My Grandfather (Robert DiLullo) took the first steam shovel bucket from the diversion dam that started the project. He worked throughout the project. Later became the first roads commissioner of Shasta County. Even later became the Shasta Fairgrounds manager before retiring.
Wonderfully constructed video. Missing is deconstruction of Head Tower to the level it is now days. Remarkable to see the lack of vegetation due to copper from mining. Area sure 'greened up' over the years. And the visitors center and park came to be later. All those men had something to be so proud of. It took some ingenuitive minds and mighty muscles!! And truly its like a living thing when you stand on Shasta Dam when the drums are all open and you feel the moisture in the air, feel the vibration of the water rushing thru and below, and hear the thunderous sounds of it all.
Awesome video. My grandfather used to go to the Pitt River when he was in the Boy Scouts before the dam was built. I have spent every summer of my life on that lake and love the history.
Very interesting, especially the head tower and tail towers that allowed quick handling of the concrete. I saw the dam years ago but had no idea about the head tower until the current drought exposed its base.
I don't know where you found this, but I couldn't stop watching this. OK I was looking for my Dad, He was one of the workers there. He also worked on the Oroville lake dam. This is a cool old video.
@JohnnyD RC it's amazing what this generation was able to pull off. I wonder how many of the tools, carts and other items used for this project were invented just for this job. In one scene the dump truck didn't even have a cab on it. Contrast that to today's monster machines that have AC and heat. Another facet of this project is they built it while WWII was raging on. I wonder if the nearby residents, if there were any, thought the Germans were attacking every time dynamite was used?
@@doobielawson702 I have no idea how they did it, I did have home videos on Oroville Dam being built, when my dad worked on that Dam. But was lost after he past away.
My grandfather's brother worked concrete on the dam. For at least the 60's, 70's and 80's from my own knowledge, he lived about a half mile south of the dam on Lake Blvd.
Should have a Narrator telling us about this Marvel. Ya' kno some old guy with a twang in his voice, so he sounds like he was telling the story back in the day.....🤣🤣🤠💛👍
From the Great Northwest public Duck Blind yes my grandparents came to a Redding California to build the dam my grandfather Jay Lewis Presley Butch Knox Presley his brother both worked on the I-5 bridge and the Dam have lots of memories of the area sad to see it was on fire and that the lake is low okay from the Great Northwest God bless
We do not. They are property of the Redding Chamber of Commerce, however, we did look into re-formatting them but the cost is prohibitive and there is only one source to digitize that particular file size and not locally.
@@robbiem4624 Can you blame them? Machines dont complain, call in sick, file frivolous lawsuits, get tired, stay home and collect government handouts, etc etc etc ...
My Grandfather (Robert DiLullo) took the first steam shovel bucket from the diversion dam that started the project. He worked throughout the project. Later became the first roads commissioner of Shasta County. Even later became the Shasta Fairgrounds manager before retiring.
Wonderfully constructed video. Missing is deconstruction of Head Tower to the level it is now days. Remarkable to see the lack of vegetation due to copper from mining. Area sure 'greened up' over the years. And the visitors center and park came to be later. All those men had something to be so proud of. It took some ingenuitive minds and mighty muscles!! And truly its like a living thing when you stand on Shasta Dam when the drums are all open and you feel the moisture in the air, feel the vibration of the water rushing thru and below, and hear the thunderous sounds of it all.
I think it was the copper, rather than lead, that kept the vegetation sparse then.
Looks like hard work start to finish, something to be proud of.
Awesome video. My grandfather used to go to the Pitt River when he was in the Boy Scouts before the dam was built. I have spent every summer of my life on that lake and love the history.
Very interesting, especially the head tower and tail towers that allowed quick handling of the concrete. I saw the dam years ago but had no idea about the head tower until the current drought exposed its base.
I don't know where you found this, but I couldn't stop watching this. OK I was looking for my Dad, He was one of the workers there. He also worked on the Oroville lake dam. This is a cool old video.
@JohnnyD RC it's amazing what this generation was able to pull off. I wonder how many of the tools, carts and other items used for this project were invented just for this job. In one scene the dump truck didn't even have a cab on it. Contrast that to today's monster machines that have AC and heat. Another facet of this project is they built it while WWII was raging on. I wonder if the nearby residents, if there were any, thought the Germans were attacking every time dynamite was used?
@@doobielawson702 I have no idea how they did it, I did have home videos on Oroville Dam being built, when my dad worked on that Dam. But was lost after he past away.
My grandfather's brother worked concrete on the dam. For at least the 60's, 70's and 80's from my own knowledge, he lived about a half mile south of the dam on Lake Blvd.
What was is name?
If you ever get the chance take the tour of the Dam it’s impressive for sure the second largest dam in America
Fantastic! Loved this...
My Great Grandpa was a pipe fitter. He might be the man in the Video
Should have a Narrator telling us about this Marvel. Ya' kno some old guy with a twang in his voice, so he sounds like he was telling the story back in the day.....🤣🤣🤠💛👍
We need more dams.
Incredible film!
Great footage
Audio silent for any one else?
This is awesome! 👍
Thomas Reagan of seattle Washington my grand fathers uncle , worked on the damn.
Worked on the damn what?
SHASTA DAM AND HOOVER DAM.
@@ApartmentKing66 the damn dam
From the Great Northwest public Duck Blind yes my grandparents came to a Redding California to build the dam my grandfather Jay Lewis Presley Butch Knox Presley his brother both worked on the I-5 bridge and the Dam have lots of memories of the area sad to see it was on fire and that the lake is low okay from the Great Northwest God bless
Amazing
No audio in this video? Is it suppose to have it?
Do you guys have that History of Redding video that used to air every Saturday morning on local channels? I can't seem to find it anywhere.
We do not. They are property of the Redding Chamber of Commerce, however, we did look into re-formatting them but the cost is prohibitive and there is only one source to digitize that particular file size and not locally.
I wonder how long it would of taken with modern equipment
25 years
@@steveholley9508 yeah im sure
Nice! A friend is looking for the video that they 'used' to show at the Visitor Center. Is that available anywhere? Thanks!
Contact the Shasta Visitor Center 530/225-4485
Could they ever built it today? With all the environmental concerns and no one wants to work
however, if those same people could be able to replace everyone with a machine they would.
@@robbiem4624 Can you blame them? Machines dont complain, call in sick, file frivolous lawsuits, get tired, stay home and collect government handouts, etc etc etc ...
@@steves659 go pray to your god Trump while he calls your town a shit hole. Right wing states get more welfare.
0.03 ❤❤❤❤❤
😍
does anybody have audio?
CuriousEarthMan I don’t
@@nursultanbegmatov6227 thank you.
Back in the day you had the projector tape then you had a record for Audio. I imagine there's audio out there somewhere.
Crude, but interesting
10:44 - The remains of the headtower can be seen in this 2014 video ==> ua-cam.com/video/OxzQ8ExwxdA/v-deo.html