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World Environmental and Water Resources Congress 2017                                                    379




                                       Who Designed the Ill-Fated St. Francis Dam?

                                         J. David Rogers, Ph.D., P.E., P.G., F.ASCE
                                                                                   1

               1 Professor and K.F. Hasselmann Chair in Geological Engineering, Missouri Univ. of Science
               and Technology, Rolla, MO 65409. E-mail: rogersda@mst.edu

               Abstract

               The St. Francis Dam was built by the City of Los Angeles Bureau of Water Works and Supply
               (BWWS)  in  1925-26  as a  curved concrete gravity dam,  approximately  200  feet high  in San
               Francisquito Canyon, about 35 miles northeast of downtown Los Angeles.  The reservoir provided
               an  additional 38,000 acre-feet  of  storage from  the Los  Angeles  Aqueduct.  The dam  failed
               catastrophically on March 13, 1928, killing at least 432 people, making it the most deadly American
               structural failure  of the  20th  Century. BWWS  Chief Engineer  and  General Manager  William
               Mulholland accepted complete blame for the failure, but who actually designed the dam has been
               clouded  in  mystery  for almost  90  years. Recent research  suggests  that  no  site-specific   rational
               design methodology was actually performed, only visual comparisons with some published cross
               sections of then-existing dams. More than a dozen separate investigations of the failure followed,
               all of which failed to ascertain the dam’s actual maximum cross section or the fact that there were
               no stability calculations undertaken as part of the design. Recent evaluations have demonstrated that
               the St. Francis Dam exhibited extremely low safety factors in at least five different failure modes,
               including  internal  instability,  overturning,  arching,  keyblock  uplift,  and  reactivation  of  a
               megalandslide on the dam’s left abutment

               INTRODUCTION

               A careful review of the 847-page Los Angeles County Coroner’s Inquest into the Failure of the
               St. Francis Dam in March 1928 (LA Co Coroner, 1928) was made in 2009-10, while the author
               served as a Trent Dames Civil Engineering Heritage and Dibner Research  Fellow at the
               Huntington Library in San Marino, California. Prior to this the author had spent several decades
               researching the St. Francis Dam failure (Rogers, 1992; 1993; 1995; 1997, 2006; and 2007).
                       The nine jurors were  comprised of prominent engineers and contractors from  Los
               Angeles, each volunteering their services for nothing. They included  Los Angeles hydraulics
               engineer  Irving C. Harris (foreman), mining  engineer Sterling C.  Lines, structural  engineers
               Blaine Noice, Oliver G. Bowen and Chester D. Waltz, general engineering contractor William H.
               Eaton, Jr., real estate appraiser Harry G. Holabird, contractor and insurance executive Ralph F.
               Ware, and Z. Nathanial [Nate] Nelson.
                       Although none of the Jurors appears to have had any formal expertise in geology  or
               foundation engineering, they possessed  considerable technical training in civil/structural
               engineering and heavy construction, which is revealed in the technical content of their inquiries
               and the timeless wisdom of their concluding recommendations and findings, which have been

               quoted in countless articles, standards, and publications relating to dam safety, which advanced
               the need for external peer review of dams and establishment of the nation’s premier state dam
               safety agency, the Division of Safety of Dams (DSOD) of the California Department of Water
               Resources (DWR).








                                           World Environmental and Water Resources Congress 2017
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