GRR_00495b

The terrible tempest of wind and wave which swept over Galveston, Texas, Saturday, Sept. 8th, 1900, was perhaps the greatest natural tragedy of the century. The city, containing about 60,000 inhabitants, is situated on a low island, the shores of which are washed on the north and west by Galveston B...

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Online Access:http://cdm16274.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16274coll15/id/1175
id ftgettysburgcodc:oai:cdm16274.contentdm.oclc.org:p16274coll15/1175
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spelling ftgettysburgcodc:oai:cdm16274.contentdm.oclc.org:p16274coll15/1175 2023-05-15T17:08:55+02:00 GRR_00495b Stereoview cards http://cdm16274.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16274coll15/id/1175 unknown http://cdm16274.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16274coll15/id/1175 Image ftgettysburgcodc 2022-09-03T09:46:04Z The terrible tempest of wind and wave which swept over Galveston, Texas, Saturday, Sept. 8th, 1900, was perhaps the greatest natural tragedy of the century. The city, containing about 60,000 inhabitants, is situated on a low island, the shores of which are washed on the north and west by Galveston Bay and on the east and south by the Gulf of Mexico. The storm came from the West Indies, growing fiercer and more terrible as it crossed the Gulf, and about two o'clock Sunday morning reached Galveston. For twelve wild and terrible hours the winds and waves beat upon the fated city. The storm from the Gulf and the wind from the north piled the waters upon both sides of the city, and about three o'clock p. m. these waters met, submerging the entire city. The flooding of the electric light plant and the gas company's factory left the city in darkness. To go on the street was to court death. The wind-measuring instrument recorded a velocity of eighty- four miles per hour when it was blown away. The tempest left an unparalleled scene of ruin and desolation in its path. Thirteen hundred acres in the southern part of the city were swept of habitations, while almost every building in the city was damaged or destroyed. More than five thousand lives were lost, and many millions of dollars worth of property destroyed. Assistance from every direction has poured in for the tnouands of destitute and homeless survivors. Even the Government of Mexico voted to .end them $30,000. Still Image Low Island GettDigital (Gettysburg College Digital Collections)
institution Open Polar
collection GettDigital (Gettysburg College Digital Collections)
op_collection_id ftgettysburgcodc
language unknown
description The terrible tempest of wind and wave which swept over Galveston, Texas, Saturday, Sept. 8th, 1900, was perhaps the greatest natural tragedy of the century. The city, containing about 60,000 inhabitants, is situated on a low island, the shores of which are washed on the north and west by Galveston Bay and on the east and south by the Gulf of Mexico. The storm came from the West Indies, growing fiercer and more terrible as it crossed the Gulf, and about two o'clock Sunday morning reached Galveston. For twelve wild and terrible hours the winds and waves beat upon the fated city. The storm from the Gulf and the wind from the north piled the waters upon both sides of the city, and about three o'clock p. m. these waters met, submerging the entire city. The flooding of the electric light plant and the gas company's factory left the city in darkness. To go on the street was to court death. The wind-measuring instrument recorded a velocity of eighty- four miles per hour when it was blown away. The tempest left an unparalleled scene of ruin and desolation in its path. Thirteen hundred acres in the southern part of the city were swept of habitations, while almost every building in the city was damaged or destroyed. More than five thousand lives were lost, and many millions of dollars worth of property destroyed. Assistance from every direction has poured in for the tnouands of destitute and homeless survivors. Even the Government of Mexico voted to .end them $30,000.
format Still Image
title GRR_00495b
spellingShingle GRR_00495b
title_short GRR_00495b
title_full GRR_00495b
title_fullStr GRR_00495b
title_full_unstemmed GRR_00495b
title_sort grr_00495b
url http://cdm16274.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16274coll15/id/1175
genre Low Island
genre_facet Low Island
op_relation http://cdm16274.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16274coll15/id/1175
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