header image

[Sign Up Now] to Receive Our FREE Daily SCVTV-SCVNews Digest by E-Mail

Inside
Weather


 
Calendar
Today in
S.C.V. History
December 24
1965 - Signal newspaper owner Scott Newhall shows up for a duel (of words) with rival Canyon Country newspaper publisher Art Evans, who no-shows and folds his paper soon after [story]
headline


| Tuesday, Mar 12, 2019
The "tombstone" was left standing when the dam collapsed. Colorization by Pony Horton.

 

President Donald Trump has signed the federal lands package that creates, among other things, a national monument in the Santa Clarita Valley to memorialize the more than 400 victims of the St. Francis Dam Disaster, the Department of the Interior announced Tuesday.

The signing comes on the 91st anniversary of the disaster, which was one of the worst civil engineering failures in U.S. history and California’s second-deadliest disaster after the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and fire.

The “Saint Francis Dam Disaster National Memorial and National Monument” legislation is part of S.47, a sweeping lands package that received overwhelming bipartisan support in both houses of Congress and will protect millions of acres of land. It expands several national parks and establishes four new national monuments including the first that is wholly within the Santa Clarita Valley – and only the second to touch the SCV after the designation by President Obama of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument in 2014.

The dam legislation hit a few bumps in the road, having gone through several rounds in both the House of Representatives and U.S. Senate before finally coming to fruition five years after the first draft. A host of local lawmakers from both political parties did not waiver in their ongoing fight for the passage of the bill. They include former Reps. Buck McKeon and Steve Knight and current Rep. Katie Hill, D-Agua Dulce, in the House; and Kamala Harris and Dianne Feinstein in the Senate.

The official legislative history shows the version of the bill included in S.47 was the version introduced in the previous House session by then-Rep. Knight, R-Palmdale, and coauthored by Rep. Julia Brownley, D-Thousand Oaks; and in the Senate by Harris and co-authored by Feinstein. In February, Hill, who succeeded Knight in office, introduced identical language as a stand-alone bill to keep the effort alive just in case S.47 was defeated. Harris did the same in the Senate.

“The St. Francis Dam Memorial has been a priority for the city of Santa Clarita for years,” Hill said in a statement. “I’m proud that in the 116th Congress we are able to deliver this piece of legislation and amplify the stories of the tragedy.

“Our local partners were critical to getting this done,” she said, “and I’m thankful for the work of my predecessor, Steve Knight, to advance this concept in the 115th Congress. I am also grateful to my neighbor, Congresswoman Julia Brownley, for her leadership on this issue, and Senators Kamala Harris and Dianne Feinstein for their leadership in the Senate.”

The St. Francis Dam monument covers 353 acres of federal land in San Francisquito Canyon that is already managed by the U.S. Forest Service, which will retain operational control over it. Initially planned for 440 acres, all leaseholds and mining fee lands were removed from the final bill last year.

Located approximately seven miles north of Copper Hill Drive, a future visitors center will honor the estimated 411 victims who perished when the dam collapsed and unleashed 13 billion gallons of water just before midnight on March 12, 1928. It left behind a 54-mile swath of death and destruction from Saugus to the Pacific Ocean. As a result of its failure, William Mulholland, chief engineer of the Los Angeles Bureau of Water Works and Supply (now the LADWP) and oversaw the dam’s construction, resigned his post.

The people of the Santa Clarita Valley never benefited from so much as one drop of water from the dam and reservoir; it was piped directly to the city of Los Angeles.

The disaster was of national interest for several reasons. Many of the victims were electric company and phone company workers and tourists who hailed from cities and towns throughout the Western United States – which is known from their many burial places across the country.

The federal government owned the land where the dam was erected. (The City of Los Angeles leased it from the Forest Service – and still does lease the forest land it uses.) Before the dam broke, the federal government had authority over the strategic waterway into which the floodwaters were unleashed. Afterward, the Congress investigated. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers designed a levee at the west end of the floodplain that still stands.

