USA > California > Los Angeles County > Los Angeles > A history of California and an extended history of Los Angeles and environs : also containing biographies of well-known citizens of the past and present, Volume I > Part 65
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In 1872 P. Beaudry established a water system for supplying the hills with water. Near the crossing of College and Alameda streets, where the Dryden springs were located, he excavated a large basin and with a sixty horse power en- gine running a pump with the capacity of 40,- 000 gallons per hour, forced the water to an ele- vation of 240 feet into two reservoirs located on the hills northeast of the present site of the Sis- ters' hospital. From these it was distributed over the hill section of the city in iron pipes.
The Citizens' Water Company was organized in 1886. It bought out the Beaudry and Rogers systems. The latter was a system which ob- tained water from the seepings of reservoir No. 4. The lease of the water from the Beaudry springs expiring February 1, 1887, the works were taken down and the Citizens' Company obtained its water after that date from the river about four miles above the city. This system was purchased by the Los Angeles City Water Company in 1892.
The Canal and Reservoir Company was or- ganized in 1868 with a capital stock of $200,000. Its first officers were George Hansen, president ;
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J. W. Greensmith, treasurer, and J. J. Warner, secretary. P. Beaudry was one of the largest stockholders. This company contracted with the city to build within three years a dam twenty feet high across the cañon just below where Echo Park is now located and to construct a ditch down the cañon of the Arroyo de Los Reyes to Pearl street, the object of which was to furnish water to the hill portions of the city and supply power for manufacturing. In 1873 a woolen mill was built on this ditch and was operated for twelve or fifteen years and was then converted into an ice factory. The company received in compensation for the construction of this sys- tem a large body of city land, since known as the canal and reservoir lands. .
A CENTURY OF LITIGATION.
Almost from the beginning of the nineteenth century the city at various times has been com- pelled to engage in litigation to preserve her water rights.
The first legal contest over water rights on the Los Angeles river was begun in 1810. The padres of San Fernando had caused a dam to be constructed at Cahuenga, by which the waters of the river were diverted from its channel. The authorities of the pueblo protested, and appoint- ed a committee to investigate. The committee reported that the dam cut off the source of the pueblo's water supply, thereby causing great damage and suffering to the people of the town. The padres denied the allegation, and set up a claim to the water on the plea that the dam had been used by a previous occupant of the land for fourteen years. There were no lawyers in Cali- fornia then, and the contestants fought their legal battle to a finish among themselves. The padres were finally compelled to concede the justice of the pueblo's claim to the waters of the hiver. They asked and were granted permission to use enough water to irrigate a small tract of land to supply the mission with corn. This was granted with a definite understanding that, should the settlers' water supply at any time run short, the mission should cease to use the river water. The agreement between the contestants was signed March 26, 1810, and was approved by Governor Arrellaga.
Time passes. Spain no longer controls the destinies of California, but the missions, in the language of a protest in the old archives, "still maintain their proud old notions of being the owners of all the natural products of forest and field."
The pueblo had won its suit for possession of the waters of the river under the rule of monarchial Spain, but it must again contend for its right under republican Mexico.
In the proceedings of the most illustrious ayuntamiento of Los Angeles, October 8, 1833, is this entry: "The ayuntamiento of this town finding it absolutely necessary to obtain by all means possible the prosperity of our fellow citi- zens residing in this community, so as to facili- tate the greatest advantages to their interest ; we have been compelled to name an individual with sufficient power from this body to defend with all the power of the law the question arising be- tween this corporation and the reverend father, the teacher of the San Fernando Mission, with reference to his claim on the lands called Cahu- enga, where said father has built a house and made other improvements (constructed a dam in the river). Notwithstanding, the lands are known as public lands. To that effect we name citizen José Antonio Carrillo, on whom suffi- cient power is conferred to prosecute, defend and allege according to law before the proper trib- unals the questions between the corporation of this town and the reverend father of the mission of San Fernando. Said Carrillo may refer to this ayuntamiento at any time for all information and documents. Unanimously ordered by this corporation."
