The Crescenta Valley flood occurred in New Year's Eve 1933 (December 31, 1933) and extended to New Year's 1934 (January 1, 1934) in the Crescenta Valley in Los Angeles County, California, inundating communities in the valley including La Crescenta-Montrose, La Cañada, and Tujunga.[1] This seemed to have happened because in late 1933, wildfires burned much of the trees and grass in the Crescenta Valley, leaving the cities in the lower parts of the valley vulnerable to flooding. On New Year's Eve, heavy rains led to the collapse of earthen dams, which in turn led to the destruction of many homes in the valley and many deaths.
Date | December 1933 until January 1934 |
---|---|
Location | Los Angeles County, California (specifically La Crescenta-Montrose, California) |
Deaths | 45 (or more) |
Background
editIn November 1933, wildfires raged through the nearby San Gabriel mountains above the communities of La Crescenta, La Cañada and Montrose. Earthen dams had been created by the Civilian Conservation Corps in three of the valleys (Dunsmore, Pickens and Hall-Beckley) to trap rainwater.[2] During the last week of December of that year, a series of winter storms pounded the mountainside with 12 inches (300 mm) of rain. On New Year's Eve, more heavy rains led to sporadic flooding.
New Year's
editAround midnight on December 31 (1933), the earthen dams above the Crescenta Valley collapsed, sending millions of tons of mud and debris into the neighborhoods below.[2][3] The mudslides that began in the mountains above La Cañada and La Crescenta carved a path of destruction all the way to the Verdugo Wash and beyond.
Aftermath
editSome Montrose residents sought shelter from flooding at American Legion Post 288, which was destroyed, killing 12.[4]
More than 400 homes were destroyed in La Cañada, La Crescenta, Montrose and Tujunga. Scores of people were killed, and hundreds were left homeless. Entire families were wiped out. Parts of Foothill Boulevard were buried under 12 feet (4 m) of mud, boulders and debris. The mud was deep enough to bury cars completely on Montrose Avenue. Miles of Honolulu Boulevard were inundated by several feet of sand and silt.
Two notable victims of the flood were silent-era identical-twin child actors Winston and Weston Doty, who died at the age of 19.[5][6]
Reconstruction
editFollowing the disaster, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the County of Los Angeles (with the Los Angeles County Department of Public Works) built a flood control system of catch basins and concrete storm drains, designed to prevent a repeat of the 1933-1934 disaster.[7]
The flood was commemorated in Woody Guthrie's song "Los Angeles New Year's Flood".[8] To honor the victims of that New Year's calamity and to mark its 75th anniversary, a small monument was dedicated January 1, 2004, at Rosemont and Fairway avenues in Montrose, near where the American Legion Hall had stood.
References
edit- ^ Cobery, Art (2012). The Great Crescenta Valley flood: New Year's Day, 1934. Charleston, SC: The History Press. ISBN 978-1-60949-449-0. OL 30660958M.
- ^ a b "Society to Focus on 1934 Flood". Glendale News-Press. 2006-01-13. Retrieved 2022-08-14.
Just after midnight each of the local canyons, Dunsmore, Pickens and Hall-Beckley, disgorged the topsoil from the denuded mountains, and 20-foot high walls of mud and debris roared across Foothill Boulevard.
- ^ Merl, Jean (25 January 2009). "Montrose flood roared through the Crescenta Valley as 1934 began". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on 25 January 2021. Retrieved 23 March 2018 – via Internet Archive.
- ^ Los Angeles Times, January 2, 3, 4, 5, 1934
- ^ "Trojan's Famous Twin Cheer Leaders Drown" - San Antonio Light (San Antonio, Texas) January 3, 1934 pg. 8
- ^ San Antonio Light (San Antonio, Texas) January 20, 1934 pg. 3
- ^ "Images of America: La Crescenta" Mike Lawler and Robert Newcombe. Arcadia Pub. 2005
- ^ ""Los Angeles New Years Flood" by Woody Guthrie". Woodyguthrie.org. Retrieved 23 March 2018.