The man who courted nature
They call Charles Hatfield a commander of nature, the greatest
rainmaker of modern times. For more than 30 years he practiced
his art and won a name for himself by filling lakes, saving crops,
and breaking droughts from the Yukon to Guatemala. He offered to
clear London of its fogs and to water the Sahara. But the scene
of his most spectacular achievement was San Diego, California.
Hawfield approached the city council in December 1915 with a simple
offer. For a fee of $10,000 he would fill the vast city reservoir
at Morena Dam; if no rain fell, he would expect no pay. The council's
amused reaction: if he did fill the reservoir, they would pay him
with pleasure.
It seemed a safe bet. The reservoir could hold a staggering 15
billion gallons and had never been more than one-third full since
it was built. Besides, as one member of the council pointed out,
if Hatfield did succeed, he would supply them with 10 billions
gallons of water at a cost of one-tenth of a cent for 1,000 gallons;
if he failed, the attempt would have cost them nothing.
On January 1, 1916, Hatfield arrived at Morena Dam, some 60 miles
east of San Diego, and set to work. First he erected a wooden tower
about 20 feet high. On top of it he placed large galvanizing trays
containing his special moisture-attracting mixture. Then, through
a process of chemical evaporation - the details of which he kept a
closely guarded secret-he began "coaxing, wheedling, and courting"
nature.
By January 5 there was already rain at the reservoir. By January 10,
heavy, almost continuous rain fell throughout the county. Then the
downpour began in earnest - and continues for 10 days.
To the inhabitants of San Deigo, it seemed the rains would never end.
As torrents of water rushed through the streets, business stopped and
all normal life was suspended. Highways were closed and rail
connections flooded. The telephone and telegraph were cut off. Rivers
overflowed their banks, washing away houses and barns.
There was a brief respite. For a few days the sun shone weakly
throughout the clouds, and repair work began. But on January 26 the
storm returned. At Morena Dam rain fell heavily and steadily all day.
By midnight the level of the lake was rising at the rate of two feet
per hour. It finally stopped just five inches from the top of the
dam, and disaster on a massive scale was averted.
Other districts were less fortunate. The nearby Lower Otay Dam
disintegrated, releasing a wall of water 40 feet high. The water
plowed 12 mules to the sea, demolishing everything before it.
Altogether an estimated 50 lives were lost, more than 200 bridges
were washed away and miles of track were destroyed; trains were
halted for 32 days. The floods left scars on the mountains and hills
for years, and in some places the landscape was changed permanently.
There was no doubt in Hatfield's mind that he had lived up to his
promise to fill the Morena Reservoir. But when he went to claim his
money, the city council refused to pay.
Hatfield had proceeded on the basis of an oral agreement, without a
signed legal contract. Now the council was maintaining that the
deluge was an "act of God," unless Hawfield could provide evidence
that he was the one who brought forth the rain.
Many people thought that Hatfield had been treated unfairly, although
the episode did much to enhance his reputation as King of the Cloud
Compilers. He filed a suit against the city, but did little to pursue
it: it was finally dismissed in 1938 for lack of prosecution.
But the city of San Diego remembered Hatfield for some years to come:
in 1948, when they hired a cloud seeder to make it rain, they took out
substantial damage insurance.
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