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1900 Galveston hurricane

The 1900 Galveston hurricane,[1] also known as the Great Galveston hurricane and the Galveston Flood, and known regionally as the Great Storm of 1900 or the 1900 Storm,[2][3] is the deadliest natural disaster in United States history.[4] The strongest storm of the 1900 Atlantic hurricane season, it left between 6,000 and 12,000 fatalities in the United States; the number most cited in official reports is 8,000. Most of these deaths occurred in and near Galveston, Texas, after the storm surge inundated the coastline and the island city with 8 to 12 ft (2.4 to 3.7 m) of water. It remains among the deadliest Atlantic hurricanes on record. In addition to the number killed, the storm destroyed about 7,000 buildings of all uses in Galveston, which included 3,636 demolished homes; every dwelling in the city suffered some degree of damage. The hurricane left approximately 10,000 people in the city homeless, out of a total population of fewer than 38,000. The disaster ended the Golden Era of Galveston, as the hurricane alarmed potential investors, who turned to Houston instead. In response to the storm, three engineers designed and oversaw plans to raise the Gulf of Mexico shoreline of Galveston Island by 17 ft (5.2 m) and erect a 10 mi (16 km) seawall.

1900 Galveston hurricane
Surface weather analysis of the hurricane on September 8, just before landfall.
Meteorological history
FormedAugust 27, 1900
ExtratropicalSeptember 11, 1900
DissipatedSeptember 15, 1900
Category 4 major hurricane
1-minute sustained (SSHWS/NWS)
Highest winds145 mph (230 km/h)
Lowest pressure936 mbar (hPa); 27.64 inHg
Overall effects
Fatalities6,000–8,000
(Deadliest in U.S. history; fourth-deadliest Atlantic hurricane)
Damage$1.25 billion (2023 USD)
Areas affectedLesser Antilles, Greater Antilles (Dominican Republic and Cuba landfalls), Turks and Caicos Islands, Bahamas, Gulf Coast of the United States (Texas landfall), Midwestern United States, Mid-Atlantic, New England, Eastern Canada
IBTrACS

Part of the 1900 Atlantic hurricane season

On August 27, 1900, a ship east of the Windward Islands detected a tropical cyclone, the first observed that year. The system proceeded to move steadily west-northwestward and entered the northeastern Caribbean on August 30. It made landfall in the Dominican Republic as a weak tropical storm on September 2. It weakened slightly while crossing Hispaniola, before re-emerging into the Caribbean Sea later that day. On September 3, the cyclone struck modern-day Santiago de Cuba Province and then slowly drifted along the southern coast of Cuba. Upon reaching the Gulf of Mexico on September 6, the storm strengthened into a hurricane. Significant intensification followed and the system peaked as a Category 4 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 145 mph (235 km/h) on September 8. Early on the next day, it made landfall to the south of Houston.[nb 1] The cyclone weakened quickly after moving inland and fell to tropical storm intensity late on September 9. The storm turned east-northeastward and became extratropical over Iowa on September 11. The extratropical system strengthened while accelerating across the Midwestern United States, New England, and Eastern Canada before reaching the Gulf of Saint Lawrence on September 13. After striking Newfoundland later that day, the extratropical storm entered the far North Atlantic Ocean and weakened, with the remnants last observed near Iceland on September 15.

The great storm brought flooding and severe thunderstorms to portions of the Caribbean, especially Cuba and Jamaica. It is likely that much of South Florida experienced tropical storm-force winds, though mostly minor damage occurred. Hurricane-force winds and storm surge inundated portions of southern Louisiana, though the cyclone left no significant structural damage or fatalities in the state. The hurricane brought strong winds and storm surge to a large portion of east Texas, with Galveston suffering the brunt of the impact. Farther north, the storm and its remnants continued to produce heavy rains and gusty winds, which downed telegraph wires, signs, and trees in several states. Fatalities occurred in other states, including fifteen in Ohio, two in Illinois, two in New York, one in Massachusetts, and one in Missouri. Damage from the storm throughout the U.S. exceeded US$34 million.[nb 2] The remnants also brought severe impact to Canada. In Ontario, damage reached about C$1.35 million, with CAD$1 million to crops.[nb 3] The remnants of the hurricane caused at least 52 deaths – and possibly as many as 232 deaths – in Canada, mostly due to sunken vessels near Newfoundland and the French territory of Saint-Pierre. Throughout its path, the storm caused more than $35.4 million in damage. ($1.3 billion in 2023)[nb 4]

Meteorological history

 
Map plotting the storm's track and intensity, according to the Saffir–Simpson scale
Map key
  Tropical depression (≤38 mph, ≤62 km/h)
  Tropical storm (39–73 mph, 63–118 km/h)
  Category 1 (74–95 mph, 119–153 km/h)
  Category 2 (96–110 mph, 154–177 km/h)
  Category 3 (111–129 mph, 178–208 km/h)
  Category 4 (130–156 mph, 209–251 km/h)
  Category 5 (≥157 mph, ≥252 km/h)
  Unknown
Storm type
  Extratropical cyclone, remnant low, tropical disturbance, or monsoon depression

The storm is believed to have originated from a tropical wave which moved off the west coast of Africa and emerged into the Atlantic Ocean.[8] However, this is not completely certain because of the limited observational methods available to contemporary meteorologists, with ship reports being the only reliable tool for observing hurricanes.[9] The first formal sighting of the tropical storm occurred on August 27, about 1,000 mi (1,600 km) east of the Windward Islands, when a ship encountered an area of unsettled weather.[5][8] Over the next couple of days, the system moved west-northwestwards and is thought to have maintained its intensity as a weak tropical storm, before it passed through the Leeward Islands and entered the Caribbean Sea on August 31.[5]

On September 1, Father Reese Gangoite, the director of the Belen College Observatory in Havana, Cuba, noted that the storm was in its formative stages, with only vague indications of a small tropical cyclone to the southwest of Saint Croix.[10] During that day, the system passed to the south of Puerto Rico before it made landfall near Baní, Dominican Republic, early on September 2.[5] Moving west-northwestward, the storm crossed the island of Hispaniola and entered into the Windward Passage near Saint-Marc, Haiti, several hours later.[5] The system made landfall on Cuba near Santiago de Cuba during September 3, before it moved slowly west-northwestward across the island and emerged into Straits of Florida as a tropical storm on September 5.[5] As the system emerged into the Straits of Florida, Gangoite observed a large, persistent halo around the moon, while the sky turned deep red and cirrus clouds moved northwards. This indicated to him that the tropical storm had intensified and that the prevailing winds were moving the system towards the coast of Texas.[11] However, the United States Weather Bureau (as it was then called) disagreed with this forecast, as they expected the system to recurve and make landfall in Florida before impacting the American East Coast.[11][12] An area of high pressure over the Florida Keys ultimately moved the system northwestward into the Gulf of Mexico, where favorable conditions such as warm sea surface temperatures allowed the storm to intensify into a hurricane.[5][11]

 
Hurricane track from September 1 to 10

In the eastern Gulf of Mexico on September 6, the ship Louisiana encountered the hurricane, and its captain, T. P. Halsey, estimated that the system had wind speeds of 100 mph (160 km/h).[13] The hurricane continued to strengthen significantly while heading west-northwestward across the Gulf. On September 7, the system reached its peak intensity with estimated sustained wind speeds of 145 mph (235 km/h), which made it equivalent to a Category 4 hurricane on the modern-day Saffir–Simpson scale.[5] That day, the Weather Bureau realized that the storm was continuing west-northwestward across the Gulf of Mexico, rather than turning northward over Florida and the East Coast as it had predicted. However, Weather Bureau director Willis Moore insisted that the cyclone was not of hurricane intensity.[11] The hurricane weakened slightly on September 8 and recurved to the northwest as it approached the coast of Texas, while the Weather Bureau office in Galveston began observing hurricane-force winds by 22:00 UTC.[5][14]

The cyclone made landfall around 8:00 p.m CST on September 8 (02:00 UTC on September 9) to the south of Houston as a Category 4 hurricane.[5] While crossing Galveston Island and West Bay, the eye passed southwest of the city of Galveston.[15] The hurricane quickly weakened after moving inland, falling to tropical storm intensity late on September 9.[5] The storm lost tropical characteristics and transitioned into an extratropical cyclone over Iowa by 12:00 UTC on September 11.[5] Moving rapidly east-northeastward, the extratropical system re-intensified, becoming the equivalent of a Category 1 hurricane over Ontario on September 12.[5] The extratropical remnants reached the Gulf of Saint Lawrence early the following day.[5] After crossing Newfoundland and entering the far northern Atlantic hours later, the remnants of the hurricane weakened and were last noted near Iceland on September 15 where the storm finally dissipated.[5]

Background

The city of Galveston, formally founded in 1839, had weathered numerous storms, all of which the city survived with ease. In the late 19th century, Galveston was a boomtown with the population increasing from 29,084 people in 1890 to 37,788 people in 1900.[16][17] The city was the fourth largest municipality in terms of population in the state of Texas in 1900, and had among the highest per capita income rates in the U.S.[18] Galveston had many ornate business buildings in a downtown section called The Strand, which was considered the "Wall Street of the Southwest".[19] The city's position on the natural harbor of Galveston Bay along the Gulf of Mexico made it the center of trade in Texas, and one of the busiest ports in the nation.[20] With this prosperity came a sense of complacency,[21] as residents believed any future storms would be no worse than previous events.[nb 5] In fact, Isaac Cline, director of the Weather Bureau's Galveston office, wrote an 1891 article in the Galveston Daily News that it would be impossible for a hurricane of significant strength to strike Galveston Island.[23]

A quarter of a century earlier, the nearby town of Indianola on Matagorda Bay was undergoing its own boom.[24] Then in 1875, a powerful hurricane blew through and nearly destroyed the town. Indianola was rebuilt,[25] though a second hurricane in 1886 caused most of the town's residents to move elsewhere.[26] Many Galveston residents took the destruction of Indianola as an object lesson on the threat posed by hurricanes. Galveston is built on a low, flat island, little more than a large sandbar along the Gulf Coast. These residents proposed a seawall be constructed to protect the city, but the majority of the population and the city's government dismissed their concerns.[27] Cline further argued in his 1891 article in the Daily News that a seawall was not needed due to his belief that a strong hurricane would not strike the island. As a result, the seawall was not built, and development activities on the island actively increased its vulnerability to storms. Sand dunes along the shore were cut down to fill low areas in the city, removing what little barrier there was to the Gulf of Mexico.[27]

Preparations

On September 4, the Weather Bureau's Galveston office began receiving warnings from the Bureau's central office in Washington, D.C., that a tropical disturbance had moved northward over Cuba. At the time, they discouraged the use of terms such as "hurricane" or "tornado" to avoid panicking residents in the path of any storm event. The Weather Bureau forecasters had no way of knowing the storm's trajectory, as Weather Bureau director Willis Moore implemented a policy to block telegraph reports from Cuban meteorologists at the Belen Observatory in Havana – considered one of the most advanced meteorological institutions in the world at the time – due to tensions in the aftermath of the Spanish–American War. Moore also changed protocol to force local Weather Bureau offices to seek authorization from the central office before issuing storm warnings.[11]

Weather Bureau forecasters believed that the storm had begun a northward curve into Florida and that it would eventually turn northeastward and emerge over the Atlantic.[11] As a result, the central office of the Weather Bureau issued a storm warning in Florida from Cedar Key to Miami on September 5.[28] By the following day, a hurricane warning was in effect along the coast from Cedar Key to Savannah, Georgia, while storm warnings were displayed from Charleston, South Carolina, to Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, as well as from Pensacola, Florida, to New Orleans, Louisiana.[29] Cuban forecasters adamantly disagreed with the Weather Bureau, saying the hurricane would continue west. One Cuban forecaster predicted the hurricane would continue into central Texas near San Antonio.[12]

In Galveston on the morning of September 8, the swells persisted despite only partly cloudy skies. Largely because of the unremarkable weather, few residents saw cause for concern.[30] Few people evacuated across Galveston's bridges to the mainland,[31] and the majority of the population was unconcerned by the rain clouds that began rolling in by midmorning.[30] According to his memoirs, Isaac Cline personally traveled by horse along the beach and other low-lying areas to warn people of the storm's approach.[32] However, these accounts by Cline and his brother, Galveston meteorologist Joseph L. Cline, have been in dispute since.[33][34] Although Isaac Cline is credited with issuing a hurricane warning without permission from the Bureau's central office,[35] author Erik Larson points to his earlier insistence that a seawall was unnecessary and his notion that an intense hurricane could not strike the island, with Cline even considering it "simply an absurd delusion" to believe otherwise.[36] Further, according to Larson, no other survivors are known to have corroborated these accounts.[34]

Impact

Caribbean

Antigua reported a severe thunderstorm passing over on August 30, with lower barometric pressures and 2.6 in (66.0 mm) of rain on the island. In Puerto Rico, the storm produced winds up to 43 mph (69 km/h) at San Juan.[10] In Jamaica, heavy rainfall from the storm caused all rivers to swell. Floodwaters severely damaged banana plantations and washed away miles of railroads. Damage estimates ranged in the thousands of British pounds.[37] Heavy rains fell in Cuba in association with the cyclone, including a peak 24-hour total of 12.58 in (319.5 mm) in the city of Santiago de Cuba.[38] The city experienced its worst weather since 1877. The southern end of the city was submerged with about 5 ft (1.5 m) of water. Firefighters and police rescued and aided stranded residents. St. George, a German steamer, ran aground at Daiquirí.[39] A telegraph from the mayor of Trinidad, who was asking for assistance from the U.S. occupation government, indicated that the storm destroyed all crops and left many people destitute.[40]

United States

Deadliest United States hurricanes
Rank Hurricane Season Fatalities
1  4  "Galveston" 1900 8,000–12,000
2  4  "San Ciriaco" 1899 3,400
3  4  Maria 2017 2,981
4  5  "Okeechobee" 1928 2,823
5  4  "Cheniere Caminada" 1893 2,000
6  3  Katrina 2005 1,392
7  3  "Sea Islands" 1893 1,000–2,000
8  3  "Indianola" 1875 771
9  4  "Florida Keys" 1919 745
10  2  "Georgia" 1881 700
Reference: NOAA, GWU[41][42][nb 6]

The Great Galveston hurricane made landfall on September 8, 1900, near Galveston, Texas. It had estimated winds of 140 mph (225 km/h) at landfall, making the cyclone a Category 4 storm on the modern day Saffir–Simpson scale.[5] The hurricane caused great loss of life, with a death toll of between 6,000 and 12,000 people;[31] the number most cited in official reports is 8,000,[26][43] giving the storm the third-highest number of deaths of all Atlantic hurricanes, after the Great Hurricane of 1780 and Hurricane Mitch in 1998.[44] The Galveston hurricane of 1900 is the deadliest natural disaster to strike the United States.[26][43] This loss of life can be attributed to the fact that officials for the Weather Bureau in Galveston brushed off the reports and they did not realize the threat.[45]

More than US$34 million in damage occurred throughout the United States,[14][46] with about US$30 million in Galveston County, Texas, alone.[14] If a similar storm struck in 2010, damage would total approximately US$104.33 billion (2010 USD), based on normalization, a calculation that takes into account changes in inflation, wealth, and population.[43] In comparison, the costliest United States hurricanes – Hurricane Katrina in 2005 and Hurricane Harvey in 2017 – both caused about US$125 billion in damage.[47]

The hurricane occurred before the practice of assigning official code names to tropical storms was instituted, and thus it is commonly referred to under a variety of descriptive names. Typical names for the storm include the Galveston hurricane of 1900,[48] the Great Galveston hurricane,[1] and, especially in older documents and publications, the Galveston Flood.[49] It is often referred to by Galveston locals as the Great Storm of 1900 or the 1900 Storm.[2][3]

