Thursday 11:30 a.m. UPDATE to the post below: I'll be the first one to admit when I've erred. Liz's (Pasadena Adjacent) 11:02 Tuesday guess "The completion of the bridge at Devils Gate dam (before it was a dam)" was close enough, so she wins this week's fabulous prize. And so maybe I won't go so easy on you next week!
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How can it be that I stumped everybody two weeks in a row?
I figured that with Hahamongna being in the news lately, it would be fun to post another photo from the 1890s outing to Devil's Gate that I featured in a prior Mystery History won by Bellis last year.
What the group was looking up toward is lost to the ages. A hawk? Someone atop a canyon wall?
One man brought a fishing pole all the way up there, which I love.
Click on the "prior Mystery History" link above for more history of Devil's Gate.
Just as I did the last time I stumped everyone two weeks in a row, I promise to go easy on you next week!
Bellis wins with her Tuesday 9:10 a.m. guess “It's an outing of early Pasadenans to Devil's Gate (before the dam). You can see the devil in the background - someone's climbed on his head!” Bellis, please email me at pasadenapio@gmail.com and I’ll tell you all about your fabulous prize.
In the undated photo above, presumably shot in the late 1890s, a group on an outing stops at Devil’s Gate.
There’s not much more than a puddle of water in the photo.
Here's the same location with much more water, probably shot in winter or spring.
And here's a 1934 shot, probably in the summertime, when it was dry as a bone:
Benjamin Eaton named the gorge Devil’s Gate because of the stone formation that looked like a devil's profile, right down to the horns.
Eaton, a visionary engineer and later a district attorney and judge, was a founding resident of the Indiana Colony who designed pipelines between 1865 and 1874 that brought water southward from Devil’s Gate and the canyon now named after him, making possible the eventual development of Pasadena.
The three-mile pipeline out of Devil's Gate brought water directly to a reservoir near the present-day Pasadena Museum of History (Walnut Street at Orange Grove Boulevard). At the south end of this reservoir, another pipeline brought water to the southern portion of the Indian Colony in what is now South Pasadena.
Here's an early photo in which you can see a section of pipeline along the lower left wall of the gorge.
With water for agricultural irrigation and domestic use, the settlers’ vision was becoming reality.
Here are selected scenes from the 15-minute film "Eaton's Water" that was produced with the intention of including water studies in local sixth-grade curriculum:
I've never seen the entire film. Does anybody out there have it?
How did the dam come to be?
After torrential floods in 1914 and 1916 that devastated the Arroyo Seco, a bond issue to fund construction of a flood-control dam was placed on the ballot in 1917 for all Los Angeles County voters. It passed.
Here are couple of photos of the 100-foot-tall dam under construction in 1920:
And here's the completed project:
I like this long shot that shows the vast upper Arroyo Seco, including where Jet Propulsion Laboratory would someday be built.
With the construction of the dam, there was no longer any public access to the devil’s profile. Many years later the formation was covered in gunite, rendering it nearly unrecognizable.
There's much more detailed history that I could go into -- the fight for water rights, improvements to the dam, more flooding, the many plans over the years for the future of Hahamongna -- but I'll let you research all that on your own time.