When the St. Francis failed, the Boulder (Hoover) Dam was in the planning stages. Some of the first federal dam safety measures arose out of the horror of the St. Francis Dam disaster and set a course toward the current dam safety regulations that have saved untold numbers of lives.

The monument legislation calls on the Forest Service to work closely with the two formal proponents of the bill – the Santa Clarita Valley Historical Society and the local Community Hiking Club – as well as the city of Santa Clarita, in the design and interpretation of the memorial.

Dianne Erskine-Hellrigel, who, along with Historical Society President Alan Pollack, wrote a first draft of the initial bill that was introduced by McKeon in 2014, expressed gratitude to the lawmakers and other proponents and supporters of the legislation.

“Now, the 400-plus victims of this tragedy can be remembered properly at the dam site. We are looking forward to working with the Forest Service to erect a proper memorial, and honoring the victims,” said Erskine-Hellrigel, who is president of the Community Hiking Club and a Historical Society board member.

The enormity of the bill’s passage was not lost on Pollack.

“What a momentous and historical day for the city of Santa Clarita,” the Historical Society president said. “The St. Francis Dam Disaster National Memorial is officially established and at last the memories of over 400 dead appropriately honored. We now look forward to working with the U.S. Forest Service to build a memorial visitor center and wall with the names of all the victims in the next few years.”

The list of deceased victims continues to be a work in progress. It currently stands at 411. While historians initially focused on an accurate count of the victims, a graduate student from California State University, Northridge, set out to focus instead on the “humanity” of the disaster. Ann Stansell, under the tutelage of Professor James Snead, took on the monumental task in October 2011 as part of her thesis, while pursuing a master’s degree in anthropology.

To see the current list and learn more about Stansell’s research, click [here].

Recent years have also seen a slew of new books that reexamined the causes of the failure.

Leon Worden, vice president of the Historical Society, lauded the many individuals who laid the groundwork for the legislation.

“This could be the single most significant thing the Historical Society has ever done,” Worden said. “Alan and Dianne had a vision that went beyond what was thought possible. I’m proud of them.

“There were a lot of unsung heroes along the way,” he said. “It was an evolutionary process, and it really goes back almost a decade to a CSUN professor named James Snead who built an entire class project around the idea that the victims of the tragedy weren’t just numbers but real people. Ann Stansell, one of his students, grabbed the ball and ran with it, and she’s still running with it, to identify all of the victims.

“‘Dammies’ like Don Ray, Frank Rock, Philip Scorza, Keith Buttelman and others had carried the torch for decades, and I remember Don and Frank were in that first meeting at SCVTV when Alan and Dianne fleshed out their plans for federal legislation. Mike Murphy at the city and Councilwoman Laurene Weste played important roles, and I apologize to anyone I’m failing to mention.”

The nonprofit St. Francis Dam National Memorial Foundation has been established to raise the funds for the visitors center, and the group is actively seeking monetary donations. To donate to the memorial and monument, or to learn more about the St. Francis Dam Disaster, visit SaintFrancisDam.com.

 

Comment On This Story
COMMENT POLICY: We welcome comments from individuals and businesses. All comments are moderated. Comments are subject to rejection if they are vulgar, combative, or in poor taste.
REAL NAMES ONLY: All posters must use their real individual or business name. This applies equally to Twitter account holders who use a nickname.

6 Comments

  1. Carol Jones says:

    Nice but he’s only commemorating land that is useless for oil, mineral, timber and water rights. Tracts such as this were thrown in as an afterthought. Nonetheless, the more land preserved is less that can be built on – so that’s great.

    • SCVNews.com says:

      We have not worked on the Dam legislation for the last five years (actually a lot longer) as an “afterthought.” Moreover, “he” is not doing anything. It’s not his bill; he had nothing to do with crafting the legislation. It’s pretty much everyone else’s in Congress.

  2. David C Thompson says:

    What is attached to the bill that will do much more harm than good?

