Manzanar, California

Manzanar (Spanish for '"apple orchard"') was a town in Inyo County, California, founded by water engineer and land developer George Chaffey.[1]

Manzanar
Manzanar
Location in California
Coordinates: 36°44′24″N 118°04′50″W
CountryUnited States
StateCalifornia
CountyInyo County
Elevation3,727 ft (1,136 m)

It was situated on the former narrow gauge railway line of the Southern Pacific Railroad 9 miles (14 km) north of Lone Pine,[2] at an elevation of 3,727 feet (1,136.0 m).[1]

A post office operated at Manzanar from 1911 to 1914.[2] Manzanar was a shipping point for the surrounding apple orchards before the diversion of water through the Los Angeles Aqueduct from the Owens Valley to Los Angeles.[2]

During World War II, the area was the location of the Manzanar War Relocation Center, where people of Japanese ancestry were held.[3]

Owens Valley Paiute

Manzanar was first inhabited by Native Americans nearly 10,000 years ago. Approximately 1,500 years ago, the area was settled by the Owens Valley Paiute,[4][5] who ranged across the Owens Valley from Long Valley on the north to Owens Lake on the south, and from the crest of the Sierra Nevada on the west to the Inyo Mountains on the east.[6] Other Native American nations in the region included the Miwok, Western Mono, and Tubatulabal to the west, the Shoshone to the south and east, and the Mono Lake Paiute to the north.[6] The Owens Valley Paiute hunted and fished, collected pine nuts, and raised crops utilizing irrigation in the Manzanar area.[4][7] They also traded brown-ware pottery for salt from the Saline Valley, and traded other wares and goods across the Sierra Nevada during the summer and fall.[8]

The Owens Valley received scant attention from European Americans until the early 1860s, as it was little more than a crossroads on the routes through the area. When gold and silver were discovered in the Sierra Nevada and the Inyo Mountains, the resulting sudden influx of miners, farmers, cattlemen and their hungry herds brought conflict with the Owens Valley Paiute, whose crops were being destroyed.[9]

"The Army didn't take them on a direct route, either, said Owens Valley Paiute elder Irene Button. "They were forced to walk all the way around the eastern shore of Owens Lake" (covers an area of approximately 108 square miles (280 km2)).[10]

Approximately one-third of the Native Americans in the Owens Valley were relocated to Fort Tejon. After 1863, many returned to their permanent villages, established along creeks flowing down from the Sierra Nevada mountains. In the Manzanar area, the Owens Valley Paiute had established villages along Bairs, Georges, Shepherds, and Symmes creeks.[11]

Ranchers

When European American settlers first arrived in the Owens Valley in the mid-19th century, they found a number of large Paiute villages in the Manzanar area.[12] John Shepherd, one of the first of the new settlers, homesteaded 160 acres (65 ha) of land 3 miles (5 km) north of Georges Creek in 1864. With the help of Owens Valley Paiute field workers and laborers,[13] he expanded his ranch to 2,000 acres (810 ha).[14]

As the area was developed, its farmers by 1922 produced "probably 90 per cent Winesaps on 400 to 500 acres of bearing trees," even with its "limited water supply." Inyo County agricultural agent J.P. Hertel predicted that year the growers would "no doubt plant many more trees in the future and irrigate them by the development of large wells."[15]

In 1925 it was known as "one of the best apple and peach districts in California."[16]

Township

George Chaffey

In 1905, George Chaffey, an agricultural developer from Southern California, purchased Shepherd's ranch and subdivided it, along with other adjacent ranches. He founded the town of Manzanar in 1910,[17][18] "on the main trunk line of the Southern Pacific."[19] By August 1911, the town had a population of "almost 200 people."[20]

The articles of incorporation for a Manzanar Water Company were filed on September 15, 1910, with capital stock of $250,000. The incorporators, directors, and subscribers were G.A. Hanson, Isaac Baxter and C.E. Searls.[21]

In January 1911, the Inyo County Board of Supervisors approved an application by Chaffey's Owens Valley Improvement Company for a telephone line between Independence, Lone River, Owengo, Francis, Citrus and Manzanar.[22]

The company built an irrigation system over an area of a thousand acres and planted about twenty thousand fruit trees.[17][20]

Ira L. Hatfield was the town's first postmaster, appointed in May 1911.[23] The first post office was at Thebes, a town 1.5 miles away.[24]

Manzanar Community Hall, ca. 1912. In back is Hatfield's (later Bandhauer's) General Store, which housed the post office.[25]