Carrillo, who was at that time alcalde of Los Angeles, and also a member of the territorial legislature, although not a practicing lawyer, was well versed in the law and one of the ablest men of California.
He won his case. The reverend father aband- oned his claim to the Cahuenga, conceded the claims of the ayuntamiento and allowed the waters of the river to flow to the pueblo. Two years later the mission of San Fernando was secular- ized. Then contention between the pueblo and the mission fathers over the waters of the river
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that had existed for more than a generation was ended forever. In every contest the pobladores of the pueblo had won.
The mission property passed into the hands of an agent or commissioner of the government, and he, too, like his predecessors of San Fernando, had to learn that the river waters belonged to the pueblo, or city, as it had now become. In the session of the ayuntamiento of April 7, 1836, the president said "that the party in charge of San Fernando Mission was damming the water of the river at Cahuenga," as he had been informed by a commission he had appointed to investigate. "The damming of the city's river water was re- ducing the supply in the public reservoir and causing injury to this vicinity." He said that he acquainted the ayuntamiento of these facts, "so that it might take measures to protect the interests of the community." The city attorney and Regidor Lugo were appointed a committee to defend the city's rights.
At the next session "the city attorney. as one of the committee appointed to investigate the damming of one of the branches of the river by the man in charge of the ex-mission of San Fernando, gave as his opinion that there was sufficient water in the 'city's river' to supply the main zanja and the private zanjas:" but, he said, furthermore, "that the man in charge of San Fernando had promised him in case said dam should break and damage the city reservoir that he (the man) would repair the same at his own expense, and if the supply of water should at any time fall short in the river he would break said dam that he had constructed and allow all the water to flow into the river." Thus we see in the early days of the pueblo the authorities guarded with jealous care the pueblo's water rights. There was no dallying with adverse claimants ; no allowing of cases to go by default ; no jeopardizing the city's rights by criminal de- lay. The old regidores might be "poco tiempo" in some things, but when the city's water rights were in danger they were prompt to act.
Nor did they guard their claim to the waters of the river alone. The royal reglamento gave the pueblo the right to the waters of the springs as well as to the river.
In the city archives is a parallel case to the Crystal Springs controversy. It is the "Aguage de los Abilas," the spring of the Abilas. During the great flood of 1815 the river cut a new chan- nel for itself along the edge of the mesa on the western side of the valley. It left its old channel at the point of the hills and flowed down the valley very nearly on what is now the line of San Fernando and Alameda streets. It subsequently returned to its old channel on the eastern side of its valley. For many years after, along the base of the hills where the San Fernando depot grounds now are, and below that where the Beaudry waterworks were formerly located, there were springs formed by the percolation of the water through the old river channel. Along about 1826 or '27, Francisco Abila was allowed to use the waters of the largest of these springs for irrigation.
In 1833 his widow, Señora Encarnacion Sepul- veda, applied for a land grant and the exclusive possession of this spring on the plea of having had the exclusive use of the spring for a long time. The case was argued in the ayuntamiento, and that angust body promptly decided it against her. While its decision is not couched in the legal verbiage of a supreme court decision, it nevertheless abounds in good sense and good law points.
This is the decision: "The illustrions ayun- tamiento decided that the spring in question should be held for the benefit of the public, who would be injured if this spring belonged to a private individual. Furthermore, this illustrious ayuntamiento is informed that the immediate neighborhood is in need of the water from that spring. In this particular, Capt. Don José Noriega, who granted said Abila the use of this spring, decreed as follows: 'The said water springs are hereby granted to Abila in case the public does not desire to use its waters.'
"This ayuntamiento also takes into considera- tion that when said spring was granted to the late Francisco Abila, the number of residents in this city was not as large as now. Also at that time said Abila possessed a small orchard, which he irrigated with the waters of this spring, but at present he does not possess any lands ; and there
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is nothing to irrigate on his former place. Señora Encarnacion Sepulveda has no more right to the waters of this spring than any other resident, it being community property. She as well as the rest of the community shall apply to the alcalde for a permit at any time they may need to use the water of said spring."