    See?

    https://www.cyclenews.com/2019/03/article/s-47-has-been-signed-into-law/

    • SCVNews.com says:

      Not sure what you mean by “attached” … There are 100 bills in the lands package … the text is all online … and you can follow the link in this story to read the text of our own Dam bill. You’ll see that cattle grazing is still allowed in the monument area in San Francisquito Canyon. Not that there has ever been cattle grazing there, but that sort of thing does not change. It was National Forest before, it’s National Forest now. It’s really about building a visitors center there.

  3. jacqueline says:

    Wait a minute… there’s a memorial burial ground somewhere right in San Fran Cyn. Please do not forget to honor all of the American Mexican Indian families who had ranches along the way through Filmore to Santa Barbara!

    • SCVNews.com says:

      It’s not a “memorial” burial ground; it’s a private cemetery on private property. This is a public visitors center on public property.

Leave a Comment


SCV NewsBreak
LOCAL NEWS HEADLINES
Wednesday, Dec 24, 2025
Barger Urges Residents to Stay Alert, Follow Evacuation Orders
Los Angeles County Supervisor Kathryn Barger is urging residents to remain vigilant as a powerful storm system moves through Los Angeles County, bringing periods of heavy rain and rapidly changing conditions.
Wednesday, Dec 24, 2025
CHP Makes Multiple Arrests Made in Statewide Organized Retail Theft Investigation
Thirteen suspects were arrested, and more than $800,000 in stolen merchandise was recovered following a coordinated, multi-agency operation targeting an organized retail theft network operating across Northern California.
Wednesday, Dec 24, 2025
Dec. 27: Holiday Spice Salsa Edition at Canyon Country Community Center
The city of Santa Clarita invites the community to heat up the holiday season at the Holiday Spice Salsa Edition on Saturday, Dec. 27, at the Canyon Country Community Center, located at 18410 Sierra Highway Santa Clarita, CA 91351.
Keep Up With Our Facebook