Florida to Louisiana

 
Map of rainfall totals in Florida

Portions of South Florida experienced tropical storm-force winds, with a sustained wind speed of 48 mph (77 km/h) in Jupiter and 40 mph (64 km/h) in Key West.[10] The hurricane left "considerable damage" in the Palm Beach area, according to The New York Times. Many small boats were torn from their moorings and capsized. The bulkhead of the pier was washed away, while docks and several seawalls were damaged.[50] Rainfall in the state peaked at 5.7 in (140 mm) in Hypoluxo.[51] High winds in North Florida downed telegraph lines between Jacksonville and Pensacola.[52] In Mississippi, the city of Pass Christian recorded winds of 58 mph (93 km/h).[53] Tides produced by the storm inundated about 200 ft (61 m) of railroad tracks in Pascagoula (then known as Scranton), while a quarantine station on Ship Island was swept away.[54]

In Louisiana, the storm produced gale-force winds as far inland as DeRidder and as far east as New Orleans, with hurricane-force winds observed in Cameron Parish. Along the coast, storm surge inundated Johnson Bayou, while tides at some locations reached their highest level since the 1875 Indianola hurricane.[55] Winds and storm surge caused severe damage to rice crops, with at least 25% destroyed throughout the state.[56] The community of Pointe à la Hache experienced a near-total loss of rice crops.[57] Farther east, roads were flooded by storm surge in the communities of Gretna and Harvey near New Orleans, leaving the streets impassable via horses. Winds downed telegraph lines in the southeastern Louisiana in the vicinity of Port Eads.[54] Two men were initially presumed to have drowned after sailing away from Fort St. Philip and not returning in a timely manner,[58] but they were both later found alive.[59]

Texas

 
Floating wreckage near Texas City – typical scene for miles along the water front

Nearly all of the damage in the United States occurred in Texas, with much of the damage in Galveston.[26] However, many communities outside of Galveston also suffered serious damage and it caused many casualties and affected many families economically,[46] with several cities reporting a near or complete loss of all buildings or homes, including Alta Loma, Alvin,[60] Angleton,[61] Brazoria, Brookshire,[60] Chenango,[62] El Campo,[61] Pearland,[60] and Richmond.[61] Throughout Texas – in areas other than Galveston – at least $3 million in damage occurred to cotton crops, $75,000 to telegraph and telephone poles, and $60,000 to railroads.[46]

At Alvin, 8.05 in (204 mm) of rain fell on September 8, the highest 24-hour total for that city in the month of September.[26] The city suffered nine fatalities and about $50,000 in damage.[46] In West Columbia, the storm destroyed the old capitol building of the former Republic of Texas.[26] Eight deaths occurred in the city.[46] In Quintana, the city experienced extensive damage during this storm and a flood in 1899, causing portions of the community to be abandoned.[26] Throughout Brazoria County alone, the hurricane caused nearly $200,000 in damage and 47 deaths.[46] Houston also experienced significant damage. The hurricane wrought damage to many buildings, including a Masonic temple, a railroad powerhouse, an opera house, a courthouse, and many businesses,[63] churches, homes, hotels, and school buildings.[64] Streets were littered with branches from shade trees and downed electrical wires, leaving several roads completely impassable to cars.[63] The city of Houston suffered about $250,000 in damage and two deaths,[46] one of which occurred when a man was struck by falling timber.[64]

A train heading for Galveston left Houston on the morning of September 8 at 9:45 a.m. CST (15:45 UTC).[65] It found the tracks washed out, and passengers were forced to transfer to a relief train on parallel tracks to complete their journey. Even then, debris on the track slowed the train's progress to a crawl. The 95 travelers on the train from Beaumont found themselves at the Bolivar Peninsula waiting for the ferry that would carry them to the island. When it arrived, the high seas forced the ferry captain to give up on his attempt to dock. The train crew attempted to return the way they had come, but rising water blocked the train's path.[66] Ten refugees from the Beaumont train sought shelter at the Point Bolivar lighthouse with 190 residents of Port Bolivar who were already there. The 85 who stayed with the train died when the storm surge overran the tops of the cars, while every person inside the lighthouse survived.[67]

Galveston

First news from Galveston just received by train that could get no closer to the bay shore than 6 mi [9.7 km] where the prairie was strewn with debris and dead bodies. About 200 corpses counted from the train. Large steamship stranded 2 mi [3.2 km] inland. Nothing could be seen of Galveston. Loss of life and property undoubtedly most appalling. Weather clear and bright here with gentle southeast wind.

— G.L. Vaughan
Manager, Western Union, Houston,
in a telegram to the Chief of the U.S. Weather Bureau on the day after the hurricane, September 9, 1900[68]

At the time of the 1900 hurricane, the highest point in the city of Galveston was only 8.7 ft (2.7 m) above sea level.[23] The hurricane brought with it a storm surge of over 15 ft (4.6 m) that washed over the entire island. Storm surge and tides began flooding the city by the early morning hours of September 8. Water rose steadily from 3:00 p.m. (21:00 UTC) until approximately 7:30 p.m. (01:30 UTC September 9), when eyewitness accounts indicated that water rose about 4 ft (1.2 m) in just four seconds. An additional 5 ft (1.5 m) of water had flowed into portions of the city by 8:30 p.m. (02:30 UTC September 9).[14] The cyclone dropped 9 in (230 mm) of precipitation in Galveston on September 8, setting a record for the most rainfall for any 24-hour period in the month of September in the city's history.[69]

The highest measured wind speed was 100 mph (160 km/h) just after 6:15 p.m. on September 8 (00:15  UTC September 9), but the Weather Bureau's anemometer was blown off the building shortly after that measurement was recorded.[23] Contemporaneous estimates placed the maximum sustained wind speed at 120 mph (190 km/h). However, survivors reported observing bricks, slate, timbers, and other heavy objects becoming airborne, indicating that winds were likely stronger.[70] Later estimates placed the hurricane at the higher Category 4 classification on the Saffir–Simpson scale.[5] The lowest recorded barometric pressure was 964.4 mbar (28.48 inHg), but this was subsequently adjusted to the storm's official lowest measured central pressure of about 936 mbar (27.6 inHg).[31][5]

Searching for bodies in Galveston in the aftermath of the storm of 1900. At the time this film was shot, the stench of hundreds of bodies could be smelled for miles. One body was discovered (but not filmed) while the camera crew was present.

Few streets in the city escaped wind damage and all streets suffered water damage,[71] with much of the destruction caused by storm surge. All bridges connecting the island to the mainland were washed away, while approximately 15 mi (24 km) of railroad track was destroyed. Winds and storm surge also downed electrical, telegraph, and telephone wires. The surge swept buildings off their foundations and dismantled them. Many buildings and homes destroyed other structures after being pushed into them by the waves,[72] which even demolished structures built to withstand hurricanes.[70] Every home in Galveston suffered damage, with 3,636 homes destroyed.[14] Approximately 10,000 people in the city were left homeless, out of a total population of nearly 38,000.[73] Portrait and landscape artist Verner Moore White who moved from Galveston the day before the hurricane and survived, had his studio and much of his portfolio destroyed.[74]The Tremont Hotel, where hundreds of people sought refuge during the storm,[75] was severely damaged.[71] All public buildings also suffered damage, including city hall – which was completely deroofed –[72] a hospital, a city gas works, a city water works, and the custom house.[71] The Grand Opera House also sustained extensive damage, but was quickly rebuilt.[76]

Three schools and St. Mary's University were nearly destroyed. Many places of worship in the city also received severe damage or were completely demolished.[71] Of the 39 churches in Galveston, 25 experienced complete destruction, while the others received some degree of damage.[77] During the storm, the St. Mary's Orphans Asylum, owned by the Sisters of Charity of the Incarnate Word, was occupied by 93 children and 10 sisters. As tides began approaching the property, the sisters moved the children into the girl's dorm, as it was newer and sturdier. Realizing they were under threat, the sisters had the children repeatedly sing Queen of the Waves to calm them. As the collapse of the building appeared imminent, the sisters used a clothesline to tie themselves to six to eight children. The building eventually collapsed. Only three of the children and none of the sisters survived.[78] The few buildings that survived, mostly solidly built mansions and houses along the Strand District, are today maintained as tourist attractions.[79]

 
Map illustrating the devastation in Galveston

Early property damage estimates were placed at $25 million.[71] However, itemized estimates from 1901 based on assessments conducted by the Galveston News, the Galveston chamber of commerce, a relief committee, and multiple insurance companies indicated that the storm caused just over $17 million in damage throughout Galveston, including about $8.44 million to residential properties, $500,000 to churches, $656,000 to wharves and shipping properties, $580,000 to manufacturing plants, $397,000 to mercantile buildings, $1.4 million to store merchandise, $670,000 to railroads and telegraph and telephone services, $416,000 to products in shipment, $336,000 to municipality properties, $243,000 to county properties, and $3.16 million to United States government properties. The total also included $115,000 in damage to schools and approximately $100,000 in damage to roads.[77]

The area of destruction – an area in which nothing remained standing after the storm – consisted of approximately 1,900 acres (768.9 ha) of land and was arc-shaped, with complete demolition of structures in the west, south, and eastern portions of the city, while the north-central section of the city suffered the least amount of damage.[71] In the immediate aftermath of the storm, a 3 mi (4.8 km) long, 30 ft (9.1 m) wall of debris was situated in the middle of the island.[72] As severe as the damage to the city's buildings was, the death toll was even greater. Because of the destruction of the bridges to the mainland and the telegraph lines, no word of the city's destruction was able to reach the mainland at first.[80]

 
Many who died had their corpses piled onto carts for burial at sea.

On the morning of September 9, one of the few ships at the Galveston wharfs to survive the storm, the Pherabe, set sail and arrived in Texas City on the western side of Galveston Bay with a group of messengers from the city. When they reached the telegraph office in Houston early on September 10, a short message was sent to Texas Governor Joseph D. Sayers and U.S. President William McKinley: "I have been deputized by the mayor and Citizen's Committee of Galveston to inform you that the city of Galveston is in ruins." The messengers reported an estimated five hundred dead; this was initially considered to be an exaggeration.[81] The citizens of Houston knew a powerful storm had blown through and had prepared to provide assistance. Workers set out by rail and ship for the island almost immediately. Rescuers arrived to find the city completely destroyed.[82]

A survey conducted by the Morrison and Fourmy Company in early 1901 indicated a population loss of 8,124, though the company believed that about 2,000 people left the city after the storm and never returned. On this basis, the death toll is no less than 6,000,[83] while estimates range up to 12,000.[31] It is believed 8,000 people—20% of the island's population—had lost their lives.[82] Most had drowned or been crushed as the waves pounded the debris that had been their homes hours earlier.[84] A number of fatalities also occurred after strong winds turned debris into projectiles.[14] Many survived the storm itself but died after several days being trapped under the wreckage of the city, with rescuers unable to reach them. The rescuers could hear the screams of the survivors as they walked on the debris trying to rescue those they could.[84] More people were killed in this single storm than the total of those killed in at least the next two deadliest tropical cyclones that have struck the United States since.[85] The Galveston hurricane of 1900 remains the deadliest natural disaster in U.S. history.[26] The disaster did not even spare the buried dead; a number of coffins, including reportedly that of actor-playwright Charles Francis Coghlan who had died in Galveston the previous year, were washed out of the local cemetery to sea by the tidal storm surge.[86]

Midwest

After moving northward from Texas into Oklahoma, the storm produced winds of near 30 mph (48 km/h) at Oklahoma City.[87] The extratropical remnants of the cyclone then re-intensified to the equivalence of a tropical storm and continued to strengthen,[5] bringing strong winds to the Midwestern United States. High winds in Missouri toppled a brick wall under construction in St. Joseph, killing a man and severely injuring another.[88] In Illinois, particularly hard hit was the city of Chicago, which experienced wind gusts up to 84 mph (135 km/h).[10] Thousands of dollars in damage occurred to roofs, trees, signs, and windows. Several people were injured and two deaths occurred in the city, one from a live wire and the other was a drowning after a boat capsized in Lake Michigan.[89] In Wisconsin, many weather stations in the northern and central portions of the state recorded at least 1 in (25 mm) of rainfall, including a peak total of 4.25 in (108 mm) in Shawano.[90] Heavy rains fell in parts of Minnesota. The Minneapolis–Saint Paul area recorded 4.23 in (107 mm) of precipitation over a period of 16 hours. Farther north, several washouts occurred, especially in the northern areas of the state. A bridge, along with a few train cars, were swept away during a washout in Cold Spring.[91]

In Michigan, the storm produced winds around 60 mph (97 km/h) at Muskegon. Tides from Lake Michigan were the highest in several months. According to The Times Herald, the city of Marshall experienced "the severest windstorm of the season", which uprooted trees and damaged several buildings. Throughout the state, winds left at least $12,000 in losses to peach orchards, with many peach trees uprooted. Significant losses to apples and pears also occurred.[92] Rough seas in Lake Erie resulted in several maritime incidents offshore Ohio. The John B. Lyon, a 255 ft (77.7 m) steamer, capsized about 5 mi (8.0 km) north of Conneaut. Fourteen out of sixteen crew members drowned. A survivor suggested that the ship being overloaded may have been a factor in its sinking. About 10 mi (16 km) farther north, the schooner Dundee sank, causing at least one death. In another incident nearby, the steamer City of Erie, with about 300 passengers aboard, was hit by a wave that swept over the bulwarks. The engine slowed and the steamers later reached safety in Canada with no loss of lives.[93] In Toledo, strong winds disrupted telegraph services. Winds also blew water out of parts of the Maumee River and Maumee Bay to such an extent that they were impassable by vessels due to low water levels. A number of vessels were buried in mud several feet deep, while about 20 others were beached.[94]

New York

 
A destroyed iron works in Buffalo

Of the many cities in New York affected by the remnants of the hurricane, Buffalo was among the hardest hit. There, winds peaked at 78 mph (126 km/h), downing hundreds of electrical, telegraph, and telephone wires,[95] while numerous trees toppled and some branches fell onto roadways. An oil derrick blew away and landed on the roof of a house, crushing the roof and nearly killing the occupants.[96] A newly built iron works building was virtually destroyed, causing a loss of about $10,000.[97] At the Pan-American Exposition, the storm damaged several structures, including part of the government building, while two towers were destroyed. Losses at the exposition alone were conservatively estimated at $75,000.[98] One death occurred in Buffalo after a woman inadvertently touched a downed electrical wire obscured by debris.[95] Several nearby resorts received extensive damage. At Woodlawn Beach, several dozens of small boats and a pier were destroyed. Nearly all vessels owned by the Buffalo Canoe Club suffered severe damage or destruction at Crystal Beach. A toboggan slide and a restaurant were also destroyed. Losses in Crystal Beach reached about $5,000. Heavy crop losses occurred over western New York, with fallen apples and peaches completely covering the ground at thousands of acres of orchards. Losses reportedly ranged in the hundreds of thousands of dollars.[99]

The rapidly moving storm was still exhibiting winds of 65 mph (105 km/h) while passing well north of New York City on September 12.[100] The New York Times reported that pedestrian-walking became difficult and attributed one death to the storm. A sign pole, snapped by the wind, landed on a 23-year-old man, crushing his skull and killing him instantly, while two others were knocked unconscious. Awnings and signs on many buildings broke and the canvas roofing at the Fire Department headquarters was blown off.[101] Closer to the waterfront, along the Battery seawall, waves and tides were reported to be some of the highest in recent memory of the fishermen and sailors. Spray and debris were thrown over the wall, making walking along the waterfront dangerous. Small craft in New York Harbor were thrown off course and tides and currents in the Hudson River made navigation difficult.[102] In Brooklyn, The New York Times reported that trees were uprooted, signs and similar structures were blown down, and yachts were torn from moorings with some suffering severe damage.[103] Because of the direction of the wind, Coney Island escaped the fury of the storm, though a bathing pavilion at Bath Beach suffered damage from wind and waves.[101]

