Because day or night you can see a fire. It lights up the sky day or night. People can scream "Fire" and people will listen because no one wants to be burned up which is likely the most painful way to die in some ways in a natural setting.
However, you cannot necessary hear flash flooding coming and you cannot necessarily even see it coming (until it's too late). And often heavy rains come at night (like in Montecito, California) last Januarty where 25 died in the night including children.
This is why Flash Flooding is so very deadly. You don't know it's coming (sometimes never) so often you don't know until you are being washed away or your home is being buried by rocks and mud.
If you have ever been to Los Angeles and seen what is called the L.A. River which is made of cement and funnels water to the sea, you might wonder why it was built. And if you watched "Grease" with John Travolta (this is where they raced their cars in the movie). Actually something likely worse happened before which had already caused the L.A. River to be built even before this.
Here is why. And there were other things like this that happened before this too.
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The Los Angeles flood of 1938 was one of the largest floods in the history of Los Angeles, ... Between 113–115 people were killed by the flooding. .... in the San Gabriel Mountains were destroyed, stranding hundreds of people for days.
Mar 1, 2018 - In LA County, some of the most severe flooding was in the San ... The death toll in Los Angeles County exceeded 100 people and the floods caused ... But the threat of severe flooding was still top-of-mind in 1930s LA, where ...
Los Angeles flood of 1938
The Los Angeles River overflowing its banks near Griffith Park
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Date | February–March 1938 |
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Location | Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino and Venturacounties, California |
Deaths | 113-115 |
Property damage | About US$78 million ($1.36 billion in 2017 dollars) 5,601 buildings destroyed 1,500 buildings damaged several small towns completely destroyed Large portions of Riverside and Orange counties completely inundated |
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The Los Angeles flood of 1938 was one of the largest floods in the history of Los Angeles, Orange, and Riverside Counties in southern California. The flood was caused by two Pacific storms that swept across the Los Angeles Basin in February-March 1938 and generated almost one year's worth of precipitation in just a few days. Between 113–115 people were killed by the flooding.[1] The Los Angeles, San Gabriel and Santa AnaRivers burst their banks, inundating much of the coastal plain, the San Fernando and San Gabriel Valleys, and the Inland Empire. Flood control structures spared parts of Los Angeles County from destruction, while Orange and Riverside Counties experienced more damage.[1]
The flood of 1938 is considered a 50-year flood.[2] It caused $78 million of damage ($1.36 billion in 2017 dollars),[2] making it one of the costliest natural disasters in Los Angeles' history.[3] In response to the floods, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and other agencies began to channelizelocal streams in concrete, and built many new flood control dams and debris basins. These works have been instrumental in protecting Southern California from subsequent flooding events, such as in 1969 and 2005, which both had a larger volume than the 1938 flood.[3]
Contents
Background[edit]
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Due to its location between the Pacific Ocean and the high San Gabriel Mountains, the Los Angeles Basin is subject to flash floods caused by heavy orographic precipitation from Pacific storms hitting the mountains. Due to the arid climate, soils are too hard to absorb water quickly during storm events, resulting in large amounts of surface runoff. The steep, rocky terrain of the San Gabriel Mountains further contributes to the rapid runoff and resultant flooding hazard.[4]
Between February 27 and 28, 1938, a storm from the Pacific Ocean moved inland into the Los Angeles Basin, running eastward into the San Gabriel Mountains. The area received almost constant rain totaling 4.4 in (110 mm) from February 27-March 1. This caused minor flooding that affected only a few buildings in isolated canyons and some low-lying areas along rivers.[1] Fifteen hours later on March 1, at approximately 8:45 PM, a second storm hit the area, creating gale-force winds along the coast and pouring down even more rain. The storm brought rainfall totals to 10 in (250 mm) in the lowlands and upwards of 32 in (810 mm) in the mountains.[5] When the storm ended on March 3, the resulting damage was horrific.[1]
