|
Hillcrest’s Water History |
| Obtaining
sufficient water has always been a
basic requirement for residents of San Diego. Hillcrest sits in a
central position in
the development of waterworks constructed to supply the expanding
population. The padres were the first to build dams and aqueducts
to supply their mission along the San Diego River. San
Diego’s Old Town relied mostly on wells dug in Mission Valley, the
floodplain of
the San Diego River.The transfer of the civic center of San
Diego from Old Town to its present harbor side location followed the
growth of shipping commerce using the newly dredged harbor. Delivering
water from the San Diego River to the growing population in New Town
required pumping it out of the valley and over the San Diego Mesa.
Reservoirs were located in Balboa Park, University Heights,
Bankers
Hill and Mission Hills. The name “Hillcrest” (which was originated by
Laura
Anderson
in 1907) may have been inspired by the location where the water
supply
pipes changed from pumped to gravity driven. |
| 1813 | Hoping to improve agriculture yields, the Franciscan missionaries organize construction of the first water engineering project on the west coast of the United States. The first dam to cross the San Diego River is located in present day Mission Trails Regional Park. | ||||||||||||
| 1853 |
San Diego River is diverted from San Diego Harbor into False
Bay (Mission Bay) under the harbor improvement plan of Lt. George
Derby. The “Derby Dike” failed after two years and the river
returned to depositing sediment into San Diego Bay until another levee
was constructed in 1876. |
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| 1860s |
Mission Dam falls into
disrepair. San Diego’s population is clustered around wells at
the mouth of Mission Valley. |
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| 1861 |
Storms dump 30 inches of rain on San Diego.
Statewide the storms destroy 25% of California’s taxable property. |
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| 1864 |
Successive years of light rains bring
severe drought to San Diego. |
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| 1871 |
The first wells are sunk in downtown (new town)
San Diego. |
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| 1873 |
H.M. Covert and Jacob Gruendike initiate the
first
major waterworks since mission days forming the city’s first water
company (San Diego Water Company) on January 20th. Wells drilled in
Pound Canyon near site of the present Cabrillo Bridge provide the first
reliable water supply for the city. Two reservoirs are constructed on
mesas bordering
the canyon with a total capacity of 170,000 gallons. |
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| 1875 |
Increasing demands for water lead San Diego
Water Company to tap water from Mission Valley. The first pumps raise
water to a reservoir
in University Heights. Construction soon begins on a more
energy efficient route across a lower portion of San Diego Mesa.
The new
pipeline runs from wells near the mouth of Mission Valley through
tunnels
driven in the hills below the present site of the UCSD Medical Center.
Pumps lift water to the crest of the mesa near the core of
present-day Hillcrest. From there an aqueduct carries the water
downhill to a reservoir at Fifth and Hawthorn. |
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| 1877 |
Severe drought. A dike across the San Diego
River is completed allowing some of the run-off of the river to be
diverted into the city’s water system. |
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| 1887 |
San Diego Reservoir is constructed in what is
now Presidio Park. Water pumped from Mission Valley
supplies the reservoir which has a four million gallon capacity.
It remains in use until 1912, and in 1927 it’s filled forming
the “Picnic Bowl” bounded by Cosoy Way. |
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| 1888 |
Sweetwater Reservoir is
completed. |
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| 1889 |
The 35.6-mile San Diego Flume is completed
at a cost of about one million dollars. The flume, a series of five
tunnels
and 315 redwood trestles, carries water from Cuyamaca Mountain to the
University
Heights reservoir. City covers over the abandoned Pound Canyon well citing danger of the deep well. |
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| 1895 |
La Mesa Dam is completed.
In 1918 it is superceded by a larger dam which forms Lake Murray. |
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Map of San Diego County Reservoirs (from San Diego, An Introduction to the Region, edited by P.R. Pryde, 1976) |
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| 1900 |
George Chaffey begins irrigation of the Colorado
Desert. |
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| 1901 |
The first water runs into Imperial Valley
canals. San Diego purchases all water systems within the city limits. |
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| 1905 |
Floods on the Colorado River bring disaster to
Imperial Valley farmers creating the Salton Sea. |
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| 1906 |
Pumping plant in Mission Valley closes, and the
city enters into a contract with Southern California Mountain Water
Company to buy water (4 cents per 1000 gallons) from mountain
reservoirs. |
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| 1912 | After 17 years of construction
Morena Reservoir on cottonwood creek, a tributary of the Tijuana
River, is completed. |
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| 1913 |
Southern California Mountain Water Company
is purchased by city. |
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| 1915 |
After four dry years in a row, former sewing
machine salesman and fabled rainmaker Charles
M. Hatfield offers to aid the city. San Diego City Council
accepts his offer, and Hatfield erects a tower containing a secret
chemical concoction near Morena Reservoir. |
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| 1916
|
The worst floods in county history.
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| 1918 |
Hodges Reservoir is completed across the San
Dieguito River. The first dams were completed on Alvarado Creek
to form the Lake Murray. |
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| 1924 |
Wohlford Dam is constructed
on top of the 1895 dike on Escondido Creek. Combined capacity of
the all counties reservoirs nears half a million acre-feet. |
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| 1935 |
El Capitan Reservoir is
completed across the headwaters of the San Diego River. Hoover Dam is
completed bringing control to the Colorado River. |
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| 1938 |
Parker Dam is completed across the Colorado
River
forming Lake Havasu. Three years later, the Colorado River
Aqueduct is completed. The aqueduct conveys Colorado river water
from Lake
Havasu to Lake Matthews in Riverside County. |
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| 1943 |
In anticipation of receiving Colorado River
water, San Vicente Reservoir is built to significantly increasing
storage
capacity in San Diego County. |
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| 1947 |
First pipeline of the San
Diego Aqueduct is completed. The aqueduct taps into the Colorado
River Aqueduct and delivers water from the Colorado to San Diego for
the
first time. In seven years another pipeline is added parallel
to
the original aqueduct. The combined capacity of the San Diego
Aqueduct
is 196 cubic feet per second (about 140,000 acre feet a year) |
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| 1960 |
A second San Diego Aqueduct to
carry more water into San Diego from the north. The pipeline
follows a more coastal route than the first aqueduct, delivering water
to Miramar and Lower Otay reservoirs. |