New England

In Connecticut, winds gusted up to about 40 mph (64 km/h). The apple crops, already endangered by drought conditions, suffered severe damage, with The Boston Globe noting that there was, "hardly an apple left on a tree in the entire state".[104] In the town of Orange, twelve large tents at a fair were ripped. At another fair in New Milford, fifteen tents collapsed, forcing closure of the fair.[105] Along the coast, the storm produced abnormally high tides, with tides reaching their highest heights in six years at Westbrook. Water reached the bulkheads and remained there for several hours.[106] In Rhode Island, the storm left damage in the vicinity of Providence. Telegraph and telephone services were interrupted, but not to such a large extent. Some small crafts in Narragansett Bay received damage, while apple orchards experienced slight losses.[107]

Lightning produced by the storm ignited several brush fires in Massachusetts, particularly in the southeastern portions of the state, with winds spreading the flames. In Plymouth and other nearby towns, some residents evacuated from the fires by boat. Most cottages around the Big Long, Gallows,[108] Halfway,[109] and Little Long ponds were reduced to burning coals.[108] In Everett, orchards in the Woodlawn section suffered complete losses of fruit. Two wooden frame building were demolished, while winds also toppled fences throughout the city.[110] Winds damaged many telephone and electric wires in Cambridge. A lineman sent to fix the electrical wires nearly died when a pole snapped during a fierce wind gust. Orchards in the city suffered near complete loss and many shade trees were also damaged. At least a few chimneys toppled and several others were left leaning. A bathhouse at Harvard University lost a portion of its tin roof and its copper cornices.[111] At Cape Cod, a wind speed of 45 mph (72 km/h) was observed at Highland Light in North Truro. Waves breached the sand dunes at multiple locations along the cape, with water sweeping across a county road at Beach Point in North Truro. A number of fishing boats sank and several fish houses received severe damage.[112] One man drowned in a lake near Andover while canoeing during the storm.[113]

Strong winds in Vermont generated rough seas in Lake Champlain. Early reports indicated that a schooner sunk near Adams Ferry with no survivors,[114] but the vessel was later found safely anchored at Westport, New York.[115] According to a man near the lake, all water from the New York portion of the lake was blown to the Vermont side, crashing ashore in waves as high as 15 to 20 ft (4.6 to 6.1 m).[114] In the state capital of Montpelier, several large trees at the state house were uprooted. Within Montpelier and vicinity, farmers suffered some losses to apples and corn. Telephone and telegraph services were almost completely cut off. In Vergennes, a number of telephone wires snapped, while many apples, pears, and plums were blown off the trees. Additional damage to fruit and shade trees occurred in Middlebury and Winooski.[115] The city of Burlington experienced its worst storm in many years. Winds downed all telephone and telegraph wires, whereas many trees had severe damage. Some homes were deroofed.[116]

In New Hampshire, the storm left wind damage in the city of Nashua. Winds tore roofs off a number of buildings, with several roofs landing on the streets or telephone wires. Chimneys in each section of the city collapsed; many people narrowly escaped injury or death. In Nashua and the nearby cities of Brookline and Hollis, thousands of dollars in losses occurred to apple crops, described as "practically ruined".[117] The city of Manchester was affected by "one of the most furious windstorms which visited this city in years". Telephone and telegraph communications were nearly completely out for several hours, while windows shattered and trees snapped. Street railway traffic experienced delays.[118] In Maine, the storm downed trees and chimney and caused property damage in the vicinity of Biddeford.[119]

Canada

Deadliest Canada hurricanes
Rank Hurricane Season Fatalities
1 "Newfoundland (1)" 1775 4,000–4,163†
2 "Nova Scotia (1)" 1873 600†
3 "Nova Scotia (3)" 1927 173–192†
4 "Labrador" 1882 140
5 Hazel 1954 81
6 "Newfoundland (2)" 1883 80
7 "Nova Scotia (2)" 1926 55–58†
8 "Galveston" 1900 52–232†
9 "Newfoundland (3)" 1935 50†
10 "Saxby Gale" 1869 37+
† – Estimated total
Source: NOAA[120]

From September 12–September 14, the extratropical remnants of the Galveston hurricane affected six Canadian provinces, resulting in severe damage and extensive loss of life. In Ontario, storm surge in Lake Ontario ranged from 8 to 10 ft (2.4 to 3.0 m), wreaking havoc on vessels, beaching several boats, destroying a number of boats, and setting some others adrift. Many other vessels canceled or postponed their departures. Winds reached as high as 77 mph (124 km/h) in Toronto, breaking windows throughout the city. A fire broke out at a flour mill in Paris, and the flames were fanned by the storm, resulting in $350,000 in damage to the mill and 50 other stores and offices. High winds downed electrical, telegraph, and telephone lines in many areas. Total crop damage in Ontario alone amounted to $1 million. Impact to crops was particularly severe at St. Catharines, where many apple, peach, pear, and plum orchards were extensively damaged, with a loss of thousands of dollars. One person died in Niagara Falls, when a man attempted to remove debris from a pump station, but he was swept away into the river instead. Maximum rainfall in Canada reached 3.9 in (100 mm) in Percé, Quebec.[121]

In Nova Scotia, damage was reported in the Halifax area. A plethora of fences and trees fell over, while windows shattered and a house under construction collapsed. Two schooners were driven ashore at Sydney and a brigantine was also beached at Cape Breton Island. Another schooner, known as Greta, capsized offshore Cape Breton Island near Low Point, with the fate of the crew being unknown. On Prince Edward Island, a few barns, a windmill, and a lobster factory were destroyed. Falling trees downed about 40 electrical wires. A house suffered damage after its own chimney fell and collapsed through the roof. Strong winds also tossed a boxcar from its track. A bridge and wharf at St. Peters Bay were damaged. Fruit crops were almost entirely ruined throughout Prince Edward Island. The majority of loss of life in Canada occurred due to numerous shipwrecks off the coasts of Saint Pierre and Miquelon, Newfoundland, and Prince Edward Island. The overall death toll in Canadian waters is estimated to be between 52 and 232, making this at least the eighth deadliest hurricane to affect Canada. The large discrepancy between the fatality figures is due to the fact that many people were reported missing. Thus, the exact number of deaths is unknown.[121]

Aftermath

Costliest U.S. Atlantic hurricanes, 1900–2017
Direct economic losses, normalized to societal conditions in 2018[122]
Rank Hurricane Season Cost
1  4  "Miami" 1926 $235.9 billion
2  4  "Galveston" 1900 $138.6 billion
3  3  Katrina 2005 $116.9 billion
4  4  "Galveston" 1915 $109.8 billion
5  5  Andrew 1992 $106.0 billion
6  ET  Sandy 2012  $73.5 billion
7  3  "Cuba–Florida" 1944  $73.5 billion
8  4  Harvey 2017  $62.2 billion
9  3  "New England" 1938  $57.8 billion
10  4  "Okeechobee" 1928  $54.4 billion
Main article: List of costliest Atlantic hurricanes

The city of Galveston was effectively obliterated.[123] With the city in ruins and railroads to the mainland destroyed, the survivors had little to live on until relief arrived. On September 9, Galveston city officials established the Central Relief Committee for Galveston Storm Sufferers (CRC), chaired by Mayor Walter C. Jones. The CRC was composed of subcommittees for specific aspects of relief efforts, including burial of the deceased, correspondence, distribution of food and water, finances, hospitalization and rehabilitation for the injured, and public safety.[72]

The dead bodies were so numerous that burying all of them was impossible. Initially, bodies were collected by "dead gangs" and then given to 50 African American men – who were forcibly recruited at gunpoint[citation needed] – to load them onto a barge. About 700 bodies were taken out to sea to be dumped. However, after gulf currents washed many of the bodies back onto the beach, a new solution was needed. Funeral pyres were set up on the beaches, or wherever dead bodies were found, and burned day and night for several weeks after the storm. The authorities passed out free whiskey to sustain the distraught men conscripted for the gruesome work of collecting and burning the dead.[124]

With thousands dead and roughly 2,000 survivors leaving the city and never returning according to a Morrison and Fourmy Company survey, Galveston initially experienced a significant population decline.[83] Between 1907 and 1914, Congregation B'nai Israel rabbi Henry Cohen and philanthropist Jacob Schiff spearheaded the Galveston Movement. Cohen, Schiff, and others created the movement to draw Jewish immigrants away from the crowded area along the East Coast and toward cities farther west, such as Galveston. Although approximately 10,000 Jewish immigrants arrived in Galveston during this period, few settled in the city or the island, but about one-fourth of them remained in Texas.[125] The 1910 Census reported a population of 36,891 people in Galveston. Although a decline from the 1900 Census, the population loss of thousands of people was nearly reversed.[126]

In the months prior to the hurricane, valet Charles F. Jones and lawyer Albert T. Patrick began conspiring to murder wealthy businessman William Marsh Rice in order to obtain his wealth. Patrick fabricated Rice's legal will with the assistance of Jones. Rice's properties in Galveston suffered extensive damage during the storm. After being informed of the damage, Rice decided to spend $250,000, the entire balance of his checking account, on repairing his properties. With the duo realizing that they would fail to obtain Rice's wealth, Patrick convinced Jones to kill Rice with chloroform as he slept. Immediately after murdering Rice, Jones forged a large check to Patrick in Rice's name. However, Jones misspelled Patrick's name on the check, arousing suspicion and eventually resulting in their arrests and convictions. Rice's estate was used to open an institute for higher learning in Houston in 1912, which was named Rice University in his honor.[127]

Rebuilding

 
A plaque placed on buildings in Galveston to indicate which structures survived the 1900 hurricane

Survivors set up temporary shelters in surplus United States Army tents along the shore. They were so numerous that observers began referring to Galveston as the "White City on the Beach".[128] In the first two weeks following the storm, approximately 17,000 people resided in these tents, vacant storerooms, or public buildings.[129] Others constructed so-called "storm lumber" homes, using salvageable material from the debris to build shelter.[128] The building committee, with a budget of $450,000, opened applications for money to rebuild and repair homes. Accepted applicants were given enough money to build a cottage with three 12 by 12 ft (3.7 by 3.7 m) rooms. By March 1901, 1,073 cottages were built and 1,109 homes had been repaired.[129]

Winifred Bonfils, a young journalist working for William Randolph Hearst, was the first reporter on the line at the hurricane's ground zero in Galveston. She delivered an exclusive set of reports and Hearst sent relief supplies by train.[130] By September 12, Galveston received its first post-storm mail. The next day, basic water service was restored, and Western Union began providing minimal telegraph service.[131] Within three weeks of the storm, cotton was again being shipped out of the port.[132]

A number of cities, businesses, organizations, and individuals made monetary donations toward rebuilding Galveston. By September 15, less than one week after the storm struck Galveston, contributions totaled about $1.5 million. More than $134,000 in donations poured in from New York City alone. Five other major cities – St. Louis, Chicago, Boston, Pittsburgh, and Philadelphia – had also donated at least $15,000 by September 15.[133] By state, the largest donations included $228,000 from New York, $67,000 from Texas, $56,000 from Illinois, $53,000 from Massachusetts, and $52,000 from Missouri. Contributions also came from abroad, such as from Canada, Mexico, France, Germany, England, and South Africa,[70] including $10,000 each from Liverpool and Paris. Andrew Carnegie made the largest personal contribution, $10,000, while an additional $10,000 was donated by his steel company.[133]

It was one of those monstrosities of nature which defied exaggeration and fiendishly laughed at all tame attempts of words to picture the scene it had prepared. The churches, the great business houses, the elegant residences of the cultured and opulent, the modest little homes of laborers of a city of nearly forty thousand people; the center of foreign shipping and railroad traffic lay in splinters and debris piled twenty feet above the surface, and the crushed bodies, dead and dying, of nearly ten thousand of its citizens lay under them.

Clara Barton, founder of the American Red Cross, after viewing the destruction in Galveston[72]

Clara Barton, the founder and president of the American Red Cross and famous for her responses to crises in the latter half of the 19th century, responded to the disaster and visited Galveston with a team of eight Red Cross workers. This would be the last disaster that Barton responded to, as she was 78 years old at the time and would retire in 1904. After Barton and the team observed the catastrophe, the Red Cross set up a temporary headquarters at a four-story warehouse in the commercial district. Her presence in Galveston and appeals for contributions resulted in a substantial amount of donations. Overall, 258 barrels, 1,552 pillow cases, and 13 casks of bedding, clothing, crockery, disinfectants, groceries, hardware, medical supplies, and shoes were received at the warehouse, while $17,341 in cash was donated to the Red Cross. Contributions, both monetary gifts and supplies, were estimated to have reached about $120,000.[72]

Before the hurricane of 1900, Galveston was considered to be a beautiful and prestigious city and was known as the "Ellis Island of the West" and the "Wall Street of the Southwest".[19][134] However, after the storm, development shifted north to Houston, which reaped the benefits of the oil boom, particularly after the discovery of oil at Spindletop on January 10, 1901.[135] The dredging of the Houston Ship Channel began by 1909,[136] which opened in 1914, ending Galveston's hopes of regaining its former status as a major commercial center.[137]

The Galveston city government was reorganized into a commission government in 1901, a newly devised structure wherein the government is made of a small group of commissioners, each responsible for one aspect of governance. This was prompted by fears that the existing city council would be unable to handle the problem of rebuilding the city. The apparent success of the new form of government inspired about 500 cities across the United States to adopt a commission government by 1920. However, the commission government fell out of favor after World War I, with Galveston itself switching to council–manager government in 1960.[138]

Protection

 
Seawall, Galveston district

To prevent future storms from causing destruction like that of the 1900 hurricane, many improvements to the island were made. The city of Galveston hired a team of three engineers to design structures for protection from future storms – Alfred Noble, Henry Martyn Robert, and H. C. Ripley.[139] The three engineers recommended and designed a seawall. In November 1902, residents of Galveston overwhelmingly approved a bond referendum to fund building a seawall, passing the measure by a vote of 3,085–21.[124] The first 3 mi (4.8 km) of the Galveston Seawall, 17 ft (5.2 m) high, were built beginning in 1902 under the direction of Robert.[140][141] In July 1904, the first segment was completed, though construction of the seawall continued for several decades, with the final segment finished in 1963.[140] Upon completion, the seawall in its entirety stretched for more than 10 mi (16 km).[142]

Another dramatic effort to protect Galveston was its raising, also recommended by Noble, Robert, and Ripley, and similar to the earlier raising of Chicago and Sacramento, California. Approximately 15,000,000 cu yd (11,000,000 m3) of sand was dredged from the Galveston shipping channel to raise the city, some sections by as much as 17 ft (5.2 m).[139] Over 2,100 buildings were raised in the process of pumping sand underneath,[32] including the 3,000-st (2,700-t) St. Patrick's Church.[70] According to historian David G. McComb, the grade of about 500 blocks had been raised by 1911.[139] The seawall was listed among the National Register of Historic Places on August 18, 1977,[142] while the seawall and raising of the island were jointly named a National Historical Civil Engineering Landmark by the American Society of Civil Engineers on October 11, 2001.[143]

In 1915, a storm similar in strength and track to the 1900 hurricane struck Galveston. The 1915 storm brought storm surge up to 12 ft (3.7 m), testing the integrity of the new seawall. Although 53 people on Galveston Island lost their lives in the 1915 storm, this was a great reduction from the thousands who died in 1900.[144] Other powerful tropical cyclones would test the effectiveness of the seawall, including Hurricane Carla in 1961, Hurricane Alicia in 1983, and Hurricane Ike in 2008. Carla primarily caused severe coastal flood-related damage to structures unprotected by the seawall.[26] Following Hurricane Alicia, the Corps of Engineers estimated that the seawall prevented about $100 million in damage.[126] Despite the seawall, Ike left extensive destruction in Galveston due to storm surge, with preliminary estimates indicating that up to $2 billion in damage occurred to beaches, dwellings, hospitals, infrastructure, and ports.[145] Damage in Galveston and surrounding areas prompted proposals for improvements to the seawall, including the addition of floodgates and more seawalls.[146]

