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Prior to 1915 both Oregon City and West Linn got their drinking water from the Willamette River. As a consequence of a serious outbreak of typhoid in 1913, the Oregon City Commission formed the “Pure Mountain Water League” and directed it to find a new source of drinking water. The League identified the South Fork of the Clackamas River. In March of that year the Oregon City Commission accepted West Linn’s request for one-third share in the project. As a result representatives from both Cities were selected and the South Fork Water Board was created.
In late 1915 twenty-six miles of 18” pipe of was constructed to a site near Memaloose Creek, about 3,000 feet from the confluence of the South Fork and the main stem of the Clackamas River. This pipeline became known as the "Mountain Line”. The first water began to flow by gravity through the system on October 7, 1915, supplying three million gallons per day. The only treatment at this time was chlorination.
In 1939-40 South Fork Water Board joined with the federal Works Project Administration to extend a 24” line upstream from Memaloose Creek to a point above the high falls by means of a series of tunnels that were hand drilled through granite cliffs to reach the water above the falls. This effort raised the systems intake 1000 ft, increasing the water pressure and capacity available to users of the system.