In summer 1911, a "one and a half story building, 40x50" was erected at the corner of Francis and Independence avenues. The lower floor included a hall to be used "for public gatherings, church, Sunday-school and dancing." Four rooms were to be used for a company office, a barber shop and "other small lines of business." The upper floor was planned for "a good-sized hall to be used for lodge purposes."[24]

By 1920, the town had more than twenty-five homes, a two-room school, a town hall, and a general store.[18] Also at that time, nearly 5,000 acres (2,000 ha) of apple, pear, and peach trees were under cultivation; along with crops of grapes, prunes, potatoes, corn and alfalfa; and large vegetable and flower gardens.[17][26]

"Manzanar was a very happy place and a pleasant place to live during those years, with its peach, pear, and apple orchards, alfalfa fields, tree-lined country lanes, meadows and corn fields," said Martha Mills, who lived at Manzanar from 1916 to 1920.[27]

Quenching Los Angeles' thirst

Unlined section of the Los Angeles Aqueduct, just south of Manzanar near U.S. Route 395, 2007

In 1913, the City of Los Angeles completed construction of its 233-mile (375 km) Los Angeles Aqueduct.[28] It did not take long for Los Angeles water officials to realize that Owens River water was insufficient to supply the rapidly growing metropolis. In 1920, they began to purchase more of the water rights on the Owens Valley floor. As the decade went on, the City of Los Angeles bought out one Owens Valley farmer after another, and extended its reach northward into Mono County, including Long Valley.[29] By 1933, the city owned 85 percent of all town property and 95 percent of all ranch and farm land in the Owens Valley, including Manzanar.[18]

Although some residents sold their land for prices that made them financially independent and relocated, a significant number chose to stay. In dry years, Los Angeles pumped ground water and drained all surface water, diverting all of it into its aqueduct and leaving Owens Valley ranchers without water.[30] Without water for irrigation, the holdout ranchers left their ranches and their communities; that included the town of Manzanar, which was abandoned by 1929.[4]

There was so much water during those early years, that when a horse pulled a buggy, the water frequently came up to the horse's knees," said Lucille DeBoer, who lived on a ranch at Manzanar. "When this happened, the children took off their shoes and socks to walk home. In the early 1900s the City of Los Angeles started to purchase ranches in the Owens Valley for the sole purpose of supplying water to the people in Los Angeles. People started to sell their land to the city, which put in wells to drain the water out of the ground; the trees began to die; and the land finally turned to vacant dirt. This ended the Land of the Big Red Apples"[26]

By the beginning of August 1924, however, "the purchase of the Manzanar district for $780,000 was consummated by Los Angeles."[31]

The Alabama Hills, 2009

The 4,958-acre Manzanar tract of 68 parcels was obtained by the city for an "aggregate price" of $788,120 ($159 an acre). It was described as lying "between the north end of the Alabama Hills and the town of Independence." It was fed by the "Shepard [sic], George, Bairs, Symmes and Pinyon creeks." City engineer William Mulholland said the land would be valuable to the city "chiefly as a subterranean reservoir of water."[32]

By 1925, as a result of farmers and others moving away from Manzanar as Los Angeles purchased their properties, the "two-teacher school" was expected to have only seven pupils.[33]

The Manzanar and Independence, California, school districts were merged,[34] but the combined district was suspended, or it lapsed, in 1934.[35]

The ranches remained, and Los Angeles offered the land and the buildings on them for lease.[16][36] Many farmers who had sold out leased their farms back. Water from a new well was made available to some.[37] Victor M. Christopher, who had been working for the Owens Valley Improvement Company, was hired by the city to "look after the maintenance and leasing of the whole tract."[38]

Manzanar remained uninhabited until the United States Army leased 6,200 acres (2,500 ha) from the City of Los Angeles for the Manzanar War Relocation Center.[4]