Open Era and beyond

In historiography, the hurricane and the rebuilding afterward divide what is known as the Golden Era (1875–1900) from the Open Era (1920–1957) of Galveston. The most important long-term impact of the hurricane was to confirm fears that Galveston was a dangerous place to make major investments in shipping and manufacturing operations; the economy of the Golden Era was no longer possible as investors fled.[147] However, the city experienced a significant economic rebound beginning in the 1920s, when Prohibition and lax law enforcement opened up new opportunities for criminal enterprises related to gambling and bootlegging in the city. Galveston rapidly became a prime resort destination enabled by the open vice businesses on the island. This new entertainment-based economy brought decades-long prosperity to the island.[148]

To commemorate the hurricane's 100th anniversary in 2000, the 1900 Storm Committee was established and began meeting in January 1998. The committee and then-Mayor of Galveston, Roger Quiroga, planned several public events in remembrance of the storm, including theatrical plays, an educational fundraising luncheon, a candlelight memorial service, a 5K run, the rededication of a commemorative Clara Barton plaque, and the dedication of the Place of Remembrance Monument.[149] At the dedication of the Place of Remembrance Monument, the Sisters of Charity of the Incarnate Word sang "Queen of the Waves" and placed 10 roses and 90 other flowers around the monument to commemorate the 10 nuns and 90 children who perished after the hurricane destroyed the St. Mary's Orphans Asylum.[150] Speakers at the candlelight memorial service included U. S. Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison, who was born in Galveston; Administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration D. James Baker; and CBS Evening News anchor Dan Rather, who gained fame for his coverage during Hurricane Carla in 1961.[151] The Daily News published a special 100th anniversary commemorative edition newspaper on September 3, 2000.[149]

The last reported survivor of the Galveston hurricane of 1900, Maude Conic of Wharton, Texas,[152] died November 14, 2004, at the claimed age of 116, although the 1900 census and other records indicate she was about 10 years younger than that.[153]

The Galveston Historical Foundation maintains the Texas Seaport Museum at Pier 21 in the port of Galveston. Included in the museum is a documentary titled The Great Storm, that gives a recounting of the 1900 hurricane.[154][155]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ In local time, Central Standard Time (CST), the hurricane made landfall in Texas around 8:00 p.m. on September 8. However, government meteorological agencies such as NOAA use Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), which is six hours ahead of CST.[5][6]
  2. ^ All damage figures pertaining to the United States are in 1900 USD, unless otherwise noted
  3. ^ All damage figures pertaining to Canada are in 1900 CAD, unless otherwise noted
  4. ^ The Canadian dollar and United States dollar were roughly identical in value between January 1879 and August 1914.[7]
  5. ^ However, that view was not universally held by all Texas residents, particularly those advocating other Texas seaports. "Galveston Island, with all its boasted accumulation of people, habitations, wealth, trade and commerce, is but a waif of the ocean, a locality but of yesterday ... liable, at any moment, and certain, at no distant day, of being engulfed and submerged by the self-same power that gave it form. Neither is it possible for all the skillful devices of mortal man to protect this doomed place against the impending danger; the terrible power of a hurricane cannot be ... resisted. I should as soon think of founding a city on an iceberg." – D. E. E. Braman (1857).[22]
  6. ^ The storm category color indicates the intensity of the hurricane when landfalling in the U.S.

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Bibliography

  • Bixel, Patricia Bellis; Turner, Elizabeth Hayes (2000). Galveston and the 1900 Storm. Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0-292-70884-6.
  • Braman, D. E. E. (1857). "Description of Counties". Braman's Information About Texas. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: J. B. Lippincott & Co. p. 46.
  • Cline, Joseph (1946). "Chapter IV: The Galveston Hurricane". When the Heavens Frowned. New York City, New York: Firebird Press. ISBN 978-1-56554-783-4.
  • Coe, Fanny E. (1911). "The Telegraph Operator". Heroes of Everyday Life. University of California: Ginn and Co. p. 28. ISBN 978-1164668466.
  • Frank, Neil L. (2003). "Chapter 5. The Great Galveston Hurricane of 1900". (PDF). Vol. 55. Hoboken, New Jersey: American Geophysical Union. ISBN 978-0875902975. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 25, 2009.
  • Green, Nathan C. (1900). "Chapter VIII". Story Of The Galveston Flood. Baltimore, Maryland: R. H. Woodward Company. ISBN 978-1596057661.
  • Hardwick, Susan Wiley (2002). "Introduction". Mythic Galveston: reinventing America's third coast. Baltimore, Maryland: JHU Press. p. 13. ISBN 0-8018-6887-4. - Read online, registration required
  • Kramarae, Cheris; Treichler, Paula A.; Russo, Ann (1992). Amazons, Bluestockings and Crones. Kitchener, Ontario: Pandora. ISBN 978-0-04-440863-5.
  • Larson, Erik (1999). Isaac's Storm: A Man, A Time, and the Deadliest Hurricane in History (1st ed.). New York City, New York: Crown Publishers. ISBN 978-0-609-60233-1.
  • Ousley, Clarence (1900). Galveston in Nineteen Hundred: The Authorized and Official Record. Atlanta, Georgia: William C. Chase.

Further reading

  • "1900 Storm". The 1900 Storm 1900storm.com. Galveston Newspapers, Inc. Retrieved December 18, 2007.
  • Greene, Casey Edward; Kelly, Shelly Henley (2000). Through a Night of Horrors: Voices from the 1900 Galveston Storm. Texas A&M University Press. ISBN 978-1-58544-228-7.
  • Halstead, Murat (1900). Galveston: The Horrors Of A Stricken City. American Publishers' Association. Retrieved July 15, 2009.
  • Lienhard, John H. "Raising Galveston". The Engines of Our Ingenuity. University of Houston. Retrieved December 18, 2007.
  • McGee, W. J. (October 1900). "The Lessons Of Galveston". The National Geographic Magazine. XI (10): 377–383. Retrieved July 15, 2007.
  • Moore, Willis L. (October 1900). "The Weather Bureau and the Gulf Storms". The National Magazine. XIII (1): 542–546. Retrieved July 15, 2009.
  • Moore, Willis L. (1901). Report of the Chief of the Weather Bureau, 1900–1901. Vol. 1. Washington: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Weather Bureau (Government Printing Office). pp. 9–10. Retrieved July 15, 2007.
  • Ousley, Clarence (October 1900). "Thrilling Experiences In The Galveston Storm". The National Magazine. XIII (1): 533–542. Retrieved July 15, 2009.
  • Weems, John Edward (1957). Weekend in September. Texas A&M University Press. ISBN 978-0-89096-390-6.

External links

Listen to this article (18 minutes)
 
This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 17 June 2005 (2005-06-17), and does not reflect subsequent edits.
  • Sept. 11, 1900: Galveston wiped out Wire service account published in the Minneapolis Tribune
  • Galveston Hurricane of 1900 Texas Archive of the Moving Image
  • Galveston 1900: Storm of the Century Primary Source Adventure, a lesson plan hosted by The Portal to Texas History
  • – manuscripts, photographs, and other archival holdings from the Galveston and Texas History Center at the Rosenberg Library – including
  • The early history of Galveston, by Dr. J. O. Dyer, published 1916, hosted by the *Portal to Texas History
  • The great Galveston disaster, containing a full and thrilling account of the most appalling calamity of modern times including vivid descriptions of the hurricane, published 1900, hosted by the Portal to Texas History
  • When Weather Changed History - Galveston Hurricane – A Weather Channel documentary about the 1900 Galveston hurricane
  • The Deadliest Hurricane in History: A Storm of Unimaginable Magnitude – Erik Larson speaking at the Texas State Capitol Complex about his book, Isaac's Storm, and about the hurricane itself
  • 1900 Galveston hurricane from the Handbook of Texas Online