It was ordered that this decision be published as an ordinance of the city.
During the sixty-six years that Los Angeles was under Spanish and Mexican domination, no cloud was allowed to rest on the water rights of the pueblo or of its successor, the ciudad, but during the years of American rule clouds have shadowed it, nor have they rolled by. I have space in this only to briefly glance at a few of the legal contests which the city has fought over its water rights of late years.
In 1873 the city of Los Angeles brought suit against Leon McL. Baldwin to quiet its title to two irrigation heads of water that said Bald- win and others were appropriating and claiming to own. These heads were taken from the river and used on Los Feliz rancho. The court held that, so far as appears from the evidence, the city is not the owner of the "corpus" of the water of the river. By reason of this decision and failure to prosecute a former action brought against the same parties, the city in 1884 paid $50,000 to buy back these two irrigation heads of water and some other privileges lost by default.
A suit was brought by Anastacio Feliz against the city of Los Angeles for cutting off the water of the river from the plaintiff's ditch. In this case the court found that ever since the founda- tion of the pueblo in 1781, the pueblo or its suc- cessor, the city, had claimed the exclusive right to use all the waters of the Los Angeles river, and said right had been recognized and allowed by owners of the land at the source and border- ing on said river.
The judge of the lower court (McNealy) granted a perpetual injunction, enjoining the city from depriving the plaintiff Feliz of sufficient river water for irrigation and domestic use. The supreme court set aside the injunction and re- versed the judgment of the lower court. The supreme court, however, held in its decision, that
if there was a surplus in the river over and above the needs of the lands situated within the city limits, that surplus might be appropriated by riparian owners above the city, but that the city could not sell water to parties outside of its limits to the detriment of riparian owners above it. This decision was rendered before our mu- nicipal expansion began.
The last important legal battle which the city has fought to a finish is the Pomeroy-Hooker case, entitled "The City of Los Angeles, respond- ent, vs. A. E. Pomeroy and J. D. Hooker, ap- pellants," decided by the supreme court June, 1899. It was begun in one of the superior courts of Los Angeles in 1893 and carried to the supreme court of the state.
It was a suit to condemn a tract of about 315 acres of land lying near the base of the Cahuenga range, and extending along the river nearly two miles in length by half a mile in width.
Being at a point where the Verdugo hills come nearest the Cahuenga range and thus narrow the river valley, the land was needed by the city for headworks. The city and the owners could not agree on the price, the owners asking a high price on account of the percolating waters from the river, which waters they claimed the right to sell. The city began a suit of condemnation and gained it. The defendants appealed from the decree of condemnation and from the order overruling their motion for a new trial. The supreme court, in a lengthy decision, sustained the rulings of the lower court.
When the thirty years' contract with the as- signs of Messrs. Griffin, Beaudry and Lazard ex- pired, July 22, 1898, a number of schemes were broached by which the city could get possession of the water works. None of these resulted in anything more than talk and some long-winded resolutions for political effect.
The question of the value of the water com- pany's plant was submitted to arbitration, as provided for in the original contract. The city council chose James C. Kays and the water com- pany Charles T. Healy. After considerable time spent in collecting data and discussing val- ues, these two arbitrators, being unable to agree, chose for the third Col. George H. Mendell. On
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the 12th of May, 1899, James C. Kays and George H. Mendell made an award fixing the value of the Los Angeles City Water Company's property at $1,183,591.42. From this award Charles T. Healy dissented.
August 23, 1899, an election was held to au- thorize the issuing of city bonds to the amount of $2,090,000; $2,000,000 of this amount was to pay the City Water Company for its pipes, reser- voirs and water works and the remainder to be used in the construction of headworks, the build- ing of reservoirs, pipe lines, etc. The bond issue carried seven to one.