Flooding effects[edit]
The 1938 flood destroyed 5,601 homes and businesses, and damaged a further 1500 properties. The flooding was accompanied by massive debris flows of mud, boulders and downed trees which surged out of the foothill canyons. Transport and communication were cut off for many days as roads and railroads were buried, and power, gas and communication lines were cut. Dozens of bridges were destroyed, either by the sheer erosive force of floodwaters or by the collision of floating buildings and other wreckage. Some communities were buried as much as 6 feet (1.8 m) deep in sand and sediment, requiring a massive clean-up effort afterward.[4] It took from two days to a week to restore highway service to most impacted areas. The Pacific Electric rail system serving Los Angeles, Orange, San Bernardino and Riverside Counties was out of service for three weeks.[4]
Although the 1938 flood caused the most damage of any flood in Los Angeles' history, the rainfall and river peaks were not even close to the Great Flood of 1862, the largest known flood by total volume of water. However, during the 1862 flood the region was much less populated than it was in 1938.[6]
Los Angeles area[edit]
About 108,000 acres (44,000 ha) were flooded in Los Angeles County, with the worst hit area being the San Fernando Valley, where many communities had been built during the economic boom of the 1920s in low-lying areas once used for agriculture.[5] In fact, many properties were located in old river beds that had not seen flooding in some years.[1] Swollen by its flooded tributaries, the Los Angeles River reached a maximum flood stage of about 99,000 cubic feet per second (2,800 m3/s).[7] The water surged south, inundating Compton before reaching Long Beach, where a bridge at the mouth of the river collapsed killing ten people.[2] To the west, Venice and other coastal communities were flooded with the overflow of Ballona Creek. The Los Angeles Times chartered a United Air Lines Mainliner to provide them an aerial view of flooding damage. The reporter remarked: "Disaster, gutted farmlands, ruined roads, shattered communications, wrecked railroad lines—all leap into sharp-etched reality from that altitude."[8]
Communities and mining operations in the San Gabriel Mountains were destroyed, stranding hundreds of people for days.[3] As many as 25 buildings were destroyed in the Arroyo Seco canyon, although due to a successful evacuation, no one was killed.[9] Two Civilian Conservation Corps camps, three guard stations and a ranger station were destroyed, along with sixty campgrounds. Almost every road and trail leading into the Angeles National Forestwas damaged or destroyed by erosion and landslides.[10] About 190 men had to be evacuated from one of the CCC camps, near Vogel Flats, using a cable strung across Big Tujunga Canyon.[1]
The Tujunga Wash reached its peak flow on March 3, with a water flow of an estimated 54,000 cubic feet per second (1,500 m3/s).[11] Upper Big Tujunga Canyon was "all but swept clean of structures that were not up above the flood line".[9] In the San Fernando Valley, the floodwaters swept through many areas after escaping the normal channels of Tujunga Creek and its tributaries. Waters reached deep into the valley, flooding Van Nuys; five people died when the Lankershim Boulevard bridge collapsed at Universal City, just below the confluence of Tujunga Wash and the LA River.[9][12] The flooding would have been much worse had a large debris flow not been halted at Big Tujunga Dam; Sam Browne, dam keeper during the 1938 flood, wrote that "Large oak trees several hundred years old rushed down the canyon like kindling... If this dam had never been built, there is no telling what would have happened to Sunland, and the city of Tujunga and the northern end of Glendale."[13][14]
San Gabriel Valley[edit]
On the San Gabriel River, dams built prior to 1938 greatly reduced the magnitude of flooding. Along the West Fork the floodwaters first hit Cogswell Dam, which had been completed just four years earlier in 1934. Cogswell moderately reduced the flood crest on the West Fork, which further downstream joined with the undammed East Fork to peak at more than 100,000 cu ft/s (2,800 m3/s). The floodwaters poured into the reservoir of the still incomplete San Gabriel Dam, filling it over the night of March 2-3 and overtopping the emergency spillway. The maximum release from San Gabriel was held at 60,000 cu ft/s (1,700 m3/s), while the downstream Morris Dam further reduced the peak, to about 30,000 cu ft/s (850 m3/s). As a result, much of the San Gabriel Valley were spared from flooding, although heavy damage still occurred in some areas.[1][15] In Azusa, four spans of the 1907 "Great Bridge" along the Monrovia-Glendora Pacific Electric line, which had survived the San Gabriel's seasonal flooding for over 30 years, were swept away in the torrent.[16]