1900, galveston, hurricane, galveston, hurricane, redirects, here, other, hurricanes, that, impacted, galveston, galveston, hurricane, disambiguation, also, known, great, galveston, hurricane, galveston, flood, known, regionally, great, storm, 1900, 1900, stor. Galveston hurricane redirects here For other hurricanes that impacted Galveston see Galveston hurricane disambiguation The 1900 Galveston hurricane 1 also known as the Great Galveston hurricane and the Galveston Flood and known regionally as the Great Storm of 1900 or the 1900 Storm 2 3 is the deadliest natural disaster in United States history 4 The strongest storm of the 1900 Atlantic hurricane season it left between 6 000 and 12 000 fatalities in the United States the number most cited in official reports is 8 000 Most of these deaths occurred in and near Galveston Texas after the storm surge inundated the coastline and the island city with 8 to 12 ft 2 4 to 3 7 m of water It remains among the deadliest Atlantic hurricanes on record In addition to the number killed the storm destroyed about 7 000 buildings of all uses in Galveston which included 3 636 demolished homes every dwelling in the city suffered some degree of damage The hurricane left approximately 10 000 people in the city homeless out of a total population of fewer than 38 000 The disaster ended the Golden Era of Galveston as the hurricane alarmed potential investors who turned to Houston instead In response to the storm three engineers designed and oversaw plans to raise the Gulf of Mexico shoreline of Galveston Island by 17 ft 5 2 m and erect a 10 mi 16 km seawall 1900 Galveston hurricane Surface weather analysis of the hurricane on September 8 just before landfall Meteorological historyFormedAugust 27 1900ExtratropicalSeptember 11 1900DissipatedSeptember 15 1900Category 4 major hurricane1 minute sustained SSHWS NWS Highest winds145 mph 230 km h Lowest pressure936 mbar hPa 27 64 inHgOverall effectsFatalities6 000 8 000 Deadliest in U S history fourth deadliest Atlantic hurricane Damage 1 25 billion 2023 USD Areas affectedLesser Antilles Greater Antilles Dominican Republic and Cuba landfalls Turks and Caicos Islands Bahamas Gulf Coast of the United States Texas landfall Midwestern United States Mid Atlantic New England Eastern CanadaIBTrACSPart of the 1900 Atlantic hurricane season On August 27 1900 a ship east of the Windward Islands detected a tropical cyclone the first observed that year The system proceeded to move steadily west northwestward and entered the northeastern Caribbean on August 30 It made landfall in the Dominican Republic as a weak tropical storm on September 2 It weakened slightly while crossing Hispaniola before re emerging into the Caribbean Sea later that day On September 3 the cyclone struck modern day Santiago de Cuba Province and then slowly drifted along the southern coast of Cuba Upon reaching the Gulf of Mexico on September 6 the storm strengthened into a hurricane Significant intensification followed and the system peaked as a Category 4 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 145 mph 235 km h on September 8 Early on the next day it made landfall to the south of Houston nb 1 The cyclone weakened quickly after moving inland and fell to tropical storm intensity late on September 9 The storm turned east northeastward and became extratropical over Iowa on September 11 The extratropical system strengthened while accelerating across the Midwestern United States New England and Eastern Canada before reaching the Gulf of Saint Lawrence on September 13 After striking Newfoundland later that day the extratropical storm entered the far North Atlantic Ocean and weakened with the remnants last observed near Iceland on September 15 The great storm brought flooding and severe thunderstorms to portions of the Caribbean especially Cuba and Jamaica It is likely that much of South Florida experienced tropical storm force winds though mostly minor damage occurred Hurricane force winds and storm surge inundated portions of southern Louisiana though the cyclone left no significant structural damage or fatalities in the state The hurricane brought strong winds and storm surge to a large portion of east Texas with Galveston suffering the brunt of the impact Farther north the storm and its remnants continued to produce heavy rains and gusty winds which downed telegraph wires signs and trees in several states Fatalities occurred in other states including fifteen in Ohio two in Illinois two in New York one in Massachusetts and one in Missouri Damage from the storm throughout the U S exceeded US 34 million nb 2 The remnants also brought severe impact to Canada In Ontario damage reached about C 1 35 million with CAD 1 million to crops nb 3 The remnants of the hurricane caused at least 52 deaths and possibly as many as 232 deaths in Canada mostly due to sunken vessels near Newfoundland and the French territory of Saint Pierre Throughout its path the storm caused more than 35 4 million in damage 1 3 billion in 2023 nb 4 Contents 1 Meteorological history 2 Background 3 Preparations 4 Impact 4 1 Caribbean 4 2 United States 4 2 1 Florida to Louisiana 4 2 2 Texas 4 2 2 1 Galveston 4 2 3 Midwest 4 2 4 New York 4 2 5 New England 4 3 Canada 5 Aftermath 5 1 Rebuilding 5 2 Protection 5 3 Open Era and beyond 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 Further reading 11 External linksMeteorological history nbsp Map plotting the storm s track and intensity according to the Saffir Simpson scaleMap keySaffir Simpson scale Tropical depression 38 mph 62 km h Tropical storm 39 73 mph 63 118 km h Category 1 74 95 mph 119 153 km h Category 2 96 110 mph 154 177 km h Category 3 111 129 mph 178 208 km h Category 4 130 156 mph 209 251 km h Category 5 157 mph 252 km h Unknown Storm type nbsp Tropical cyclone nbsp Subtropical cyclone nbsp Extratropical cyclone remnant low tropical disturbance or monsoon depression The storm is believed to have originated from a tropical wave which moved off the west coast of Africa and emerged into the Atlantic Ocean 8 However this is not completely certain because of the limited observational methods available to contemporary meteorologists with ship reports being the only reliable tool for observing hurricanes 9 The first formal sighting of the tropical storm occurred on August 27 about 1 000 mi 1 600 km east of the Windward Islands when a ship encountered an area of unsettled weather 5 8 Over the next couple of days the system moved west northwestwards and is thought to have maintained its intensity as a weak tropical storm before it passed through the Leeward Islands and entered the Caribbean Sea on August 31 5 On September 1 Father Reese Gangoite the director of the Belen College Observatory in Havana Cuba noted that the storm was in its formative stages with only vague indications of a small tropical cyclone to the southwest of Saint Croix 10 During that day the system passed to the south of Puerto Rico before it made landfall near Bani Dominican Republic early on September 2 5 Moving west northwestward the storm crossed the island of Hispaniola and entered into the Windward Passage near Saint Marc Haiti several hours later 5 The system made landfall on Cuba near Santiago de Cuba during September 3 before it moved slowly west northwestward across the island and emerged into Straits of Florida as a tropical storm on September 5 5 As the system emerged into the Straits of Florida Gangoite observed a large persistent halo around the moon while the sky turned deep red and cirrus clouds moved northwards This indicated to him that the tropical storm had intensified and that the prevailing winds were moving the system towards the coast of Texas 11 However the United States Weather Bureau as it was then called disagreed with this forecast as they expected the system to recurve and make landfall in Florida before impacting the American East Coast 11 12 An area of high pressure over the Florida Keys ultimately moved the system northwestward into the Gulf of Mexico where favorable conditions such as warm sea surface temperatures allowed the storm to intensify into a hurricane 5 11 nbsp Hurricane track from September 1 to 10 In the eastern Gulf of Mexico on September 6 the ship Louisiana encountered the hurricane and its captain T P Halsey estimated that the system had wind speeds of 100 mph 160 km h 13 The hurricane continued to strengthen significantly while heading west northwestward across the Gulf On September 7 the system reached its peak intensity with estimated sustained wind speeds of 145 mph 235 km h which made it equivalent to a Category 4 hurricane on the modern day Saffir Simpson scale 5 That day the Weather Bureau realized that the storm was continuing west northwestward across the Gulf of Mexico rather than turning northward over Florida and the East Coast as it had predicted However Weather Bureau director Willis Moore insisted that the cyclone was not of hurricane intensity 11 The hurricane weakened slightly on September 8 and recurved to the northwest as it approached the coast of Texas while the Weather Bureau office in Galveston began observing hurricane force winds by 22 00 UTC 5 14 The cyclone made landfall around 8 00 p m CST on September 8 02 00 UTC on September 9 to the south of Houston as a Category 4 hurricane 5 While crossing Galveston Island and West Bay the eye passed southwest of the city of Galveston 15 The hurricane quickly weakened after moving inland falling to tropical storm intensity late on September 9 5 The storm lost tropical characteristics and transitioned into an extratropical cyclone over Iowa by 12 00 UTC on September 11 5 Moving rapidly east northeastward the extratropical system re intensified becoming the equivalent of a Category 1 hurricane over Ontario on September 12 5 The extratropical remnants reached the Gulf of Saint Lawrence early the following day 5 After crossing Newfoundland and entering the far northern Atlantic hours later the remnants of the hurricane weakened and were last noted near Iceland on September 15 where the storm finally dissipated 5 BackgroundSee also History of Galveston Texas The city of Galveston formally founded in 1839 had weathered numerous storms all of which the city survived with ease In the late 19th century Galveston was a boomtown with the population increasing from 29 084 people in 1890 to 37 788 people in 1900 16 17 The city was the fourth largest municipality in terms of population in the state of Texas in 1900 and had among the highest per capita income rates in the U S 18 Galveston had many ornate business buildings in a downtown section called The Strand which was considered the Wall Street of the Southwest 19 The city s position on the natural harbor of Galveston Bay along the Gulf of Mexico made it the center of trade in Texas and one of the busiest ports in the nation 20 With this prosperity came a sense of complacency 21 as residents believed any future storms would be no worse than previous events nb 5 In fact Isaac Cline director of the Weather Bureau s Galveston office wrote an 1891 article in the Galveston Daily News that it would be impossible for a hurricane of significant strength to strike Galveston Island 23 A quarter of a century earlier the nearby town of Indianola on Matagorda Bay was undergoing its own boom 24 Then in 1875 a powerful hurricane blew through and nearly destroyed the town Indianola was rebuilt 25 though a second hurricane in 1886 caused most of the town s residents to move elsewhere 26 Many Galveston residents took the destruction of Indianola as an object lesson on the threat posed by hurricanes Galveston is built on a low flat island little more than a large sandbar along the Gulf Coast These residents proposed a seawall be constructed to protect the city but the majority of the population and the city s government dismissed their concerns 27 Cline further argued in his 1891 article in the Daily News that a seawall was not needed due to his belief that a strong hurricane would not strike the island As a result the seawall was not built and development activities on the island actively increased its vulnerability to storms Sand dunes along the shore were cut down to fill low areas in the city removing what little barrier there was to the Gulf of Mexico 27 PreparationsOn September 4 the Weather Bureau s Galveston office began receiving warnings from the Bureau s central office in Washington D C that a tropical disturbance had moved northward over Cuba At the time they discouraged the use of terms such as hurricane or tornado to avoid panicking residents in the path of any storm event The Weather Bureau forecasters had no way of knowing the storm s trajectory as Weather Bureau director Willis Moore implemented a policy to block telegraph reports from Cuban meteorologists at the Belen Observatory in Havana considered one of the most advanced meteorological institutions in the world at the time due to tensions in the aftermath of the Spanish American War Moore also changed protocol to force local Weather Bureau offices to seek authorization from the central office before issuing storm warnings 11 Weather Bureau forecasters believed that the storm had begun a northward curve into Florida and that it would eventually turn northeastward and emerge over the Atlantic 11 As a result the central office of the Weather Bureau issued a storm warning in Florida from Cedar Key to Miami on September 5 28 By the following day a hurricane warning was in effect along the coast from Cedar Key to Savannah Georgia while storm warnings were displayed from Charleston South Carolina to Kitty Hawk North Carolina as well as from Pensacola Florida to New Orleans Louisiana 29 Cuban forecasters adamantly disagreed with the Weather Bureau saying the hurricane would continue west One Cuban forecaster predicted the hurricane would continue into central Texas near San Antonio 12 In Galveston on the morning of September 8 the swells persisted despite only partly cloudy skies Largely because of the unremarkable weather few residents saw cause for concern 30 Few people evacuated across Galveston s bridges to the mainland 31 and the majority of the population was unconcerned by the rain clouds that began rolling in by midmorning 30 According to his memoirs Isaac Cline personally traveled by horse along the beach and other low lying areas to warn people of the storm s approach 32 However these accounts by Cline and his brother Galveston meteorologist Joseph L Cline have been in dispute since 33 34 Although Isaac Cline is credited with issuing a hurricane warning without permission from the Bureau s central office 35 author Erik Larson points to his earlier insistence that a seawall was unnecessary and his notion that an intense hurricane could not strike the island with Cline even considering it simply an absurd delusion to believe otherwise 36 Further according to Larson no other survivors are known to have corroborated these accounts 34 ImpactCaribbean Antigua reported a severe thunderstorm passing over on August 30 with lower barometric pressures and 2 6 in 66 0 mm of rain on the island In Puerto Rico the storm produced winds up to 43 mph 69 km h at San Juan 10 In Jamaica heavy rainfall from the storm caused all rivers to swell Floodwaters severely damaged banana plantations and washed away miles of railroads Damage estimates ranged in the thousands of British pounds 37 Heavy rains fell in Cuba in association with the cyclone including a peak 24 hour total of 12 58 in 319 5 mm in the city of Santiago de Cuba 38 The city experienced its worst weather since 1877 The southern end of the city was submerged with about 5 ft 1 5 m of water Firefighters and police rescued and aided stranded residents St George a German steamer ran aground at Daiquiri 39 A telegraph from the mayor of Trinidad who was asking for assistance from the U S occupation government indicated that the storm destroyed all crops and left many people destitute 40 United States Deadliest United States hurricanes Rank Hurricane Season Fatalities 1 4 Galveston 1900 8 000 12 000 2 4 San Ciriaco 1899 3 400 3 4 Maria 2017 2 981 4 5 Okeechobee 1928 2 823 5 4 Cheniere Caminada 1893 2 000 6 3 Katrina 2005 1 392 7 3 Sea Islands 1893 1 000 2 000 8 3 Indianola 1875 771 9 4 Florida Keys 1919 745 10 2 Georgia 1881 700 Reference NOAA GWU 41 42 nb 6 The Great Galveston hurricane made landfall on September 8 1900 near Galveston Texas It had estimated winds of 140 mph 225 km h at landfall making the cyclone a Category 4 storm on the modern day Saffir Simpson scale 5 The hurricane caused great loss of life with a death toll of between 6 000 and 12 000 people 31 the number most cited in official reports is 8 000 26 43 giving the storm the third highest number of deaths of all Atlantic hurricanes after the Great Hurricane of 1780 and Hurricane Mitch in 1998 44 The Galveston hurricane of 1900 is the deadliest natural disaster to strike the United States 26 43 This loss of life can be attributed to the fact that officials for the Weather Bureau in Galveston brushed off the reports and they did not realize the threat 45 More than US 34 million in damage occurred throughout the United States 14 46 with about US 30 million in Galveston County Texas alone 14 If a similar storm struck in 2010 damage would total approximately US 104 33 billion 2010 USD based on normalization a calculation that takes into account changes in inflation wealth and population 43 In comparison the costliest United States hurricanes Hurricane Katrina in 2005 and Hurricane Harvey in 2017 both caused about US 125 billion in damage 47 The hurricane occurred before the practice of assigning official code names to tropical storms was instituted and thus it is commonly referred to under a variety of descriptive names Typical names for the storm include the Galveston hurricane of 1900 48 the Great Galveston hurricane 1 and especially in older documents and publications the Galveston Flood 49 It is often referred to by Galveston locals as the Great Storm of 1900 or the 1900 Storm 2 3 Florida to Louisiana nbsp Map of rainfall totals in Florida Portions of South Florida experienced tropical storm force winds with a sustained wind speed of 48 mph 77 km h in Jupiter and 40 mph 64 km h in Key West 10 The hurricane left considerable damage in the Palm Beach area according to The New York Times Many small boats were torn from their moorings and capsized The bulkhead of the pier was washed away while docks and several seawalls were damaged 50 Rainfall in the state peaked at 5 7 in 140 mm in Hypoluxo 51 High winds in North Florida downed telegraph lines between Jacksonville and Pensacola 52 In Mississippi the city of Pass Christian recorded winds of 58 mph 93 km h 53 Tides produced by the storm inundated about 200 ft 61 m of railroad tracks in Pascagoula then known as Scranton while a quarantine station on Ship Island was swept away 54 In Louisiana the storm produced gale force winds as far inland as DeRidder and as far east as New Orleans with hurricane force winds observed in Cameron Parish Along the coast storm surge inundated Johnson Bayou while tides at some locations reached their highest level since the 1875 Indianola hurricane 55 Winds and storm surge caused severe damage to rice crops with at least 25 destroyed throughout the state 56 The community of Pointe a la Hache experienced a near total loss of rice crops 57 Farther east roads were flooded by storm surge in the communities of Gretna and Harvey near New Orleans leaving the streets impassable via horses Winds downed telegraph lines in the southeastern Louisiana in the vicinity of Port Eads 54 Two men were initially presumed to have drowned after sailing away from Fort St Philip and not returning in a timely manner 58 but they were both later found alive 59 Texas nbsp Floating wreckage near Texas City typical scene for miles along the water front Nearly all of the damage in the United States occurred in Texas with much of the damage in Galveston 26 However many communities outside of Galveston also suffered serious damage and it caused many casualties and affected many families economically 46 with several cities reporting a near or complete loss of all buildings or homes including Alta Loma Alvin 60 Angleton 61 Brazoria Brookshire 60 Chenango 62 El Campo 61 Pearland 60 and Richmond 61 Throughout Texas in areas other than Galveston at least 3 million in damage occurred to cotton crops 75 000 to telegraph and telephone poles and 60 000 to railroads 46 At Alvin 8 05 in 204 mm of rain fell on September 8 the highest 24 hour