In 1966, exactly fifty years ago, a 6-foot diameter pipeline was snaking its way through Milpitas as part of a second line in the San Francisco water system that begins at Hetch Hetchy reservoir in Yosemite National Park. Today land in Milpitas covering the pipeline has been preserved as open space areas, and some as part of our municipal parks.
The Hetch Hetchy Water Project was originated partly in response to the tragic scarcity of water that made fighting the fires caused by the great 1906 earthquake so difficult. Work began in 1914 with the installation of a railroad line for transporting construction materials to that remote area.
Construction of the O’Shaughnessy Dam began in 1919 and was finished in 1923. On October 28, 1934 – twenty years after the beginning of construction of the Hetch Hetchy Project – a crowd of 20,000 San Franciscans gathered to celebrate the arrival of the first Hetch Hetchy water in the city.