Los Angeles, in Inyo County, lay
the serene Owens Valley. The Owens Valley is a vast terrain that is bounded by the
towering Sierra Nevada mountain range at one end and the barren Death Valley desert at
its other end. As the snowfall from the peaks of the Sierra Nevadas annually transforms
itself into water, the Owens River drains the downpour and flows profusely through the
valley. The Owens Lake would routinely capture this stream and store the river's yearly
deposits, but the route of the stream was redirected. In 1905, an avaricious project was
contrived by the political agendas of the powerful moguls behind the Los Angeles Water
Company, building the Los Angeles Aqueduct.(Davis, Margaret) The project was masterminded
by Fred Eaton and William Mulholland to foster the growth of the large metropolis
included a larger water supply, and they were willing to achieve their goals by any means
necessary. They found their water supply in the Owens Valley. However, the acquisition of
the water was surrounded by red tape. Despite the obstacles that stood in their way, the
two men found a way to fulfill their vision at expense of the Owens Valley community.
Once a fecund and fertile region that was home to many small, prosperous farms and
ranches, the Owens Valley has been stripped of its main resource due to the construction
of the Los Angeles Aqueduct.
At the turn of the century, Los Angeles began to thrive in its economic ventures. The
metropolis was slowly beginning to become focal point of tremendous business activity. As
the city boomed, business leaders began to envision the endless potential of prosperity.
The population growth was surging. People were flocking to the area in great numbers. The
Los Angeles Water Company quickly realized that an auspicious opportunity was to be had
and warned the city of need of a subsidiary water supply to sustain its growth. William
Mulholland and Fred Eaton were the masterminds behind the idea that was driven by
personal gain. They set their eyes on the Owens River, and portrayed its acquisition as
an extremely urgent matter for Los Angeles. In reality, however, the majority of the
water was to be used for irrigating the San Fernando Valley, where a syndicate of
investors had been actively purchasing land with the assurance that the value would
increase substantially. 
The people of the Owens Valley community had plans for the water as well. Most of the
residents were farmers and ranchers who were anticipating an economic outbreak of their
own as soon as the newly found Reclamation Service completed its irrigation project in
the Owens Valley. The United States Reclamation Act of 1902 gave the United States
government the primary responsibility of local irrigation projects. In order to acquire
the Owens River for Los Angeles, Mulholland and Eaton would have to deter the government
project from continuing. By means of bribery, this was accomplished. J.B. Lippincott, a
local agent of the Reclamation service, and a political crony of Eaton's was hired at a
generous salary to develop a plan for the Los Angeles Water Company to overtake the Owens
River. Lippincott's efforts for the Reclamation Service resulted in the public lands of
the valley to be set aside for future development; no rights to the land were secured.
Then Eaton strategically bought land options- the land that would be needed for
construction of an aqueduct. Ultimately, through the combination of normal land purchases
and bribery, the city had secured a substantial amount of land and water rights to
dismantle the Owens Valley project of the Reclamation Service.
The purchase of land introduced a scheme that Eaton had conjured up driven by his greed.
By planning to mix public service with private gain, Eaton also purchased large parcels
of Owens Valley for himself. These pieces of land were crucial points in the architecture
of the aqueduct because they would house the important dams. By doing so, Eaton had
positioned himself to holdout his share of land when the time came for the city of Los
Angeles to purchase the remaining land to complete the construction of the Los Angeles
Aqueduct. He would be enable himself to attain a sizable amount of money- a price that he
would be able to set. The measure taken by Eaton breeched the partnership between him and
Mulholland after it revealed the plot of extortion that Eaton had planned to take.
Consequently, Mulholland exhorted city to refuse the purchase of the vital plots of land
owned by Eaton, and order a further appropriation of the Owens River.(Mattson, Robert)
This diversion in the route of the aqueduct would result in the desolation of the new
sites of land, and further destroying the valley lands. 
In 1905, a bond was issued by the city of Los Angeles to provide Mulholland with the
millions of dollars funding necessary to build a two hundred and fifty-mile aqueduct that
would connect the water source of the Owens Valley to the city of Los Angeles. The Los
Angeles Aqueduct was to be built over the course of next eight years. Mulholland took
total control in the construction of the aqueduct. He employed thousands and directed
them as they blasted out tunnels, carved out sluiceways, cleared roads, laid railroad
tracks, and raised up power lines. The waterway was finally completed in 1913, and the
vision had been fulfilled. The massive aqueduct started at its northern end and ran right
through the valley, and the water that the valley residents had originally thought would
irrigate their farmlands instead flowed down and fed the growing population of Los
Angeles. Despite Mulholland's dire prediction of imminent water famine, Los Angeles did
not find the need to draw all the water from the Owens River.(Mattson, Robert) During the
course of the eight years of constructing the aqueduct, the city's population had more
than doubled with no evident strain on the regular water supply.
The corruption that manifested within the scheme of the project was revealing itself. The
initial motives for building an aqueduct were being replaced by those of greed at all
costs. The long-standing relationship between Mulholland and Eaton was terminated. The
water from the Owens River and Owens Lake that would irrigate the Owens Valley was being
transported to Los Angeles; both of the water sources were in the process of being
desiccated. The Owens Valley was caught in the midst of a major change. The character of
the Owens Valley was being lost. 
As the community of Owens Valley learned of the situation concerning the Los Angeles
Aqueduct, and observed the destruction of their irrigation system, they became
infuriated. With prospects of their agricultural ventures were devastated, thoughts of
retaliation dwelled within the minds of the residents of the valley. Many of the members
of the community gathered together and staged a massive demonstration of civic
solidarity. On November 24,1924, seventy armed men seized control of a critical point on
the aqueduct gate and completely halted the flow of the river. Seven hundred others
joined the demonstration, and together they protested the injustice that had been
committed against them. "The Owens Valley War", the title appropriated by a local
newspaper for the demonstration, had reached its climax. "The Owens Valley War" was
already over; the dainty valley community suffered its defeat to the powerful
metropolitan giant.
Then one of the greatest civil disasters in American history took place. The Mulholland
built, St. Francis Dam collapsed. This released a fifteen billion gallon flood that
scoured a path to the sea two miles wide, and seventy miles long. As a result, five
hundred people were found dead, a majority of the dead being Owens Valley residents. Due
to the fierce hatred among the disgruntled members of the Owens Valley community for
Mulholland, rumors of sabotage began to surface. Mulholland was investigated. Most of the
Inyo County was bogged down in the quagmire of Owens Valley. The aftermath of the flood
is symbolic of the tragedy behind the construction of the Los Angeles Aqueduct. 
Seventy-seven years following the series of events leading to the tumultuous completion
of the Los Angeles Aqueduct, the Owens Valley rests with tranquility.(Larson, Ronald) It
is now left desiccated. All the water from the Owens River is drained. The valley's most
abundant resource has been completely extracted. Fred Eaton and William Mulholland are
credited with building the impressive structure despite their turpitude. Their
anticipated growth of Los Angeles soared past all predictions into an international
metropolis. Two hundred and fifty miles away and nearly a century later, the Owens Valley
and the city of Los Angeles are in dispute once again. This time the struggle is not for
the water. The struggle is for the land. The rich mineral deposits left from the
desiccated lake are being fiercely sought after.(Davis, Margaret) After all the damage
that has been inflicted upon the Owens Valley, there may yet be more to come. 

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