total for that city in the month of September 26 The city suffered nine fatalities and about 50 000 in damage 46 In West Columbia the storm destroyed the old capitol building of the former Republic of Texas 26 Eight deaths occurred in the city 46 In Quintana the city experienced extensive damage during this storm and a flood in 1899 causing portions of the community to be abandoned 26 Throughout Brazoria County alone the hurricane caused nearly 200 000 in damage and 47 deaths 46 Houston also experienced significant damage The hurricane wrought damage to many buildings including a Masonic temple a railroad powerhouse an opera house a courthouse and many businesses 63 churches homes hotels and school buildings 64 Streets were littered with branches from shade trees and downed electrical wires leaving several roads completely impassable to cars 63 The city of Houston suffered about 250 000 in damage and two deaths 46 one of which occurred when a man was struck by falling timber 64 A train heading for Galveston left Houston on the morning of September 8 at 9 45 a m CST 15 45 UTC 65 It found the tracks washed out and passengers were forced to transfer to a relief train on parallel tracks to complete their journey Even then debris on the track slowed the train s progress to a crawl The 95 travelers on the train from Beaumont found themselves at the Bolivar Peninsula waiting for the ferry that would carry them to the island When it arrived the high seas forced the ferry captain to give up on his attempt to dock The train crew attempted to return the way they had come but rising water blocked the train s path 66 Ten refugees from the Beaumont train sought shelter at the Point Bolivar lighthouse with 190 residents of Port Bolivar who were already there The 85 who stayed with the train died when the storm surge overran the tops of the cars while every person inside the lighthouse survived 67 Galveston First news from Galveston just received by train that could get no closer to the bay shore than 6 mi 9 7 km where the prairie was strewn with debris and dead bodies About 200 corpses counted from the train Large steamship stranded 2 mi 3 2 km inland Nothing could be seen of Galveston Loss of life and property undoubtedly most appalling Weather clear and bright here with gentle southeast wind G L VaughanManager Western Union Houston in a telegram to the Chief of the U S Weather Bureau on the day after the hurricane September 9 1900 68 At the time of the 1900 hurricane the highest point in the city of Galveston was only 8 7 ft 2 7 m above sea level 23 The hurricane brought with it a storm surge of over 15 ft 4 6 m that washed over the entire island Storm surge and tides began flooding the city by the early morning hours of September 8 Water rose steadily from 3 00 p m 21 00 UTC until approximately 7 30 p m 01 30 UTC September 9 when eyewitness accounts indicated that water rose about 4 ft 1 2 m in just four seconds An additional 5 ft 1 5 m of water had flowed into portions of the city by 8 30 p m 02 30 UTC September 9 14 The cyclone dropped 9 in 230 mm of precipitation in Galveston on September 8 setting a record for the most rainfall for any 24 hour period in the month of September in the city s history 69 The highest measured wind speed was 100 mph 160 km h just after 6 15 p m on September 8 00 15 UTC September 9 but the Weather Bureau s anemometer was blown off the building shortly after that measurement was recorded 23 Contemporaneous estimates placed the maximum sustained wind speed at 120 mph 190 km h However survivors reported observing bricks slate timbers and other heavy objects becoming airborne indicating that winds were likely stronger 70 Later estimates placed the hurricane at the higher Category 4 classification on the Saffir Simpson scale 5 The lowest recorded barometric pressure was 964 4 mbar 28 48 inHg but this was subsequently adjusted to the storm s official lowest measured central pressure of about 936 mbar 27 6 inHg 31 5 source source source source Searching for bodies in Galveston in the aftermath of the storm of 1900 At the time this film was shot the stench of hundreds of bodies could be smelled for miles One body was discovered but not filmed while the camera crew was present Few streets in the city escaped wind damage and all streets suffered water damage 71 with much of the destruction caused by storm surge All bridges connecting the island to the mainland were washed away while approximately 15 mi 24 km of railroad track was destroyed Winds and storm surge also downed electrical telegraph and telephone wires The surge swept buildings off their foundations and dismantled them Many buildings and homes destroyed other structures after being pushed into them by the waves 72 which even demolished structures built to withstand hurricanes 70 Every home in Galveston suffered damage with 3 636 homes destroyed 14 Approximately 10 000 people in the city were left homeless out of a total population of nearly 38 000 73 Portrait and landscape artist Verner Moore White who moved from Galveston the day before the hurricane and survived had his studio and much of his portfolio destroyed 74 The Tremont Hotel where hundreds of people sought refuge during the storm 75 was severely damaged 71 All public buildings also suffered damage including city hall which was completely deroofed 72 a hospital a city gas works a city water works and the custom house 71 The Grand Opera House also sustained extensive damage but was quickly rebuilt 76 Three schools and St Mary s University were nearly destroyed Many places of worship in the city also received severe damage or were completely demolished 71 Of the 39 churches in Galveston 25 experienced complete destruction while the others received some degree of damage 77 During the storm the St Mary s Orphans Asylum owned by the Sisters of Charity of the Incarnate Word was occupied by 93 children and 10 sisters As tides began approaching the property the sisters moved the children into the girl s dorm as it was newer and sturdier Realizing they were under threat the sisters had the children repeatedly sing Queen of the Waves to calm them As the collapse of the building appeared imminent the sisters used a clothesline to tie themselves to six to eight children The building eventually collapsed Only three of the children and none of the sisters survived 78 The few buildings that survived mostly solidly built mansions and houses along the Strand District are today maintained as tourist attractions 79 nbsp Map illustrating the devastation in Galveston Early property damage estimates were placed at 25 million 71 However itemized estimates from 1901 based on assessments conducted by the Galveston News the Galveston chamber of commerce a relief committee and multiple insurance companies indicated that the storm caused just over 17 million in damage throughout Galveston including about 8 44 million to residential properties 500 000 to churches 656 000 to wharves and shipping properties 580 000 to manufacturing plants 397 000 to mercantile buildings 1 4 million to store merchandise 670 000 to railroads and telegraph and telephone services 416 000 to products in shipment 336 000 to municipality properties 243 000 to county properties and 3 16 million to United States government properties The total also included 115 000 in damage to schools and approximately 100 000 in damage to roads 77 The area of destruction an area in which nothing remained standing after the storm consisted of approximately 1 900 acres 768 9 ha of land and was arc shaped with complete demolition of structures in the west south and eastern portions of the city while the north central section of the city suffered the least amount of damage 71 In the immediate aftermath of the storm a 3 mi 4 8 km long 30 ft 9 1 m wall of debris was situated in the middle of the island 72 As severe as the damage to the city s buildings was the death toll was even greater Because of the destruction of the bridges to the mainland and the telegraph lines no word of the city s destruction was able to reach the mainland at first 80 nbsp Many who died had their corpses piled onto carts for burial at sea On the morning of September 9 one of the few ships at the Galveston wharfs to survive the storm the Pherabe set sail and arrived in Texas City on the western side of Galveston Bay with a group of messengers from the city When they reached the telegraph office in Houston early on September 10 a short message was sent to Texas Governor Joseph D Sayers and U S President William McKinley I have been deputized by the mayor and Citizen s Committee of Galveston to inform you that the city of Galveston is in ruins The messengers reported an estimated five hundred dead this was initially considered to be an exaggeration 81 The citizens of Houston knew a powerful storm had blown through and had prepared to provide assistance Workers set out by rail and ship for the island almost immediately Rescuers arrived to find the city completely destroyed 82 A survey conducted by the Morrison and Fourmy Company in early 1901 indicated a population loss of 8 124 though the company believed that about 2 000 people left the city after the storm and never returned On this basis the death toll is no less than 6 000 83 while estimates range up to 12 000 31 It is believed 8 000 people 20 of the island s population had lost their lives 82 Most had drowned or been crushed as the waves pounded the debris that had been their homes hours earlier 84 A number of fatalities also occurred after strong winds turned debris into projectiles 14 Many survived the storm itself but died after several days being trapped under the wreckage of the city with rescuers unable to reach them The rescuers could hear the screams of the survivors as they walked on the debris trying to rescue those they could 84 More people were killed in this single storm than the total of those killed in at least the next two deadliest tropical cyclones that have struck the United States since 85 The Galveston hurricane of 1900 remains the deadliest natural disaster in U S history 26 The disaster did not even spare the buried dead a number of coffins including reportedly that of actor playwright Charles Francis Coghlan who had died in Galveston the previous year were washed out of the local cemetery to sea by the tidal storm surge 86 Midwest After moving northward from Texas into Oklahoma the storm produced winds of near 30 mph 48 km h at Oklahoma City 87 The extratropical remnants of the cyclone then re intensified to the equivalence of a tropical storm and continued to strengthen 5 bringing strong winds to the Midwestern United States High winds in Missouri toppled a brick wall under construction in St Joseph killing a man and severely injuring another 88 In Illinois particularly hard hit was the city of Chicago which experienced wind gusts up to 84 mph 135 km h 10 Thousands of dollars in damage occurred to roofs trees signs and windows Several people were injured and two deaths occurred in the city one from a live wire and the other was a drowning after a boat capsized in Lake Michigan 89 In Wisconsin many weather stations in the northern and central portions of the state recorded at least 1 in 25 mm of rainfall including a peak total of 4 25 in 108 mm in Shawano 90 Heavy rains fell in parts of Minnesota The Minneapolis Saint Paul area recorded 4 23 in 107 mm of precipitation over a period of 16 hours Farther north several washouts occurred especially in the northern areas of the state A bridge along with a few train cars were swept away during a washout in Cold Spring 91 In Michigan the storm produced winds around 60 mph 97 km h at Muskegon Tides from Lake Michigan were the highest in several months According to The Times Herald the city of Marshall experienced the severest windstorm of the season which uprooted trees and damaged several buildings Throughout the state winds left at least 12 000 in losses to peach orchards with many peach trees uprooted Significant losses to apples and pears also occurred 92 Rough seas in Lake Erie resulted in several maritime incidents offshore Ohio The John B Lyon a 255 ft 77 7 m steamer capsized about 5 mi 8 0 km north of Conneaut Fourteen out of sixteen crew members drowned A survivor suggested that the ship being overloaded may have been a factor in its sinking About 10 mi 16 km farther north the schooner Dundee sank causing at least one death In another incident nearby the steamer City of Erie with about 300 passengers aboard was hit by a wave that swept over the bulwarks The engine slowed and the steamers later reached safety in Canada with no loss of lives 93 In Toledo strong winds disrupted telegraph services Winds also blew water out of parts of the Maumee River and Maumee Bay to such an extent that they were impassable by vessels due to low water levels A number of vessels were buried in mud several feet deep while about 20 others were beached 94 New York nbsp A destroyed iron works in Buffalo Of the many cities in New York affected by the remnants of the hurricane Buffalo was among the hardest hit There winds peaked at 78 mph 126 km h downing hundreds of electrical telegraph and telephone wires 95 while numerous trees toppled and some branches fell onto roadways An oil derrick blew away and landed on the roof of a house crushing the roof and nearly killing the occupants 96 A newly built iron works building was virtually destroyed causing a loss of about 10 000 97 At the Pan American Exposition the storm damaged several structures including part of the government building while two towers were destroyed Losses at the exposition alone were conservatively estimated at 75 000 98 One death occurred in Buffalo after a woman inadvertently touched a downed electrical wire obscured by debris 95 Several nearby resorts received extensive damage At Woodlawn Beach several dozens of small boats and a pier were destroyed Nearly all vessels owned by the Buffalo Canoe Club suffered severe damage or destruction at Crystal Beach A toboggan slide and a restaurant were also destroyed Losses in Crystal Beach reached about 5 000 Heavy crop losses occurred over western New York with fallen apples and peaches completely covering the ground at thousands of acres of orchards Losses reportedly ranged in the hundreds of thousands of dollars 99 The rapidly moving storm was still exhibiting winds of 65 mph 105 km h while passing well north of New York City on September 12 100 The New York Times reported that pedestrian walking became difficult and attributed one death to the storm A sign pole snapped by the wind landed on a 23 year old man crushing his skull and killing him instantly while two others were knocked unconscious Awnings and signs on many buildings broke and the canvas roofing at the Fire Department headquarters was blown off 101 Closer to the waterfront along the Battery seawall waves and tides were reported to be some of the highest in recent memory of the fishermen and sailors Spray and debris were thrown over the wall making walking along the waterfront dangerous Small craft in New York Harbor were thrown off course and tides and currents in the Hudson River made navigation difficult 102 In Brooklyn The New York Times reported that trees were uprooted signs and similar structures were blown down and yachts were torn from moorings with some suffering severe damage 103 Because of the direction of the wind Coney Island escaped the fury of the storm though a bathing pavilion at Bath Beach suffered damage from wind and waves 101 New England In Connecticut winds gusted up to about 40 mph 64 km h The apple crops already endangered by drought conditions suffered severe damage with The Boston Globe noting that there was hardly an apple left on a tree in the entire state 104 In the town of Orange twelve large tents at a fair were ripped At another fair in New Milford fifteen tents collapsed forcing closure of the fair 105 Along the coast the storm produced abnormally high tides with tides reaching their highest heights in six years at Westbrook Water reached the bulkheads and remained there for several hours 106 In Rhode Island the storm left damage in the vicinity of Providence Telegraph and telephone services were interrupted but not to such a large extent Some small crafts in Narragansett Bay received damage while apple orchards experienced slight losses 107 Lightning produced by the storm ignited several brush fires in Massachusetts particularly in the southeastern portions of the state with winds spreading the flames In Plymouth and other nearby towns some residents evacuated from the fires by boat Most cottages around the Big Long Gallows 108 Halfway 109 and Little Long ponds were reduced to burning coals 108 In Everett orchards in the Woodlawn section suffered complete losses of fruit Two wooden frame building were demolished while winds also toppled fences throughout the city 110 Winds damaged many telephone and electric wires in Cambridge A lineman sent to fix the electrical wires nearly died when a pole snapped during a fierce wind gust Orchards in the city suffered near complete loss and many shade trees were also damaged At least a few chimneys toppled and several others were left leaning A bathhouse at Harvard University lost a portion of its tin roof and its copper cornices 111 At Cape Cod a wind speed of 45 mph 72 km h was observed at Highland Light in North Truro Waves breached the sand dunes at multiple locations along the cape with water sweeping across a county road at Beach Point in North Truro A number of fishing boats sank and several fish houses received severe damage 112 One man drowned in a lake near Andover while canoeing during the storm 113 Strong winds in Vermont generated rough seas in Lake Champlain Early reports indicated that a schooner sunk near Adams Ferry with no survivors 114 but the vessel was later found safely anchored at Westport New York 115 According to a man near the lake all water from the New York portion of the lake was blown to the Vermont side crashing ashore in waves as high as 15 to 20 ft 4 6 to 6 1 m 114 In the state capital of Montpelier several large trees at the state house were uprooted Within Montpelier and vicinity farmers suffered some losses to apples and corn Telephone and telegraph services were almost completely cut off In Vergennes a number of telephone wires snapped while many apples pears and plums were blown off the trees Additional damage to fruit and shade trees occurred in Middlebury and Winooski 115 The city of Burlington experienced its worst storm in many years Winds downed all telephone and telegraph wires whereas many trees had severe damage Some homes were deroofed 116 In New Hampshire the storm left wind damage in the city of Nashua Winds tore roofs off a number of buildings with several roofs landing on the streets or telephone wires Chimneys in each section of the city collapsed many people narrowly escaped injury or death In Nashua and the nearby cities of Brookline and Hollis thousands of dollars in losses occurred to apple crops described as practically ruined 117 The city of Manchester was affected by one of the most furious windstorms which visited this city in years Telephone and telegraph communications were nearly completely out for several hours while windows shattered and trees snapped Street railway traffic experienced delays 118 In Maine the storm downed trees and chimney and caused property damage in the vicinity of Biddeford 119 Canada Deadliest Canada hurricanes Rank Hurricane Season Fatalities 1 Newfoundland 1 1775 4 000 4 163 2 Nova Scotia 1 1873 600 3 Nova Scotia 3 1927 173 192 4 Labrador 1882 140 5 Hazel 1954 81 6 Newfoundland 2 1883 80 7 Nova Scotia 2 1926 55 58 8 Galveston 1900 52 232 9 Newfoundland 3 1935 50 10 Saxby Gale 1869 37 Estimated total Source NOAA 120 From September 12 September 14 the extratropical remnants of the Galveston hurricane affected six Canadian provinces resulting in severe damage and extensive loss of life In Ontario storm surge in Lake Ontario ranged from 8 to 10 ft 2 4 to 3 0 m wreaking havoc on vessels beaching several boats destroying a number of boats and setting some others adrift Many other vessels canceled or postponed their departures Winds reached as high as 77 mph 124 km h in Toronto breaking windows throughout the city A fire broke out at a flour mill in Paris and the flames were fanned by the storm resulting in 350 000 in damage to the mill and 50 other stores and offices High winds downed electrical telegraph and telephone lines in many areas Total crop damage