The water system, or rather the pipes, reser- voirs and water works, of the Los Angeles City Water Company were transferred to the munici- pality on payment of the agreed price. A board of five water commissioners was appointed from among leading business men to manage the water system of the city. A reduction of ten per cent was made in the water rates. The rapid growth of the city for the past five years has made its water system a valuable source of rev- cnue. In 1904, three years after the city ac- quired the system, it paid all operating and main- tenance expenses, provided interest and sinking funds for the bonds and for extending the plant. In addition to all these it netted to the city a profit of $640,000.
The securing of the control of its water system did not put an end to litigation. A number of suits were begun by different land holders living contiguous to the river above the city. These were fought out in the state courts and the city in almost every instance won. One of these cases, brought in the superior court of Los Angeles, Judge Gibbs decided against the ranchers and enjoined one hundred and sixty. of them from pumping water from the underflow of the Los Angeles river when the city needed the water. Robert Devine and 240 other prop- erty owners resident along the Los Angeles river for a distance of six to eight miles north of the city, and a mile and a half back from the stream, banded together and brought suit in the federal courts at Los Angeles to test the city's claims. Judge Wellborn decided against them. The case was carried to the supreme court of
the United States. On the 14th of May, 1906, that court handed down a decision that the city of Los Angeles controls the waters of the Los Angeles river. By this decision the ranchers are deprived of the right to use the waters of the river except as the city sees fit to grant them that privilege.
For a number of years before the lease of the city water system had expired the necessity for a more abundant supply than could possibly be obtained from the Los Angeles river had been discussed. The waters of the other Southern California rivers had all been appropriated for irrigation and it was impossible to obtain water rights in any of them without purchasing all the irrigable land contiguous to these rivers.
Such a course would not only have destroyed highly cultivated districts where land was worth from $500 to $1,000 per acre, but would have deprived many of the minor towns of their water supply. It became necessary to go beyond Southern California for water. For several years the board of water commissioners had been quietly investigating other sources of water supply than those then accessible to the city.
To Fred Eaton, an ex-city engineer and ex- mayor of Los Angeles, belongs the credit of originating the scheme of bringing water from Owens river to Los Angeles city. This river drains the east side of the Sierra Nevada moun- tains for a distance of 100 miles. While the region through which it passes is a "land of little rain," the melting snows from Mt. Whitney, Mt. Dana and other high mountain peaks give an abundant supply of water to that river.
The distance from Los Angeles to Owens river is about two hundred miles. The work of bringing a copious supply of pure mountain water that distance through a massive cement conduit across deserts and over mountains was one of the most notable projects ever under- taken by a city for the purpose of procuring a water system. Eaton procured an option on a number of farms with their irrigating canals con- tiguous to the river. The people of Inyo county, through which the greater portion of the river flows, opposed the scheme, but the owners of the land had an undoubted right to sell it, and
Round House
Church of Our Lady of The Angels, 1857
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the water, which was an appurtenance of the land, went with it. In August, 1905, a bond is- sue for $1,500,000 was voted by the people of Los Angeles to make the first payment on land purchased. A bill was introduced into congress and passed the senate and house to give Los An- geles the right of way over government land for conduits and tunnels.
The story of the building of the Owens River Aqueduct from inception to finish ; the history of the discovery of the river and lake and the naming of them, and an account of the Indians of the valley and the war of extermination waged against them, is fully related in Chapter XLIV.
CHAPTER LVII. PIONEER CHURCHES OF LOS ANGELES CITY.
(NOTE. The churches of Los Angeles have become so numerous that it is impossible In the limits allowed me to give a history of each. Only the history of the pioneer church organization of each denomination represented in the city is given. It is to be regretted that so many of the churches have failed to preserve their early records. I have failed to find from their archives any clear and connected account of the early history of some of the Protestant churches. The history of the first churches given in this chapter has been compiled mainly from items and notices found in files of the old Los Angeles Star.)
