Environmental and natural disasters have claimed the
lives of thousands of people in the United States, wiped out entire
cities and towns, and destroyed precious historical and genealogical
documents. If your family lived in Texas,
Florida, Louisiana,
Pennsylvania, New England, California,
Georgia, South Carolina, Missouri, Illinois
or Indiana, then your family history may have been changed forever by
one of these ten deadliest U.S. disasters.
1.
Galveston, TX Hurricane - September 18, 1900 Estimated
death toll: about 8000 The deadliest natural disaster in U.S.
history was the hurricane that ripped into the rich, port city of
Galveston, Texas, on September 18, 1900. The category 4 storm devastated
the island city, killing 1 in 6 residents and destroying most of the
buildings in its path. The building which housed the port's immigration
records was one of many destroyed in the storm, and few Galveston ships
manifests survive for the years 1871-1894.zSB(3,3)
2. Great Okeechobee Hurricane, Florida -
September 16-17, 1928 Estimated death toll: 2500+ Coastal
residents living along Palm Beach, Florida, were basically prepared for
this category 4 hurricane, but it was along the south shores of Lake Okeechobee
in the Florida Everglades
that most of the 2000+ victims perished. Many were migrant workers
working in such an isolated location, that they had no warning of the
impending disaster.
3. Johnstown,
PA Flood - May 31, 1889 Estimated death toll: 2209+ A
neglected southwestern Pennsylvania dam and days of rain combined to
create one of America's greatest tragedies. The South Fork Dam, built to
hold back Lake Conemaugh for the prestigious South Fork Fishing &
Hunting Club, collapsed on May 31, 1889. More than 20 million tons of
water, in a wave reaching more than 70 feet high, swept 14 miles down
the Little Conemaugh River Valley, destroying everything in its path,
including most of the industrial city of Johnstown.
4. Chenier
Caminada Hurricane - October 1, 1893 Estimated death toll:
2000+ The unofficial name of this Louisiana hurricane (also
spelled Chenier Caminanda or Cheniere Caminada) comes from the
island-type peninsula, located 54 miles from New Orleans,
that lost 779 people to the storm. The devastating hurricane predates
modern forecasting tools, but is thought to have had winds approaching
100 miles per hour. It was actually one of two deadly hurricanes that
hit the U.S. during the 1893 hurricane season
(see below).
5.
"Sea Islands"
Hurricane - August 27-28, 1893 Estimated death toll: 1000 -
2000 It is estimated that the "Great Storm of 1893" that struck
the southern South Carolina and northern Georgia coast was at least a
Category 4 storm, but there is no way of knowing, since measures of
hurricane intensity weren't measured for storms before 1900. The storm
killed an estimated 1,000 - 2,000 people, mostly from storm surge
affecting the low-lying barrier "Sea Islands" off the Carolina coast.
6. Hurricane Katrina -
August 29, 2005 Estimated death toll: 1836+ The most
destructive hurricane ever to strike the United States, Hurricane
Katrina was the 11th named storm in the busy 2005 hurricane season. The
devastation in New Orleans and the surrounding Gulf Coast area cost over
1,800 lives, billions of dollars in damage, and catastrophic loss to
the region's rich cultural heritage.
7. Great New England Hurricane - 1938 Estimated
death toll: 720 The hurricane dubbed by some as the "Long
Island Express" made landfall over Long Island and Connecticut
as a category 3 storm on September 21, 1938. The powerful hurricane
decimated almost 9,000 buildings and homes, caused over 700 deaths, and
reshaped the landscape of the south Long Island shore. The storm caused
over $306 million in damage in 1938 dollars, which would equal about
$3.5 billion in today's dollars.
8. San Francisco Earthquake
- 1906 Estimated death toll: 700 confirmed, estimates of up
to 3000. In the dark morning hours of April 18, 1906, the
sleeping city of San Francisco was rocked by a massive earthquake. Walls
caved in, streets buckled, and gas and water lines broke, allowing
residents little time to take cover. The earthquake itself lasted less
than a minute, but fires broke out across the city almost immediately,
fueled by broken gas lines and a lack of water to put them out. Four
days later, the earthquake and subsequent fire left more than half of
San Francisco's population homeless, and had killed somewhere between
700 and 3000 people.
9. Georgia - South Carolina Hurricane - 1881 Estimated
death toll: 700 Hundreds of people were lost in this August
27th hurricane that struck the east U.S. coast at the juncture of
Georgia and South Carolina, causing severe damage to Savannah and
Charleston. The storm then moved inland, dissipating on the 29th over
northwestern Mississippi,
resulting in about 700 deaths.
10. Tri-State Tornado in
Missouri, Illinois and Indiana - 1925 Estimated death toll:
695 Widely considered the most powerful and devasting tornado in
American history,
the Great Tri-State Tornado ripped through Missouri, Illinois and
Indiana on March 18, 1925. It's uninterrupted 219-mile treck killed 695
people, injured more than 2000, destroyed about 15,000 homes, and
damaged more than 164 square miles.