Search
Login Signup

Galveston and the Great Storm of 1900

STORY PREFACE

Story Summary

http://awesomestories.com/images/user/daad7e6d8e.jpg
                        
   Photograph depicting hurricane damage caused by the storm in 1900.  Online courtesy Wikimedia Commons.


Sunday, September 9th, 1900, revealed
one of the most horrible sights that
ever a civilized people looked upon.

Isaac Cline
September 23, 1900


It was the peak of hurricane season - September 8, 1900. The waters of the Gulf of Mexico were hot.  Very hot.  Just the kind of hot a tropical storm needs to grow into a hurricane.

A storm that began in late August near the Cape Verde Islands, off Africa’s west coast, had reached Cuba by September 5th. In the days of primitive weather instruments, meteorologists on the island had developed an amazing ability to forecast major storms. They predicted this tropical storm would intensify when it left Cuba.

Those Cuban forecasters believed something else.  They were sure the storm would continue on its westward path, toward Texas.

Those early forecasters were right.  Due to the arrogance of some folks in the U.S. Weather Bureau, however, people in the direct path of the "Great Storm of 1900" didn’t know their lives and property were in grave danger.

When the storm reached Galveston, an island off the Texas shore, it temporarily buried the town and its people with sea water.  It is believed that over 8,000 people died within a few hours.

It remains the worst natural disaster in U.S. history.

 

 

Key to Color-Coded Links

Original Release Date:  September, 2006
Updated Quarterly, or as Needed

To cite this story, using MLA Guidelines:

Bos, Carole D. "Galveston and the Great Storm of 1900" AwesomeStories.com. Date of access
       <http://www.awesomestories.com/disasters/galveston>.

IN OTHER WORDS: Author. Title of story. Name of web site. Date of access <URL>.