Along the East Fork of the San Gabriel River, flooding obliterated much of a new highway that was intended to connect the San Gabriel Valley to Wrightwood. The southern stub of the highway has been rebuilt as today's East Fork Road, but north of Heaton Flat little remains except for the Bridge to Nowhere, a 120-foot (37 m) tall arch bridge that was saved due to its height above the floodwaters. Located about 5 miles (8.0 km) from the nearest road, the bridge is now a popular destination for hikers and bungee jumpers.[17]
Riverside and Orange Counties[edit]
In Riverside and Orange Counties, the Santa Ana River reached a peak flow of about 100,000 cubic feet per second (2,800 m3/s),[18] completely overwhelming the surrounding dikes and transforming low-lying parts of Riverside County and Orange County into huge, shallow lakes.[19] A reporter for the Los Angeles Times described the river as "swollen crazy-mad".[20] The town of Agua Mansa in Riverside County was completely swept away, as were the smaller communities of Atwood and La Jolla, where 43 people were killed.[21] Flooding in the city of Riverside took another 15 lives.[2] The cities of Anaheim and Santa Ana in Orange County, were flooded up to 6 feet (1.8 m) deep for several weeks.
High Desert[edit]
Although most of the damage occurred on the windward (southwestern) side of the San Gabriel and San Bernardino Mountains, large amounts of rain also fell on the northeast side which drains to the Mojave Desert. The Little Rock Dam on Little Rock Creek overtopped during the flood due to a damaged spillway siphon that had been plugged by debris; hundreds of people in downstream Palmdale were evacuted.[1] Further east, the Mojave Riverburst its banks, damaging long stretches of the ATSF railroad and causing damage in Victorville and Barstow. The main line between Barstow and Los Angeles was closed for a week.[4] The Southern Pacific Railroad main line over Tehachapi Pass was closed for two weeks, requiring emergency service via buses and trucks.[4]
Aftermath[edit]
Dams such as those at San Gabriel and Big Tujunga greatly reduced downstream damage in the 1938 flood. Many even larger dams were built after the flood to provide a greater degree of protection to downstream communities. Hansen Dam had already begun construction but stood incomplete during the 1938 flood and was unable to prevent the devastating flooding along Tujunga Wash. The dam was completed two years later, in 1940.[1] The Sepulveda Dam was built in 1941 to prevent the Los Angeles River from flooding the lower San Fernando Valley, Burbank and Glendale.
Along the San Gabriel River, the Santa Fe Dam and Whittier Narrows Dam had both been proposed prior to 1938, but had little political support until the devastation of the 1938 flood, after which federal funds were made available for both dams.[22] Santa Fe was completed in 1949, and Whittier Narrows in 1956. Construction was also expedited at Prado Dam, which had been planned in 1936 but work had not yet started at the time of the 1938 flood. Had Prado Dam been operational in 1938 it would likely have prevented the severe flooding in Orange County.[21][23]
Although some river channel work was already in place at the time, the 1938 flood was the main impetus for channelizing the Los Angeles River in concrete, speeding the flow of floodwaters to the sea. The channelization project was authorized by the Flood Control Act of 1941 was undertaken by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers starting just a few years after the 1938 flood, with emergency funding from the federal government.[1] About 278 miles (447 km) of streams in the Los Angeles River system were encased in concrete, a huge undertaking that took twenty years to complete. The system successfully protected Los Angeles from massive flooding in 1969.[5] The San Gabriel and Santa Ana Rivers were also ultimately channelized to protect against future floods, although it took much longer for those projects to be completed.[6]
In response to the large debris flows generated by the 1938 flood, the U.S. Forest Service was tasked with fire suppression in the Angeles Forest to reduce the risk of erosion in burned areas.[10]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ ab c d e f g h i j "Los Angeles Basin's 1938 Catastrophic Flood Event". Archived from the original on May 9, 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-12.