References

  1. U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Manzanar, California
  2. Durham, David L. (1998). California's Geographic Names: A Gazetteer of Historic and Modern Names of the State. Clovis, Calif.: Word Dancer Press. p. 1182. ISBN 1-884995-14-4.
  3. http://www.nps.gov/manz/ . accessed 6/24/2010
  4. "Manzanar National Historic Site: History & Culture (U.S. National Park Service)". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved April 12, 2007.
  5. Steward, Julian H (1933). "Ethnography Of The Owens Valley Paiute" (PDF). University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology. 33 (3): 233–250. Retrieved May 2, 2010.
  6. Burton, Jeffery F. (1996). Three Farewells To Manzanar: The Archeology of Manzanar National Historic Site, California. Part 1: Chapters 1–14. Western Archaeological and Conservation Center, National Park Service, US Department of the Interior. p. 151. Publications in Anthropology 67.
  7. "Manzanar National Historic Site – Owens Valley Paiute (U.S. National Park Service)". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved July 26, 2007.
  8. Burton. Three Farewells To Manzanar: The Archeology of Manzanar National Historic Site, California. Part 1: Chapters 1–14. p. 155.
  9. "California and the Indian Wars: The Owens Valley Indian War, 1861–1865". The California Military Museum. 1979. Retrieved April 23, 2007.
  10. Reheis, Marith C. (December 9, 2016). "Owens (Dry) Lake, California: A Human-Induced Dust Problem". United States Geological Service. Retrieved December 30, 2018.
  11. Van Horn, Lawrence F. (1995). Native American Consultations and Ethnographic Assessment: The Paiutes and Shoshones of Owens Valley, California. Western Archaeological and Conservation Center, National Park Service, US Department of the Interior, Denver Service Center. pp. 3–4.
  12. Burton. Three Farewells To Manzanar: The Archeology of Manzanar National Historic Site, California. Part 1: Chapters 1–14. p. 2.
  13. "Manzanar National Historic Site – Miners and Homesteaders (U.S. National Park Service)". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved July 26, 2007.
  14. Burton. Three Farewells To Manzanar: The Archeology of Manzanar National Historic Site, California. Part 1: Chapters 1–14. pp. 2–3.
  15. J.P. Hertel, "Apple Culture: A Promising Industry in Owens Valley," Los Angeles Times, July 30, 1922, image 177
  16. "City to Lease Owens Tracts," Los Angeles Times, January 4, 1925, image 7
  17. "Manzanar National Historic Site – Orchard Community (U.S. National Park Service)". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved July 26, 2007.
  18. Burton. Three Farewells To Manzanar: The Archeology of Manzanar National Historic Site, California. Part 1: Chapters 1–14. p. 3.
  19. "Topmost Prices for Owens Valley Apples," Santa Ana Register, March 1, 1913, image 10
  20. "The Thousand Wonders of Productive Owens Valley; Manzanar" Los Angeles Times, August 13, 1911, image 88, column 5
  21. "Official Record," San Bernardino Daily Sun, September 25, 1910, image 7
  22. "Progress Marks Passing of Time," Los Angeles Times, January 29, 1911, image 61
  23. "Postmasters Are Named for Office," The San Francisco Call, May 16, 1911, image 18
  24. "New Building's Varied Uses," Los Angeles Times, July 8, 1911, image 15
  25. "Manzanar Historic Resource Study/Special History Study - Chapter Six: Site Selection for Manzanar War Relocation Center — Historical Background of Owens Valley and Manzanar Vicinity". National Park Service. January 1, 2002.
  26. DeBoer, Lucille (1993). "Following Manzanar: A Life Story" (PDF). The Album, Times & Tales of Inyo-Mono. Retrieved July 26, 2007.
  27. "Manzanar National Historic Site – People (U.S. National Park Service)". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved July 26, 2007.
  28. "Facts and History: The Story of the Los Angeles Aqueduct". Los Angeles Department of Water and Power. Retrieved October 1, 2017.
  29. Smith. Deepest Valley. pp. 195–196.
  30. Smith. Deepest Valley. p. 196.
  31. "Los Angeles Buys Complete Control of Owens River," Reno Evening Gazette, August 18, 1924, page 6
  32. "City Buys Owens Tract," Los Angeles Times, August 6, 1924, image 17
  33. W.A. Chalfant, "Ranchers' Side of Water Controversy Given in Review by Inyo Editor," Santa Ana Daily Register, November 28, 1924, page 12
  34. "Schools Uniting at Independence," Los Angeles Times, June 18, 1933, image 52
  35. "Suspension Is Faced by 42 Schools," Oakland Tribune, July 19, 1934, image 5
  36. "Bureau Has Fruit Land for Lease," Los Angeles Times, December 6, 1925, image 49
  37. "In Owens Valley, Where Los Angeles, as Biggest Land Owner, Finds Itself Head Over Heels in the Farm Business," Los Angeles Times, June 13, 1926, images 156 and 157]
  38. "Los Angeles Makes Hay," Farm and Orchard Magazine, June 13, 1926, image 159
  • The website of the Manzanar National Historic Site

Additional reading

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