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Paperback William Mulholland and the Rise of Los Angeles Book

ISBN: 0520234669

ISBN13: 9780520234666

William Mulholland and the Rise of Los Angeles

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

William Mulholland presided over the creation of a water system that forever changed the course of southern California's history. Mulholland, a self-taught engineer, was the chief architect of the Owens Valley Aqueduct-a project ranking in magnitude and daring with the Panama Canal-that brought water to semi-arid Los Angeles from the lush Owens Valley. The story of Los Angeles's quest for water is both famous and notorious: it has been the subject of the classic yet historically distorted movie Chinatown, as well as many other accounts. This first full-length biography of Mulholland challenges many of the prevailing versions of his life story and sheds new light on the history of Los Angeles and its relationship with its most prized resource: water.

Catherine Mulholland, the engineer's granddaughter, provides insights into this story that family familiarity affords, and adds to our historical understanding with extensive primary research in sources such as Mulholland's recently uncovered office files, newspapers, and Department of Water and Power archives. She scrutinizes Mulholland's life-from his childhood in Ireland to his triumphant completion of the Owens Valley Aqueduct to the tragedy that ended his career. This vivid portrait of a rich chapter in the history of Los Angeles is enhanced with a generous selection of previously unpublished photographs.

Los Angeles Times Best Nonfiction Book of 2000

Customer Reviews

1 rating

A Complete Bore

Sorry I bought it, hoping for a great book, and I read almost everything of this genre. This was a bad buy I just gambled on. It's like reading a dissertation for a college class BUT by a Mulholland family member. Tangled up in footnotes, theories, imagined situations should something have gone either way -- I gave it to our local library after 3 sit-downs. Just terribly dull, boring, like reading a bad encyclopedia. Sorry Mulholland family, you had an opportunity. You blew it. You buried the most important part of Mulhollands legacy and tucked it away with deflection, that maybe it really wasn't his fault (it was) -- 400+ people died because of his lack of engineering knowledge. Instead its a family love letter. Don't buy this book.
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