- ^ ab c d Romo, Rene (1988-02-22). "Flood of Memories : Longtime Valley Residents Recall 1938 Deluge That Took 87 Lives, Did $78 Million in Damage". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2017-08-17.
- ^ ab c "The History of the Los Angeles River". L.A. River Connection. Archived from the original on 2007-06-11.
- ^ ab c d e Panhorst, F.W. (Aug 1938). "Role of Highways in Recent California Floods: Road Network Takes On Added Value in Time of Emergency". Civil Engineering. SCV History. 8 (8): 542–544. Retrieved 2017-08-17.
- ^ ab c Cram, Justin (2012-02-28). "Los Angeles Flood of 1938: Cementing the River's Future". Departures. KCET. Retrieved 2013-07-22.
- ^ ab Masters, Nathan (2017-03-03). "The Southern California Deluge of 1938". KCET. Retrieved 2017-08-17.
- ^ "USGS Gage #11103000 Los Angeles River at Long Beach, CA". National Water Information System. U.S. Geological Survey. 1929–1992. Retrieved 2017-08-17.
- ^ “Plane trip shows scene of desolation.” In Los Angeles Times, March 4, 1938, pp. 1-2.
- ^ ab c “Scores trapped in mountains: Pilots report canyon retreats destroyed or heavily damaged.” In Los Angeles Times, March 5, 1938, p. 7.
- ^ ab Cermak, Robert W. (2005). Fire in the Forest: A History of Forest Fire Control on the National Forests in California, 1898-1956. USDA Forest Service. p. 200. ISBN 1-59351-429-8.
- ^ "USGS Gage #11097000 Big Tujunga Creek below Hansen Dam, CA". National Water Information System. U.S. Geological Survey. 1933–2016. Retrieved 2017-08-17.
- ^ Roderick, Kevin (1999-10-20). "Deadly Flood of 1938 Left Its Mark on Southland". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2017-08-17.
- ^ Bartholomew, Dana (2011-07-21). "Dam renovation expected to help cut water costs". Los Angeles Daily News. Retrieved 2017-08-17.
- ^ “Small Losses prove value of dam system: Huge amounts of water stored and damage held to minimum” in Los Angeles Times, March 4, 1938, p. 7.
- ^ Medina, Daniel (2014-03-20). "The Other River that Defined L.A.: The San Gabriel River in the 20th Century". KCET. Retrieved 2017-08-17.
- ^ "Los Angeles Raiders Football Stadium, Irwindale, Parking and Associated Facilities Development: Environmental Impact Statement, Volume 2". U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. 1988. p. 35. Retrieved 2017-08-17.
- ^ Goran, David (2016-06-02). "The Bridge to Nowhere – One of the most bizarre artifacts to be found deep in the San Gabriel Mountains". The Vintage News. Retrieved 2017-08-17.
- ^ "USGS Gage #11074000 Santa Ana River below Prado Dam, CA". National Water Information System. U.S. Geological Survey. 1938–2016. Retrieved 2017-08-17.
- ^ Gold, Scott (October 3, 1999). "1938 Flood: A Watershed for the County". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 19 March 2017.
- ^ “Plane trip shows scene of desolation.” In Los Angeles Times, March 4, 1938, pp. 1-2.
- ^ ab Masters, Nathan (2012-11-29). "The Santa Ana River: How It Shaped Orange County". KCET. Retrieved 2017-08-17.
- ^ Elkind, Sarah S. (2011). How Local Politics Shape Federal Policy: Business, Power, and the Environment in Twentieth-century Los Angeles. University of North Carolina Press. pp. 92–94. ISBN 0-80783-489-0.
- ^ "History of the Santa Ana River" (PDF). Santa Ana River Vision Plan. City of Santa Ana. Retrieved 2017-08-17.
External links[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Los Angeles flood of 1938. |
- Image Gallery of 1962, 1941, 1938 Los Angeles floods
- 1938 Flood photos by Herman J. Schultheis at the Los Angeles Public Library
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