in Ontario alone amounted to 1 million Impact to crops was particularly severe at St Catharines where many apple peach pear and plum orchards were extensively damaged with a loss of thousands of dollars One person died in Niagara Falls when a man attempted to remove debris from a pump station but he was swept away into the river instead Maximum rainfall in Canada reached 3 9 in 100 mm in Perce Quebec 121 In Nova Scotia damage was reported in the Halifax area A plethora of fences and trees fell over while windows shattered and a house under construction collapsed Two schooners were driven ashore at Sydney and a brigantine was also beached at Cape Breton Island Another schooner known as Greta capsized offshore Cape Breton Island near Low Point with the fate of the crew being unknown On Prince Edward Island a few barns a windmill and a lobster factory were destroyed Falling trees downed about 40 electrical wires A house suffered damage after its own chimney fell and collapsed through the roof Strong winds also tossed a boxcar from its track A bridge and wharf at St Peters Bay were damaged Fruit crops were almost entirely ruined throughout Prince Edward Island The majority of loss of life in Canada occurred due to numerous shipwrecks off the coasts of Saint Pierre and Miquelon Newfoundland and Prince Edward Island The overall death toll in Canadian waters is estimated to be between 52 and 232 making this at least the eighth deadliest hurricane to affect Canada The large discrepancy between the fatality figures is due to the fact that many people were reported missing Thus the exact number of deaths is unknown 121 AftermathCostliest U S Atlantic hurricanes 1900 2017Direct economic losses normalized to societal conditions in 2018 122 Rank Hurricane Season Cost 1 4 Miami 1926 235 9 billion 2 4 Galveston 1900 138 6 billion 3 3 Katrina 2005 116 9 billion 4 4 Galveston 1915 109 8 billion 5 5 Andrew 1992 106 0 billion 6 ET Sandy 2012 73 5 billion 7 3 Cuba Florida 1944 73 5 billion 8 4 Harvey 2017 62 2 billion 9 3 New England 1938 57 8 billion 10 4 Okeechobee 1928 54 4 billion Main article List of costliest Atlantic hurricanes The city of Galveston was effectively obliterated 123 With the city in ruins and railroads to the mainland destroyed the survivors had little to live on until relief arrived On September 9 Galveston city officials established the Central Relief Committee for Galveston Storm Sufferers CRC chaired by Mayor Walter C Jones The CRC was composed of subcommittees for specific aspects of relief efforts including burial of the deceased correspondence distribution of food and water finances hospitalization and rehabilitation for the injured and public safety 72 The dead bodies were so numerous that burying all of them was impossible Initially bodies were collected by dead gangs and then given to 50 African American men who were forcibly recruited at gunpoint citation needed to load them onto a barge About 700 bodies were taken out to sea to be dumped However after gulf currents washed many of the bodies back onto the beach a new solution was needed Funeral pyres were set up on the beaches or wherever dead bodies were found and burned day and night for several weeks after the storm The authorities passed out free whiskey to sustain the distraught men conscripted for the gruesome work of collecting and burning the dead 124 With thousands dead and roughly 2 000 survivors leaving the city and never returning according to a Morrison and Fourmy Company survey Galveston initially experienced a significant population decline 83 Between 1907 and 1914 Congregation B nai Israel rabbi Henry Cohen and philanthropist Jacob Schiff spearheaded the Galveston Movement Cohen Schiff and others created the movement to draw Jewish immigrants away from the crowded area along the East Coast and toward cities farther west such as Galveston Although approximately 10 000 Jewish immigrants arrived in Galveston during this period few settled in the city or the island but about one fourth of them remained in Texas 125 The 1910 Census reported a population of 36 891 people in Galveston Although a decline from the 1900 Census the population loss of thousands of people was nearly reversed 126 In the months prior to the hurricane valet Charles F Jones and lawyer Albert T Patrick began conspiring to murder wealthy businessman William Marsh Rice in order to obtain his wealth Patrick fabricated Rice s legal will with the assistance of Jones Rice s properties in Galveston suffered extensive damage during the storm After being informed of the damage Rice decided to spend 250 000 the entire balance of his checking account on repairing his properties With the duo realizing that they would fail to obtain Rice s wealth Patrick convinced Jones to kill Rice with chloroform as he slept Immediately after murdering Rice Jones forged a large check to Patrick in Rice s name However Jones misspelled Patrick s name on the check arousing suspicion and eventually resulting in their arrests and convictions Rice s estate was used to open an institute for higher learning in Houston in 1912 which was named Rice University in his honor 127 Rebuilding nbsp A plaque placed on buildings in Galveston to indicate which structures survived the 1900 hurricane Survivors set up temporary shelters in surplus United States Army tents along the shore They were so numerous that observers began referring to Galveston as the White City on the Beach 128 In the first two weeks following the storm approximately 17 000 people resided in these tents vacant storerooms or public buildings 129 Others constructed so called storm lumber homes using salvageable material from the debris to build shelter 128 The building committee with a budget of 450 000 opened applications for money to rebuild and repair homes Accepted applicants were given enough money to build a cottage with three 12 by 12 ft 3 7 by 3 7 m rooms By March 1901 1 073 cottages were built and 1 109 homes had been repaired 129 Winifred Bonfils a young journalist working for William Randolph Hearst was the first reporter on the line at the hurricane s ground zero in Galveston She delivered an exclusive set of reports and Hearst sent relief supplies by train 130 By September 12 Galveston received its first post storm mail The next day basic water service was restored and Western Union began providing minimal telegraph service 131 Within three weeks of the storm cotton was again being shipped out of the port 132 A number of cities businesses organizations and individuals made monetary donations toward rebuilding Galveston By September 15 less than one week after the storm struck Galveston contributions totaled about 1 5 million More than 134 000 in donations poured in from New York City alone Five other major cities St Louis Chicago Boston Pittsburgh and Philadelphia had also donated at least 15 000 by September 15 133 By state the largest donations included 228 000 from New York 67 000 from Texas 56 000 from Illinois 53 000 from Massachusetts and 52 000 from Missouri Contributions also came from abroad such as from Canada Mexico France Germany England and South Africa 70 including 10 000 each from Liverpool and Paris Andrew Carnegie made the largest personal contribution 10 000 while an additional 10 000 was donated by his steel company 133 It was one of those monstrosities of nature which defied exaggeration and fiendishly laughed at all tame attempts of words to picture the scene it had prepared The churches the great business houses the elegant residences of the cultured and opulent the modest little homes of laborers of a city of nearly forty thousand people the center of foreign shipping and railroad traffic lay in splinters and debris piled twenty feet above the surface and the crushed bodies dead and dying of nearly ten thousand of its citizens lay under them Clara Barton founder of the American Red Cross after viewing the destruction in Galveston 72 Clara Barton the founder and president of the American Red Cross and famous for her responses to crises in the latter half of the 19th century responded to the disaster and visited Galveston with a team of eight Red Cross workers This would be the last disaster that Barton responded to as she was 78 years old at the time and would retire in 1904 After Barton and the team observed the catastrophe the Red Cross set up a temporary headquarters at a four story warehouse in the commercial district Her presence in Galveston and appeals for contributions resulted in a substantial amount of donations Overall 258 barrels 1 552 pillow cases and 13 casks of bedding clothing crockery disinfectants groceries hardware medical supplies and shoes were received at the warehouse while 17 341 in cash was donated to the Red Cross Contributions both monetary gifts and supplies were estimated to have reached about 120 000 72 Before the hurricane of 1900 Galveston was considered to be a beautiful and prestigious city and was known as the Ellis Island of the West and the Wall Street of the Southwest 19 134 However after the storm development shifted north to Houston which reaped the benefits of the oil boom particularly after the discovery of oil at Spindletop on January 10 1901 135 The dredging of the Houston Ship Channel began by 1909 136 which opened in 1914 ending Galveston s hopes of regaining its former status as a major commercial center 137 The Galveston city government was reorganized into a commission government in 1901 a newly devised structure wherein the government is made of a small group of commissioners each responsible for one aspect of governance This was prompted by fears that the existing city council would be unable to handle the problem of rebuilding the city The apparent success of the new form of government inspired about 500 cities across the United States to adopt a commission government by 1920 However the commission government fell out of favor after World War I with Galveston itself switching to council manager government in 1960 138 Protection nbsp Seawall Galveston district To prevent future storms from causing destruction like that of the 1900 hurricane many improvements to the island were made The city of Galveston hired a team of three engineers to design structures for protection from future storms Alfred Noble Henry Martyn Robert and H C Ripley 139 The three engineers recommended and designed a seawall In November 1902 residents of Galveston overwhelmingly approved a bond referendum to fund building a seawall passing the measure by a vote of 3 085 21 124 The first 3 mi 4 8 km of the Galveston Seawall 17 ft 5 2 m high were built beginning in 1902 under the direction of Robert 140 141 In July 1904 the first segment was completed though construction of the seawall continued for several decades with the final segment finished in 1963 140 Upon completion the seawall in its entirety stretched for more than 10 mi 16 km 142 Another dramatic effort to protect Galveston was its raising also recommended by Noble Robert and Ripley and similar to the earlier raising of Chicago and Sacramento California Approximately 15 000 000 cu yd 11 000 000 m3 of sand was dredged from the Galveston shipping channel to raise the city some sections by as much as 17 ft 5 2 m 139 Over 2 100 buildings were raised in the process of pumping sand underneath 32 including the 3 000 st 2 700 t St Patrick s Church 70 According to historian David G McComb the grade of about 500 blocks had been raised by 1911 139 The seawall was listed among the National Register of Historic Places on August 18 1977 142 while the seawall and raising of the island were jointly named a National Historical Civil Engineering Landmark by the American Society of Civil Engineers on October 11 2001 143 In 1915 a storm similar in strength and track to the 1900 hurricane struck Galveston The 1915 storm brought storm surge up to 12 ft 3 7 m testing the integrity of the new seawall Although 53 people on Galveston Island lost their lives in the 1915 storm this was a great reduction from the thousands who died in 1900 144 Other powerful tropical cyclones would test the effectiveness of the seawall including Hurricane Carla in 1961 Hurricane Alicia in 1983 and Hurricane Ike in 2008 Carla primarily caused severe coastal flood related damage to structures unprotected by the seawall 26 Following Hurricane Alicia the Corps of Engineers estimated that the seawall prevented about 100 million in damage 126 Despite the seawall Ike left extensive destruction in Galveston due to storm surge with preliminary estimates indicating that up to 2 billion in damage occurred to beaches dwellings hospitals infrastructure and ports 145 Damage in Galveston and surrounding areas prompted proposals for improvements to the seawall including the addition of floodgates and more seawalls 146 Open Era and beyond In historiography the hurricane and the rebuilding afterward divide what is known as the Golden Era 1875 1900 from the Open Era 1920 1957 of Galveston The most important long term impact of the hurricane was to confirm fears that Galveston was a dangerous place to make major investments in shipping and manufacturing operations the economy of the Golden Era was no longer possible as investors fled 147 However the city experienced a significant economic rebound beginning in the 1920s when Prohibition and lax law enforcement opened up new opportunities for criminal enterprises related to gambling and bootlegging in the city Galveston rapidly became a prime resort destination enabled by the open vice businesses on the island This new entertainment based economy brought decades long prosperity to the island 148 To commemorate the hurricane s 100th anniversary in 2000 the 1900 Storm Committee was established and began meeting in January 1998 The committee and then Mayor of Galveston Roger Quiroga planned several public events in remembrance of the storm including theatrical plays an educational fundraising luncheon a candlelight memorial service a 5K run the rededication of a commemorative Clara Barton plaque and the dedication of the Place of Remembrance Monument 149 At the dedication of the Place of Remembrance Monument the Sisters of Charity of the Incarnate Word sang Queen of the Waves and placed 10 roses and 90 other flowers around the monument to commemorate the 10 nuns and 90 children who perished after the hurricane destroyed the St Mary s Orphans Asylum 150 Speakers at the candlelight memorial service included U S Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison who was born in Galveston Administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration D James Baker and CBS Evening News anchor Dan Rather who gained fame for his coverage during Hurricane Carla in 1961 151 The Daily News published a special 100th anniversary commemorative edition newspaper on September 3 2000 149 The last reported survivor of the Galveston hurricane of 1900 Maude Conic of Wharton Texas 152 died November 14 2004 at the claimed age of 116 although the 1900 census and other records indicate she was about 10 years younger than that 153 The Galveston Historical Foundation maintains the Texas Seaport Museum at Pier 21 in the port of Galveston Included in the museum is a documentary titled The Great Storm that gives a recounting of the 1900 hurricane 154 155 See also nbsp Texas portal nbsp Tropical cyclones portal History of Galveston Texas Hurricane Ike 2008 Took an extremely identical track in 2008 and devastated southeastern Texas Hurricane Harvey 2017 Took a similar track and devastated southeastern Texas Hurricane Laura 2020 Took a nearly identical track in 2020 1775 Newfoundland hurricane Deadliest Canadian hurricane on record Great Hurricane of 1780 Deadliest Atlantic hurricane recorded 1959 Mexico hurricane The deadliest hurricane in Mexico 1970 Bhola cyclone The deadliest tropical cyclone on record worldwide Isaac s Storm Erik Larson s non fiction book recounting the hurricane and the life of Galveston meteorologist Isaac Cline Wasn t That a Mighty Storm An American folk song about the 1900 Galveston hurricane later popularized by musicians such as Eric Von Schmidt and Tom Rush A Weekend in September Nonfiction book about the hurricaneNotes In local time Central Standard Time CST the hurricane made landfall in Texas around 8 00 p m on September 8 However government meteorological agencies such as NOAA use Coordinated Universal Time UTC which is six hours ahead of CST 5 6 All damage figures pertaining to the United States are in 1900 USD unless otherwise noted All damage figures pertaining to Canada are in 1900 CAD unless otherwise noted The Canadian dollar and United States dollar were roughly identical in value between January 1879 and August 1914 7 However that view was not universally held by all Texas residents particularly those advocating other Texas seaports Galveston Island with all its boasted accumulation of people habitations wealth trade and commerce is but a waif of the ocean a locality but of yesterday liable at any moment and certain at no distant day of being engulfed and submerged by the self same power that gave it form Neither is it possible for all the skillful devices of mortal man to protect this doomed place against the impending danger the terrible power of a hurricane cannot be resisted I should as soon think of founding a city on an iceberg D E E Braman 1857 22 The storm category color indicates the intensity of the hurricane when landfalling in the U S References a b Trumbla Ron May 12 2017 The Great Galveston Hurricane of 1900 NOAA Celebrates 200 Years of Science Service and Stewardship National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved February 3 2019 a b Rhor Monica May 19 2016 Great Storm of 1900 brought winds of change Houston Chronicle Retrieved February 3 2019 a b Stephens Sara G December 31 2012 Portrait of a Legend The Great Storm of 1900 St Mary s Orphan Asylum Houston Family Magazine Retrieved February 3 2019 NOAA Press Release www nhc noaa gov Retrieved August 29 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s 1900 Major Hurricane Not Named 1900239N15318 International Best Track Archive for Climate Stewardship Retrieved May 29 2019 Central Standard Time Zone CST WorldTimeServer com November 14 2015 Retrieved December 29 2018 Powell James December 2005 A History of the Canadian Dollar PDF Bank of Canada p 97 Retrieved December 30 2018 a b Frank p 130 Ship based Observations Hurricanes Science and Society University of Rhode Island Retrieved May 18 2019 a b c d Partagas Jose Fernandez 1997 Year 1900 PDF Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory Report Miami Florida National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration pp 97 99 105 106 Retrieved April 13 2018 a b c d e f Roker Al September 4 2015 Blown Away Galveston Hurricane 1900 American History Magazine HistoryNet Retrieved April 18 2018 a b Larson p 83 Frank p 131 a b c d e f Cline Isaac M September 23 1900 Special Report on The Galveston Hurricane of September 8 1900 Weather Bureau Report Galveston Texas as archived in Garriott Edward B September 1900 West Indian Hurricane of September 1 12 1900 PDF Monthly Weather Review 28 9 372 374 Bibcode 1900MWRv 28 371G doi 10 1175 1520 0493 1900 28 371b WIHOS 2 0 CO 2 Retrieved May 20 2019 Frank p 136 Isaac s Storm A Man A Time and the Deadliest Hurricane in History Galveston County Daily News Retrieved May 31 2019 Texas Almanac City Population History from 1850 2000 PDF Report Texas Almanac Retrieved April 18 2018 Galveston marks anniversary of disaster Longview News Journal Longview Texas Associated Press September 9 2000 p 4A Retrieved April 18 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp a b Babineck Mark September 4 2000 A century ago hurricane left thousands dead Star Gazette Elmira New York Associated Press p 5A Retrieved April 18 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp Sealy Edward Coyle July 7 2017 Galveston Wharves Texas State Historical Association Retrieved May 31 2019 Nguyen Tuan C November 7 2007 The 10 Worst U S Natural Disasters Live Science Retrieved May 18 2019 Braman p 46 a b c Heidorn Keith C September 1 2000 Weather people and history Dr Isaac M Cline A Man of Storm and Floods Part 2 The Weather Doctor Retrieved February 3 2019 Graczyk Michael L November 16 1986 Town Abandoned After 2 Hurricanes Ruins Mark Once Busy Texas Port Los Angeles Times Associated Press Retrieved June 6 2019 Frantz Helen B January 19 2008 Handbook of Texas Online Indianola Hurricanes Texas State Historical Association Retrieved November 27 2008 a b c d e f g h