THE FIRST CHURCH
The first church or chapel built in Los Angeles stood at the foot of the hill near what is now the southeast corner of Buena Vista street and Belle- vue avenue. It was an adobe structure about 18x24 feet in size, and was completed in 1784. In 1811 the citizens obtained permission to build a new church-the primitive chapel had become too small to accommodate the increasing population of the pueblo and its vicinity.
The corner stone of the new church was laid and blessed August 15, 1814, by Father Gil, of the Mission San Gabriel. Just where it was placed is uncertain. It is probable that it was on the eastern side of the old Plaza. In 1818 it was moved to higher ground-its present site. The great flood of 1815, when the waters of the river came up to the lower side of the old Plaza, probably necessitated the change. When the foundation was laid a second time the citizens subscribed 500 cattle. In 1819 the friars of the San Gabriel Mission contributed seven barrels of brandy to the building fund worth $575. This donation, with the previous contribution of cattle, was sufficient to raise the walls to the window
arches by 1821 .* There it came to a full stop. The Pueblo colonists were poor in purse and chary of exertion. They were more willing to wait than to labor. Indeed, they seem to have performed but little of the labor. The neophytes of San Gabriel and San Luis Rey did the most of the work and were paid a real (twelve and a half cents) a day each, the missions getting the money. José Antonio Ramerez was the architect. When the colonists' means were ex- hausted the missions were appealed to for aid. They responded to the appeal. The contribu- tions to the building fund were various in kind and somewhat incongruous in character. The Mission San Miguel contributed 500 cattle, San Luis Obispo 200, Santa Barbara one barrel of brandy, San Diego two barrels of white wine, Purisima six mules and 200 cattle, San Gabriel two barrels of brandy and San Fernando one. Work was begun again on the church and pushed to completion. A house for the curate was also built. It was an adobe structure and stood near the northwest corner of the church. The church was completed and formally dedicated December 8, 1822-eight years after the laying of the first corner stone.
Captain de La Guerra was chosen by the ayun- tamiento, padrino or godfather. San Gabriel Mission loaned a bell for the occasion. The fiesta of Our Lady of the Angeles had been postponed so that the dedication and the celebration could be held at the same time. Cannon boomed on the Plaza and salvos of musketry intoned the services.
*Bancroft's History of California, Vol. I.
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The present building and its suroundings bear but little resemblance to the Nueva Iglesia (new church) that Padre Payeras labored so earnestly to complete eighty-five years ago. It then had no floor but the beaten earth and no seats. The worshipers sat or knelt on the bare ground or on cushions they brought with them. There was no distinction between the poor and the rich at first, but as time passed and the Indians degenerated or the citizens became more aristocratic, a petition was presented to the ayuntamiento to provide a separate place of worship for the Indians. If the Indian's presence in church was undesirable on account of his filthy habits, still he was useful as a church builder. At the session of the ayun- tamiento June 19, 1839, the president stated, "that he had been informed by José M. Navarro, who serves as sexton, that the baptistery of the church is almost in ruins on account of a leaking roof. It was ordered that Sunday next the al- caldes of the Indians shall meet and bring to- gether the Indians without a boss, so that no one will be inconvenienced by the loss of labor of his Indians and place them to work thereon, using some posts and brea now at the guardhouse, the regidor (or councilman) on weekly duty to have charge of the work." Extensive repairs were made on the church in 1841-42. In the sindico's account book is this entry: "Guillermo (Will- iam) Money owes the city funds out of the labor of the prisoners, loaned him for the church, $126." As the prisoners' labor was valued at a real (twelve and a half cents) a day it must have re- quired considerable repairing to amount to $126.
In 1861 the church building was remodeled, the "faithful of the parish" bearing the expense. The front wall, which had been damaged by the rains, was taken down and rebuilt of brick in- stead of adobe. The flat brea-covered roof was changed to a shingled one and the tower altered. The grounds were inclosed and planted with trees and flowers. The old adobe parish house built in 1822, with the additions made to it, later was torn down and the present brick structure erected. The church has a seating capacity of 500. It is the oldest parish church on the Pacific coast of the United States ; and is the only build-
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