NARRATOR
Even in a city there are watersheds, areas where the topography guides the flow of water both above ground and underneath it. Many decades of urban development has buried the majority of San Francisco's historic creeks and lakes. But one of the few people whose documented the city's historic watersheds is researcher Joel Pomerantz.
JOEL POMERANTZ
There were probably somewhere between 15 and 40 creeks flowing in San Francisco during the time when the earliest maps were made. And when I say flowing, I mean flowing enough so that somebody went to the trouble of trapping that water.
NARRATOR
Most of these creeks are now hidden under buildings, sidewalks, and streets, but their water continues to flow underground. The largest creek nearby ran for about five blocks and emptied into a small lagoon, just one block north of here near Jackson and Montgomery.
JOEL POMERANTZ
The water that came through that spot was flowing out of a spring in a remarkable location right near the intersection where today's Cable Car Barn is. It was remarkable because it was the only place in all of San Francisco's early territory where there was a chasm. It was 60 to 80 feet deep. And it was because of the spring source of this creek.
NARRATOR
One other very short creek formed in inviting pool just three blocks south of here off of Sacramento Street near the Bank of America building.
JOEL POMERANTZ
The alley that used to be called Spring Street—I think that was the location of a spring that was famous because the Hawaiian laborers would go swimming in the pool of water that that spring created on the beach. They would take breaks after working really hard, splash around, dive into the water.
NARRATOR
Both of these creeks flowed into Yerba Buena Cove, a shallow inlet that was later filled and built upon to become downtown San Francisco. To the south of Market Street, the land was mostly sand dunes. Instead of creeks there were variable dune ponds that only formed during wet weather. Around the Fifth Street exit of Interstate 80 was a large tidal marsh. Pomerantz says the late 1800s, this marsh was an obstacle between downtown and the city's other populated district in the Mission.
JOEL POMERANTZ
When the water route was replaced by roads, those roads were hindered by the marshes that cut off a lot of the direct route from Yerba Buena Cove to the Mission District. So they had to make the roads go in a straight line toward what's now called Civic Center and then curve to the south, which is why we still have a grid of roads that suddenly bend from one angle on Market Street to another angle in the Mission District to get around those waterways that we're blocking the most direct route.
NARRATOR
Still, there were relatively few water sources and not much rainfall in San Francisco. So as soon as the city began growing, there were shortages.
JOEL POMERANTZ
Putting out fires was a big issue when you didn't have good water supplies, and washing clothes and drinking water of course, and of course, animals the beasts of burden, which were the main working power, needed water as well. When San Francisco didn't have enough water to wash your clothes, people just threw their clothes away in the street and bought new clothes because ships coming in with goods would bring new clothes and it would be cheaper than getting your laundry done because water was so expensive.
NARRATOR
Enterprising San Franciscans began damming up creeks to hoard water and sell it at exorbitant prices. They shipped water from springs in Sausalito across the Bay on steamships. By the 1860s water companies began building dams in the canyons farther south on the Peninsula to pipe and sell water to thirsty San Francisco. Dams and reservoirs were added at greater and greater distances from the city, including Crystal Springs reservoir along Interstate 280. Finally, in 1923, the biggest water grab of all brought a dam to Yosemite National Park's Hetch Hetchy Valley, providing a permanent if controversial solution to the city's water needs. Today, San Francisco still boasts some of the best drinking water in the nation.