i Roth David M January 6 2010 Texas Hurricane History PDF Report Camp Springs Maryland National Weather Service p 47 Retrieved December 29 2018 a b Zalzal Kate S September 8 2016 Benchmarks September 8 1900 Massive hurricane strikes Galveston Texas Earth Magazine Retrieved May 30 2019 Weather Indications Evening Star Washington D C September 5 1900 p 3 Retrieved June 2 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp Fair Tonight Evening Star Washington D C September 6 1900 p 3 Retrieved June 2 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp a b The Galveston Hurricane of 1900 EyeWitnesstoHistory com Retrieved May 31 2019 a b c d Weems John Edward March 21 2016 Galveston Hurricane of 1900 Texas State Historical Association Retrieved December 13 2018 a b The 1900 Storm An Island Washed Away Galveston County Daily News Archived from the original on January 24 2001 Retrieved December 18 2007 Cline p 49 a b Larson p 103 Moore Nolan July 15 2014 10 Tragic Stories About America s Deadliest Disaster ListVerse Retrieved June 6 2019 Larson p 12 Destructive Storm in Jamaica Chicago Tribune September 8 1900 p 9 Retrieved September 1 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp Garriott Edward B 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Retrieved August 28 2018 a b c National Climatic Data Center National Hurricane Center August 10 2011 The deadliest costliest and most intense United States tropical cyclones from 1851 to 2010 and other frequently requested hurricane facts PDF National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration p 47 Retrieved August 10 2011 Meyer Ava August 29 2018 Five deadliest hurricanes as toll from Hurricane Maria raised Thomson Reuters Foundation News Retrieved June 21 2019 Deadly storm came with little warning Houston Chronicle December 17 2007 Archived from the original on December 17 2007 Retrieved September 28 2017 a b c d e f g Estimated Losses Houston Post September 13 1900 p 4 Retrieved February 3 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp Costliest U S tropical cyclones tables updated PDF Report National Hurricane Center January 26 2018 p 2 Retrieved February 3 2019 Little Becky April 12 2019 How the Galveston Hurricane of 1900 Became the Deadliest U S Natural Disaster The History Channel Retrieved May 2 2019 The Death List Anaconda Standard September 13 1900 p 1 Retrieved May 2 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp Many Wrecks On Florida Coast The New York Times September 8 1900 p 1 Retrieved April 13 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp Schoner R W Molansky S July 1956 National Hurricane Research Project No 3 Rainfall Associated With Hurricanes and Other Tropical Disturbances PDF Report United States Department of Commerce p 248 Retrieved February 14 2019 Coast Storm Does Damage Natchez Democrat September 7 1900 p 1 Retrieved August 31 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp At Pass Christian The Semi Weekly Times Democrat New Orleans Louisiana September 11 1900 p 12 Retrieved August 31 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp a b Fierce Gale The Semi Weekly Times Democrat New Orleans Louisiana September 11 1900 p 12 Retrieved August 31 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp Roth David M April 8 2010 Louisiana Hurricane History PDF Report Camp Springs Maryland National Weather Service p 28 Retrieved September 1 2018 Rice Crop Damaged The Semi Weekly Times Democrat New Orleans Louisiana September 11 1900 p 12 Retrieved September 1 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp Farmers Lose Heavily The Semi Weekly Times Democrat New Orleans Louisiana September 11 1900 p 12 Retrieved September 1 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp Two Lives Lost The Times Picayune New Orleans September 8 1900 p 1 Retrieved September 1 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp The Storm Spends Its Fierce Fury The Times Democrat New Orleans September 9 1900 p 2 Retrieved September 1 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp a b c Huge Wave From the Gulf El Paso Herald September 10 1900 p 5 Retrieved February 12 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp a b c Summary of Storm News Victoria Advocate Victoria Texas September 15 1900 p 2 Retrieved February 12 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp Eight Dead at Chenango Chicago Tribune September 10 1900 p 3 Retrieved February 12 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp a b Houston Suffered From Storm Houston Post September 10 1900 p 3 Retrieved February 12 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp a b Hhuston sic A Mass Of Wreckage Los Angeles Times Associated Press September 11 1900 p 4 Retrieved February 12 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp Bixel p 20 Larson pp 99 100 Olafson Steve August 28 2000 Unimaginable devastation Deadly storm came with little warning Houston Chronicle Archived from the original on December 17 2007 Retrieved December 18 2007 Larson p 136 September Normals Means and Extremes for Galveston Report National Weather Service Houston Galveston Texas 2018 Retrieved December 9 2018 a b c d Ramos Mary G 2008 After the Great Storm Galveston s response to the hurricane of 1900 Texas Almanac Retrieved December 22 2018 a b c d e f Map of Galveston Showing Destruction By The Storm Houston Post September 27 1900 p 7 Retrieved December 8 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp a b c d e f Turner Elizabeth Hayes Clara Barton and the Formation of Public Policy in Galveston 1900 PDF University of Houston Downtown pp 3 5 Archived from the original PDF on June 17 2013 Retrieved December 8 2018 Burnett John November 30 2017 The Tempest At Galveston We Knew There Was A Storm Coming But We Had No Idea NPR Retrieved December 8 2018 Baker James Graham Southwestern Historical Quarterly Vol CXIII April 2010 Galveston Hurricane of 1900 Panoramic View of Tremont Hotel The Texas Archive of the Moving Image Archived from the original on December 9 2018 Retrieved December 9 2018 History of The Grand The Grand 1894 Opera House Archived from the original on January 2 2019 Retrieved December 22 2018 a b The Property Loss Pittsburgh Daily Post March 10 1901 p 20 Retrieved December 20 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp The Sisters of Charity Orphanage Galveston County Daily News Retrieved December 9 2018 The Strand Galveston com amp Company Inc Retrieved February 14 2019 Galveston May be Wiped Out By Storm The New York Times September 9 1900 p 1 Retrieved May 20 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp Ousley p 276 a b Sullivan Brian K Korose Tom September 12 2008 Hurricane Ike Set to Slam Texas Coast Thousands Flee New York Bloomberg News a b Larson p 160 a b Coe p 28 Larson p 146 Charles Coghian s Body Missing New York Times 25 September 1900 pg 2 Storm Reached Oklahoma Leavenworth Times September 11 1900 p 8 Retrieved September 3 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp One Killed at St Joseph St Louis Post Dispatch September 12 1900 p 2 Retrieved September 3 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp Chicago Badly Damaged St Louis Post Dispatch September 12 1900 p 2 Retrieved September 3 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp Wilson W M September 1900 Report for September 1900 PDF Report Climatological Data Vol 5 Milwaukee Wisconsin Climate and Crop Service of the Weather Bureau pp 3 4 Archived from the original PDF on June 9 2020 Retrieved April 12 2023 via National Centers for Environmental Information Twin Cities Visited St Louis Dispatch September 12 1900 p 2 Retrieved February 2 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp Storm in Michigan The Times Herald Port Huron Michigan September 12 1900 p 8 Retrieved February 2 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp Explore Shipwrecks John B Lyon Ohio State University s Sea Grant College Program Archived from the original on August 31 2018 Retrieved November 18 2018 Water Driven from Toledo Harbor and Vessels Stuck in the Mud The Cincinnati Enquirer September 13 1900 p 2 Retrieved November 18 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp a b Great Damage By The Storm In Buffalo Buffalo Courier September 13 1900 p 7 Retrieved January 31 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp Lifted Derricp sic From The Ground Buffalo Courier September 13 1900 p 7 Retrieved January 31 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp New Cast House Was Blown Down Buffalo Courier September 13 1900 p 7 Retrieved January 31 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp Exposition s Loss Hard to Estimate Buffalo Courier September 13 1900 p 7 Retrieved January 31 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp Havoc Caused at Nearby Resorts Buffalo Courier September 13 1900 p 7 Retrieved January 31 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp Course of the Hurricane The New York Times September 13 1900 p 14 Retrieved February 3 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp a b City swept by high winds The New York Times September 13 1900 p 14 Retrieved February 3 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp The Water High at The Battery The New York Times September 13 1900 p 14 Retrieved February 11 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp The Storm in Brooklyn The New York Times September 13 1900 p 14 Retrieved February 11 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp Connecticut Fruit Crop Gone The Boston Globe September 13 1900 p 3 Retrieved November 19 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp Wind Broke Up Fairs Hartford Courant September 14 1900 p 3 Retrieved November 19 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp The Storm at Westbrook Hartford Courant September 14 1900 p 3 Retrieved November 19 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp Damage at Providence The Boston Globe September 13 1900 p 3 Retrieved November 19 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp a b Death Near to Many The Boston Globe September 13 1900 p 1 Retrieved November 24 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp Death Near to Many The Boston Globe September 13 1900 p 2 Retrieved November 24 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp Everett Was Hit Hard The Boston Globe September 13 1900 p 3 Retrieved November 30 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp Many Accidents in Cambridge The Boston Globe September 13 1900 p 3 Retrieved November 30 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp Water Sweeps High on The Cape The Boston Globe September 13 1900 p 3 Retrieved November 30 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp Joseph W Smith Drowned The Boston Globe September 14 1900 p 7 Retrieved May 17 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp a b Schooner Sunk The Burlington Free Press September 13 1900 p 1 Retrieved November 19 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp a b Damage From Wind Storm The Chelsea Herald Randolph Vermont September 20 1900 p 5 Retrieved November 19 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp Storm Strikes in Burlington Montpelier Evening Argus September 12 1900 p 1 Retrieved November 19 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp Roofs Flying In Air The Boston Globe September 13 1900 p 3 Retrieved November 23 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp Manchester Feels Its Fury The Boston Globe September 13 1900 p 3 Retrieved November 23 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp Biddeford Feels the Wind The Boston Globe September 13 1900 p 3 Retrieved May 9 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp Rappaport Edward N Fernandez Partagas Jose January 1995 The Deadliest Atlantic Tropical Cyclones 1492 1994 PDF NOAA Technical Memorandum NWS NHC 47 United States National Hurricane Center p 23 Archived PDF from the original on January 13 2013 Retrieved May 24 2019 a b 1900 1 Environment and Climate Change Canada November 20 2009 Archived from the original on March 13 2013 Retrieved May 11 2021 Weinkle Jessica et al 2018 Normalized hurricane damage in the continental United States 1900 2017 Nature Sustainability 1 808 813 doi 10 1038 s41893 018 0165 2 Wildmoon K C September 8 2008 Hurricane destroyed Galveston in 1900 CNN Retrieved October 5 2016 a b Van Riper A Bowdoin The Great Galveston hurricane of 1900 The Ultimate History Project Retrieved February 16 2019 Encyclopedia of Southern Jewish Communities Galveston Texas Goldring Woldenberg Institute of Southern Jewish Life Retrieved May 17 2019 a b U S Census Bureau History 1900 Galveston Hurricane United States Census Bureau September 2015 Retrieved May 17 2019 William March Rice and His Legacy The Historical Society at Sam Houston Park Retrieved May 16 2019 a b Bixel pp 70 71 a b Work of Committees Pittsburgh Daily Post March 10 1901 p 20 Retrieved February 14 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp Kramarae p 343 Bixel p 74 Bixel p 76 a b Some of the Contributions to the Relief Fund The Topeka Daily Capital September 15 1900 p 1 Retrieved February 14 2019 via Newspapers com nbsp Dittrick Paula July 29 1991 Galveston was The Ellis Island of the West United Press International Retrieved June 14 2019 Larson p 161 Sibley Marilyn M March 28 2017 Houston Ship Channel Texas State Historical Association Retrieved May 18 2019 J H W Stele to Sayers September 11 12 1900 Texas State Library and Archives Commission March 30 2011 Archived from the original on November 17 2010 Retrieved February 2 2019 Rice Bradley R June 12 2010 Commission Form of Government Texas State Historical Association Retrieved December 29 2018 a b c Smith Michael A Post storm rebuilding considered Galveston s finest hour Galveston County Daily News Archived from the original on February 16 2001 Retrieved February 16 2019 a b Seawall Galveston and Texas History Center Rosenberg Library October 21 2004 Archived from the original on March 21 2009 Retrieved December 29 2018 Kline Charles R June 15 2010 Robert Henry Martyn Texas State Historical Association Retrieved June 22 2019 a b Galveston Seawall PDF National Park Service August 18 1977 pp 1 5 Retrieved February 16 2019 Bartee Clark May 16 2012 Galveston Seawall and Grade Raising Project Located on the Gulf of Mexico Galveston Island Texas Third National Congress on Civil Engineering History and Heritage October 10 13 2001 American Society of Civil Engineers doi 10 1061 40594 265 55 Retrieved February 16 2019 Frankenfield H C August 1915 The Tropical Storm of August 10 1915 PDF Monthly Weather Review 43 8 Washington D C 410 Bibcode 1915MWRv 43 405G doi 10 1175 1520 0493 1915 43 lt 405 TTSOA gt 2 0 CO 2 Retrieved May 17 2019 Chapter III Economic Environment PDF Hurricane Ike Impact Report Report Federal Emergency Management Agency December 2008 p 35 Retrieved December 29 2018 Kaskey Jack August 30 2018 Houston Eyes Designer Bonds to Pay for 15 Billion Ike Dike New York Bloomberg News Retrieved December 29 2018 Hardwick p 13 Section 3 Context City of Galveston Hazard Mitigation Plan Report April 13 2011 p 4 Archived from the original on February 19 2017 Retrieved May 2 2019 a b 100th anniversary calendar of events Galveston County Daily News Retrieved December 22 2018 Galveston marks anniversary of disaster Longview News Journal Longview Texas Associated Press September 9 2000 p 4 Retrieved December 22 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp Babineck Mark September 9 2000 Hurricane s victims honored throughout the city El Paso Times Associated Press p 16 Retrieved December 22 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp Oldest living Texas Republican celebrates 113th birthday El Paso County Republican Party September 2001 Archived from the original on September 19 2008 Retrieved May 18 2019 Table of False and Exaggerated Claims Gerontology Research Group Archived from the original on July 24 2020 Retrieved May 2 2019 Pier 21 Theater The Great Storm Galveston Historical Foundation Archived from the original on June 22 2012 Retrieved May 29 2012 The Great Storm Galveston Historical Foundation Archived from the original on August 31 2012 Retrieved May 29 2012 BibliographyBixel Patricia Bellis Turner Elizabeth Hayes 2000 Galveston and the 1900 Storm Austin Texas University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 70884 6 Braman D E E 1857 Description of Counties Braman s Information About Texas Philadelphia Pennsylvania J B Lippincott amp Co p 46 Cline Joseph 1946 Chapter IV The Galveston Hurricane When the Heavens Frowned New York City New York Firebird Press ISBN 978 1 56554 783 4 Coe Fanny E 1911 The Telegraph Operator Heroes of Everyday Life University of California Ginn and Co p 28 ISBN 978 1164668466 Frank Neil L 2003 Chapter 5 The Great Galveston Hurricane of 1900 Hurricane Coping with Disaster Progress and Challenges Since Galveston 1900 PDF Vol 55 Hoboken New Jersey American Geophysical Union ISBN 978 0875902975 Archived from the original PDF on March 25 2009 Green Nathan C 1900 Chapter VIII Story Of The Galveston Flood Baltimore Maryland R H Woodward Company ISBN 978 1596057661 Hardwick Susan Wiley 2002 Introduction Mythic Galveston reinventing America s third coast Baltimore Maryland JHU Press p 13 ISBN 0 8018 6887 4 Read online registration required Kramarae Cheris Treichler Paula A Russo Ann 1992 Amazons Bluestockings and Crones Kitchener Ontario Pandora ISBN 978 0 04 440863 5 Larson Erik 1999 Isaac s Storm A Man A Time and the Deadliest Hurricane in History 1st ed New York City New York Crown Publishers ISBN 978 0 609 60233 1 Ousley Clarence 1900 Galveston in Nineteen Hundred The Authorized and Official Record Atlanta Georgia William C Chase Further reading 1900 Storm The 1900 Storm 1900storm com Galveston Newspapers Inc Retrieved December 18 2007 Greene Casey Edward Kelly Shelly Henley 2000 Through a Night of Horrors Voices from the 1900 Galveston Storm Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 978 1 58544 228 7 Halstead Murat 1900 Galveston The Horrors Of A Stricken City American Publishers Association Retrieved July 15 2009 Lienhard John H Raising Galveston The Engines of Our Ingenuity University of Houston Retrieved December 18 2007 McGee W J October 1900 The Lessons Of Galveston The National Geographic Magazine XI 10 377 383 Retrieved July 15 2007 Moore Willis L October 1900 The Weather Bureau and the Gulf Storms The National Magazine XIII 1 542 546 Retrieved July 15 2009 Moore Willis L 1901 Report of the Chief of the Weather Bureau 1900 1901 Vol 1 Washington U S Department of Agriculture Weather Bureau Government Printing Office pp 9 10 Retrieved July 15 2007 Ousley Clarence October 1900 Thrilling Experiences In The Galveston Storm The National Magazine XIII 1 533 542 Retrieved July 15 2009 Weems John Edward 1957 Weekend in September Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 978 0 89096 390 6 External links nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Galveston Hurricane of 1900 Listen to this article 18 minutes source source nbsp This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 17 June 2005 2005 06 17 and does not reflect subsequent edits Audio help More spoken articles Sept 11 1900 Galveston wiped out Wire service account published in the Minneapolis Tribune Galveston Hurricane of 1900 Texas Archive of the Moving Image Galveston 1900 Storm of the Century Primary Source Adventure a lesson plan hosted by The Portal to Texas History The 1900 Storm manuscripts photographs and other archival holdings from the Galveston and Texas History Center at the Rosenberg Library including a list of victims The early history of Galveston by Dr J O Dyer published 1916 hosted by the Portal to Texas History The great Galveston disaster containing a full and thrilling account of the most appalling calamity of modern times including vivid descriptions of the hurricane published 1900 hosted by the Portal to Texas History When Weather Changed History Galveston Hurricane A Weather Channel documentary about the 1900 Galveston hurricane The Deadliest Hurricane in History A Storm of Unimaginable Magnitude Erik Larson speaking at the Texas State Capitol Complex about his book Isaac s Storm and about the hurricane itself 1900 Galveston hurricane from the Handbook of Texas Online Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1900 Galveston hurricane amp oldid 1220615468, wikipedia, wiki, book, 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