It had no name and gave no warning, but crept stealthily into the Gulf and then roared ashore, killing six thousand people. Nearly one hundred years after its landfall, the hurricane that struck Galveston Island on September 8, 1900 remains the worst natural disaster in U.S. history. In this work witnesses to this deadly disaster describe, in many never-before-published accounts, their encounters with this monstrous storm. Casey Edward Greene and Shelly Henley Kelly’s work with these primary sources represents several years of labor in culling the Rosenberg Library in Galveston’s unparalleled collection on the 1900 storm. Some of the survivor accounts included were recorded in the days and months immediately following the disaster; others were put down after many years had passed. Oral history recordings made in the 1960s and 1970s provided further accounts given by survivors as they approached the end of their lives. More than seventy dramatic photographs underscore the catastrophe.
I have read and watched a few documentaries about the Galveston hurricane of 1900, this book takes letters, memoirs and interviews of those who survived. From young children to adults. Some lost their entire families, homes and everything others were lucky enough to have their homes only slightly damaged and loved ones still alive. There were stories from men recruited into the army or police to help stop looters and get rid of the thousands of bodies and help rebuild the city. There were unusual tales, like someone keeping their cow in the dining room where it survived the storm, people rescuing each other in boats even though they were just across the street. One young man hearing a woman calling for help and gathering up some people to help only to find the men inside the house in distress were not willing at first to help save the women and children inside. It was a sad book but also one that showed the courage and will to survive of the various survivors. But it does show hopefully how far we've come in predicting the weather and as a result have saved countless lives.
I chose this book because I've always had a fascination with the Hurricane of 1900. So much was wiped out in a single storm. Families, homes, stores, city blocks disappeared, never to be seen again.
Comprised of letters, interviews, and writings of survivors of the 1900 Galveston Hurricane, this is a tough read. The horror of that one September night is mindnumbing. I kept trying to imagine myself in that storm but just knew I wouldn't have been one of the survivors.
This is a really good book but I kept having to put it down. I couldn't handle it all in one reading. It was just too real.
First person accounts that are interesting, but quite similar and repetitive. Annotations by editing team would have made this far more informative.
Very limited context and assessment in the Introduction and I missed reading an Epilogue to wrap up the collection of stories, oral histories and memoirs and discuss the aftermath.
Maybe it’s just me, but I dislike endnotes when there is relevant information to inform the reader, which could have been included in footnotes. Endnotes are fine for reference citations. I found myself continuously flipping to the endnotes for added insight that would have been better placed in footnotes.
Awesome book written from diaries, letters and interviews of people who lived through and experienced thr storm. A book I always refer back to when researching. Full of valuable information. Highly recommend.
This compilation of eyewitness accounts shows the residents' reactions to the storm that struck Galveston Island in 1900. It's divided into letters, memoirs, and oral histories that have been transcribed. Interspersed with the letters are reports from National Weather Service meteorologist Isaac Cline who was stationed at Galveston through the storm. The texts give a very vivid portrait of what people went through. A common theme is the belief that they wouldn't make it through the night. Another striking reaction is in the aftermath when people were just numb to the horror of the situation--the thousands of dead, the wretched smell of mud and slime, the complete devastation in some areas. Survivors describe walls of debris, some two stories tall, caused by the storm surge that came in from both the north and south sides of the island. Most people had no sense of how bad it would get since they had lived through plenty of other "big blows." The book includes dozens of pictures of the devastation and maps to show where the various survivors waited out the storm. The end notes explain various details or discrepancies that arise from people misremembering what happened.
Recommended--this book is more for people interested in the history of the storm than for general readers.
This is a rich historical gem filled with eye witness accounts of the citizens of Galveston who experienced the devastating 1900 hurricane. I appreciate the research that went into compiling accounts from survivors that were penned days following the Storm, up to oral accounts recorded decades later. As an author, I leaned heavily on these accounts to bring the Great Storm to life in my novel.
I also had the privilege of working with Mr. Greene at the Rosenberg LIbrary as I did research for my book. I found his breadth of knowledge invaluable as I sorted through conflicting accounts.
I read this book for the Rosenberg Library museum book club. It was compiled and edited by two people working at the library and is well researched and told. Reading these first hand accounts of that totally tragic storm was heartbreaking! I cannot imagine how horrible it was to survive the storm and then be faced with all the horror, pain, and suffering in the aftermath. For those survivors life was a nightmare and a living hell. Not for the faint hearted, but very enlightening.