Latest Additions to SCVNews.com
Los Angeles County Supervisor Kathryn Barger is urging residents to remain vigilant as a powerful storm system moves through Los Angeles County, bringing periods of heavy rain and rapidly changing conditions.
Barger Urges Residents to Stay Alert, Follow Evacuation Orders
Thirteen suspects were arrested, and more than $800,000 in stolen merchandise was recovered following a coordinated, multi-agency operation targeting an organized retail theft network operating across Northern California.
CHP Makes Multiple Arrests Made in Statewide Organized Retail Theft Investigation
The California State Transportation Agency today announced a new joint effort by two of its departments, the Department of Motor Vehicles and California Highway Patrol, to curb excessive speeding and prevent deadly crashes.
Pilot Program to Crack Down on Extreme Speeding
The city of Santa Clarita invites the community to heat up the holiday season at the Holiday Spice Salsa Edition on Saturday, Dec. 27, at the Canyon Country Community Center, located at 18410 Sierra Highway Santa Clarita, CA 91351.
Dec. 27: Holiday Spice Salsa Edition at Canyon Country Community Center
1965 - Signal newspaper owner Scott Newhall shows up for a duel (of words) with rival Canyon Country newspaper publisher Art Evans, who no-shows and folds his paper soon after [story]
headline
As winter storms enter Los Angeles County, the Los Angeles County Department of Animal Care and Control urges pet owners to take necessary precautions in light of the significant storms expected to last for five days.
DACC Urges Pet Owners to Prioritize Safety Ahead of Storm
Brayden Miner scored 31 points and Rylan Starr had 24 as The Master's University men's basketball team crushed Bethesda University 145-59 The MacArthur Center.
Season’s Best Offensive Performance Leads TMU Over Bethesda
From surprise Santa arrivals to stacks of gifts waiting for young hands, the Boys & Girls Club of Santa Clarita Valley delivered holiday cheer on a large scale this season, reaching hundreds of children and teens throughout the Santa Clarita Valley, including Clubhouses in Canyon Country, Newhall, Val Verde and Castaic.
Boys & Girls Club of Santa Clarita Valley Spreads Holiday Cheer
Princess Cruises, headquartered in Santa Clarita, embraced a cherished maritime tradition in a uniquely festive way, celebrating a symbolic christening of its Rose Parade float with a ceremonial break of a bottle of Pantalones Organic Tequila.
Princess Cruises Christens Star Princess Tournament of Roses Float
The Golden Globes have ushered in awards season with the announcement of the 2026 nominees across 28 categories. Among this year’s contenders is Pixar’s "Elio," which earned a nomination for Best Motion Picture – Animated.
CalArtian-Directed ‘Elio’ Nominated for 2026 Golden Globe
The National Weather Service has issued a "Hazardous Weather" warning for the Santa Clarita Valley and Southern California.
NWS Issues Flood, High Wind Warnings for SCV, Southland
Detectives from the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department Missing Persons Unit are asking for the public’s help locating at-Risk missing person Drew Barrick Russell.
LASD Asks for Help Locating Missing Santa Clarita Man
1997 - Five bodies found during grading of Northlake development in Castaic; determined to be Jenkins graveyard [story]
reburial
Old Town Newhall Public Library will host "Spice Travels," Friday, Jan. 2, 9:15-9:30 a.m. at 24500 Main St., Santa Clarita, CA 91321.
Jan. 2: Explore Global Cuisine with ‘Spice Travels ‘ at Newhall Library
The California Highway Patrol encourages the public to “brake” the habit of speeding this holiday season. The CHP will launch a Holiday Enforcement Period starting at 6:01 p.m. on Wednesday, Dec. 24, and ending at 11:59 p.m. on Thursday, Dec. 25.
Dec. 24-25: CHP Launches Holiday Enforcement Period
Volunteers are needed to help clear brush and restore the tread from the existing lower Gates and Twister trails 8 a.m.-noon Saturday, Dec. 27.
Dec. 27: Volunteers Needed for SCV Trail Users Workday
Join InfluenceHER's "Redefining Happiness, a Candid Conversation for the Modern Woman," 4-6 p.m., Friday, Jan. 16 at the Venue Valencia.
Jan. 16: InfluenceHER- Redefining Happiness, A Candid Conversation for the Modern Woman
The Santa Clarita Public Library system has announced that all library branches will close at 1 p.m. on Christmas Eve, Wednesday, Dec. 24, and remain closed on Christmas Day, Thursday, Dec. 25, in observance of Christmas.
Santa Clarita Public Library Holiday Hours
Students pursuing an undergraduate degree in water resource-related fields are invited to apply for the 2026/27 ACWA Edward G. “Jerry” Gladbach Scholarship, offered by the Association of California Water Agencies in partnership with SCV Water. Applications are now being accepted through March 1, 2026.
SCV Water Announces 2026/27 ACWA Edward G. ‘Jerry’ Gladbach Scholarship
Chloe Auble scored a career-high 40 points and Allie Miller came a rebound away from her first career triple-double as The Master's University Women's Basketball team defeated the Bethesda Lion Angels 125-24 in the MacArthur Center.
Lady Mustangs Break Scoring Records in Win
Vallarta Food Enterprises, headquartered in Santa Clarita, has been ordered by a federal court to comply with subpoenas relating to charges of employment discrimination.
Federal Court Orders Vallarta to Comply with EEOC Subpoenas
Burrtec Waste Industries has partnered with the city of Santa Clarita to establish three convenient locations for residents to recycle real holiday trees this season.
Dec. 26-Jan. 10: Recycle Trees, Wreaths at City Drop-Off Locations
The North American Aerospace Defense Command is ready to track Santa on Wednesday, Dec. 24, Christmas Eve, and is celebrating the program’s 70th anniversary.
NORAD Santa Tracker Celebrates 70th Anniversary
SCVNews.com