69
Notes
P
REFACE
1
Austin Adams, The Story of
Water in San Diego (San Diego, California: Southern California Mountain Water Company, 1909 or
1910), (unpaginated) preface.
2
Richard F. Pourade, The Explorers (San Diego, California: The Union-Tribune Publishing Company, 1960), 107-108, 125; Florence
Connolly Shipek, “Kumeyaay Plant Husbandry: Fire,
Water, and Erosion,” from Before the Wilderness: Environmental
Management
by Native Californians, edited by Thomas C. Blackburn and Kat Anderson (Menlo Park, California: Ballena Press, 1993), 385.
P
ART
1 : L
IVING WITH THE
C
OUNTY
’
S
W
ATER
S
UPPLY
I
NTRODUCTION
- M
ANAGING AN
E
XTREME
C
LIMATE
1
Iris H.
W. Engstrand, San Diego: California’s Cornerstone (Tulsa, Oklahoma: Continental
Heritage Press, 1980), 10, 39.
2
2000 Urban Water
Management Plan (San Diego, California: San Diego County Water Authority, 2000), 1-9;
Maureen A.
Stapleton, “From the General
Manager: Planning needed for reliable supply,”
Water Talk
, (San Diego, California: San Diego County
Water Authority, Summer 1996), 2.
3
Gregg R. Hennessey, “The Politics of
Water in San Diego,”
The Journal of San Diego History
Vol. 24, No. 3 (Summer 1978): 367;
Thomas Joseph Adema, Our Hills and Valleys: A History of the Helix-Spring Valley Region (San Diego, California: San Diego
Historical
Society, 1993), 80; “William H. Jennings,
Water Lawyer,” Oral
History Program Interview by Tom Hall,
May and June,
1965 (Los Angeles, California: University of
California, 1967), 11.
4
Philip R. Pryde, “The Most Essential
Resource:
Water Supply for the County,” Chapter 8 in San Diego: An Introduction to the
Region 3rd ed., (Dubuque, Iowa: Kendall/Hunt Publishing Co., 1992), 119-121; Lloyd C. Fowler, “A History of the Dams and
Water Supply of
Western San Diego County,” Masters Thesis, University of
California, 1952, 2-7; First Annual
Report (San Diego
County Water Authority, 1946), 39.
5
The San Diego Water Supply (San Diego, California: City of San Diego Water Utilities Department, 1982), 1.
C
HAPTER
1: A
NCIENT
D
AYS PRE
-1769
1
Adapted from “The Story of
Creation: Diegueños,” (Native American Lore Index Page,
Web, Nov. 2000).
2
Florence Connolly Shipek, Pushed into the Rocks: Southern California Indian Land Tenure 1769-1986 (Lincoln and London:
University of
Nebraska Press, 1986), Note: Shipek stated that she interviewed Kumeyaay elders who ranged in age from 80 to
110 between 1959 and 1965 who described traditional
methods of land and water management, and that this information was
corroborated in the written accounts of Spanish,
Mexican and American settlers. 3; Richard F. Pourade, The Explorers (San Diego,
California: The Union-Tribune Publishing Company, 1960), 8-9; Iris H.W. Engstrand, San Diego: California’s Cornerstone (Tulsa,
Oklahoma: Continental
Heritage Press, 1980), 12.
3
Norris Hundley, The Great Thirst: Californians and Water, 1770s-1990s (Berkeley and Los Angeles, California: University of
California Press, 1992), 8; Florence Connolly Shipek, “Kumeyaay Plant Husbandry: Fire,
Water, and Erosion,” from Before the
Wilderness: Environmental
Management by Native Californians, edited by Thomas C. Blackburn and Kat Anderson (Menlo Park,
California: Ballena Press, 1993), 380-384; Robert F. Heizer, Handbook of
North American Indians Vol. 8 California (Washington,
DC: Smithsonian Institution, 1978), 550-552; 599-601.
4
Shipek, Pushed into the Rocks, 11-13; Jennifer Luksic and Nick Kendziorski, “The Use of Presidio Hill,”
The Journal of San Diego
History
Vol. 45, No. 3 (Summer 1999): (online pagination) 3; Shipek, “Kumeyaay Plant Husbandry,” 380-384.
5
Shipek, “Kumeyaay Plant Husbandry,” 384-385.
6
Shipek, “Kumeyaay Plant Husbandry,” 386; “Living in Harmony: The San Diego Kumeyaay,” (Pacific Bell
Knowledge Network,