Access to this collection is generously supported by Arcadia funds. View of 2 nurses and a Red Cross volunteer aiding 3 young children and a baby in a clinic that was set up to care for people who survived the flood following the failure of the Saint Francis Dam. The nurses and volunteers are in a large room, seated on beds tending the children and infant. The room is divided into section s by curtains and there are 2 cribs in the background. The St. Francis Dam was a 200-foot high concrete gravity-arch dam built between 1924 and 1926 in St. Francisquito Canyon (near present-day Castaic and Santa Clarita). The dam collapsed on March 12, 1928 at two and a half minutes before midnight. The resulting flood killed more than 600 residents plus an unknown number of itinerant farm workers camped in San Francisquito Canyon, making it the 2nd greatest loss of life in California after the 1906 San Francisco earthquake. It is considered the worst American civil engineering failure in the 20th century. Text from negative sleeve: Saint Francis Dam
Type
image
Format
b&w nitrate negative
Identifier
uclamss_1429_1955 ark:/21198/zz002dcvcr
Language
No linguistic content
Subject
Red Cross and Red Crescent--California--Santa Clara River Valley Saint Francis Dam Failure, Calif., 1928 Disaster victims--California--Santa Clara River Valley Disaster relief--California--Santa Clara River Valley Clinics--California--Santa Clara River Valley Nurses--American--California--Santa Clara River Valley
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