The water had risen to just below the brim and cracks were observed along the poured concrete rim. For days now such troubling signs had appeared; The Dam Keeper had expressed concerns, then been told not to fear. The Chief engineer had come up and opined that the mighty Dam’s walls would stand all tests of time.
Down there in the valley with the last of the light The ranchers and their families bedded down for the night. Their ignorance was bliss for no one foresaw That flood waters obey an immutable law.
The Saint Francis Dam in the San Francisquito Valley Was about to give way. There’d be no time to dally. At three minutes to midnight came an unearthly sound; Twelve Billion gallons of water knocked the dam down.
Bodies and boulders, stone structures and trees Formed a wave of destruction that raced for the sea A mighty Tsunami; a hundred feet high All those in its way were those destined to die.
Man, in his hubris, seems always to feel That he is the master to whom Nature must yield. Yet, in reality, we are helpless and small; Overcome by flood waters we are nothing at all.
Mulholland, the department head shouldered the blame. Bravely I think- Who today would do the same? The ruins of Saint Francis Dam still stand to remind us That our works are ephemeral; Nature reclaims our dust.
Our land’s infrastructure is in need of repair. We must not wait for more cracks to appear. The innocent suffer if we fail to heed this call. Its three minutes to midnight for us one and all.
( at 11:57 P.M. on March 12, 1928 the Saint Francis dam gave way and killed five hundred people in five farming communities in the valley outside Los Angeles)