The Great Galveston Disaster: Containing a Full and Thrilling Account of the Most Appalling Calamity of Modern TimesPelican Publishing Company, 2000 - 516 стор. The many personal tragedies and triumphs come to light in this full and thrilling account that is made even more evocative and jolting by its profusion of photographs taken immediately after the disaster. In the storm, S. W. Clinton lost his wife and six children, including two sons he could not save from drowning before his very eyes. Yet others survived. Long engaged, Ernest A. Mayo and Bessie Roberts decided it was better to face the daunting tasks ahead of them together, and were married a mere five days after the flood. Their stories, and the stories of all who survived the great Galveston Hurricane of 1900, attest to humanity's ability to overcome even the most horrific of disasters. |
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Сторінка 245
... buried at sea on the east end was washed ashore on the beach near the foot of Tremont street . Attached to the body was a large rock weighing about 200 pounds . The body was carried to a place back from the water's edge and placed in a ...
... buried at sea on the east end was washed ashore on the beach near the foot of Tremont street . Attached to the body was a large rock weighing about 200 pounds . The body was carried to a place back from the water's edge and placed in a ...
Сторінка 271
... buried at sea from Galveston and floated into shore again , but the position of many shows that they were natives of the little coast towns suburban to Galveston . When more order is made at Galveston attention will be turned to those ...
... buried at sea from Galveston and floated into shore again , but the position of many shows that they were natives of the little coast towns suburban to Galveston . When more order is made at Galveston attention will be turned to those ...
Сторінка 364
... buried deep in the sand . Driving beyond the grave diggers we saw prostrate on the sand the stark and swollen forms of women and children and floating farther out in the tide were other bodies soon to be brought in to be buried . The ...
... buried deep in the sand . Driving beyond the grave diggers we saw prostrate on the sand the stark and swollen forms of women and children and floating farther out in the tide were other bodies soon to be brought in to be buried . The ...
Зміст
First News of the Great CalamityGalveston Almost | 17 |
CHAPTER II | 29 |
CHAPTER III | 42 |
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avenue awful beach blown boat bridge Buffalo Bayou building buried calamity carried citizens Clara Barton clothing coast Colonel condition corpses cremated cyclone Dallas damage dead bodies death debris destruction disaster disinfectants drowned escaped feet floating flood force Galveston Bay Galveston Island Governor Sayres Gulf Gulf of Mexico horror Houston human hundred hurricane jetties Key West L. P. Davis large number lives loss lost mainland martial law Mayor Jones miles an hour morning negroes never night o'clock piled port railroad reached rebuilt refugees Relief Committee reported rescue roof ruins Sabine Pass Saturday saved scene schooner Scurry sent shore storm story streets stricken sufferers Sunday supplies swept telegraph terrible Texas City thousands tion to-day told town train Tremont Tremont street veston Virginia Point washed waves wharf wharves wife wind women and children wreckage wrecked