- Title
- Los Angeles Board of Public Service Commissioners answer to Clearing House Association
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- Creator
- Los Angeles (Calif.) Board of Public Service Commissioners
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- Date
- 1929
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- Description
- Los Angeles Board of Public Service Commissioners responding against a complaint that a decrease in cultivated areas of the Owens Valley would lead to the decline in values of these areas.
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- Format Extent
- 1 page
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- Subject
- Water-supply, Agricultural; Irrigation; Farms; Land use; Los Angeles (Calif.) Board of Public Service Commissioners; Water rights--California--Owens Valley; Water rights--California--Los Angeles; Administrative Records
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- Note
- To meet the need for water of its growing population, the City of Los Angeles began acquiring water rights in the Owens Valley in 1905. The Los Angeles Aqueduct was completed in 1913 to bring Owens Valley water to the city. During the 1920s, the City of Los Angeles began additional large-scale purchases of land in the Owens Valley to increase its supply of water from the valley, resulting in the city's almost complete control of the valley's agricultural land. This led to a decline in the valley's agricultural infrastructure and economy.
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- Collection
- J. D. Black Papers, CSLA-15, Series 1. Owens Valley Water Controversy Records; Box No. 8; Folder No. 1
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- Type
- ["Administrative records"]
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- Keywords
- ["Los Angeles Aqueduct","LA Aqueduct","Aqueduct"]
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- Language
- eng
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Los Angeles Board of Public Service Commissioners answer to Clearing House Association
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