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Flashback: The Hurricane of '28 (similar to Frances)
http://history.jupiter.fl.us/hurricane28.htm ^ | 09.02.04 | Roger Buckwalter

Posted on 09/02/2004 11:11:56 AM PDT by RedBloodedAmerican

For Jupiter, it was the big one. Local pioneer Bessie DuBois, who lived through it, called the hurricane that hit on Sept. 16, 1928, "the hurricane of the century."

It was a Category Four storm, said Senior Hurricane Specialist Gil Clark of the National Hurricane Center in Coral Cables.

The power of hurricanes is ranked by categories one through five. A five is very rare, and so is anything on the border line

Approach

This particular storm was not unnoticed before it struck Florida. Ships at sea recorded its movement and strength, beginning on Monday, Sept. 10, when the developing low pressure area was still halfway between Africa and the U.S. — slowly but inexorably making its way westward. Two high pressure areas, indicative of fair weather, dominated the Eastern U.S.

More ship reports came in as the storm reached hurricane strength just east of the Leeward Islands on Wednesday, the 12th. That day, the unnamed ‘cane passed over Guadeloupe and took dead aim at Puerto Rico. Thursday afternoon and evening, that island felt the storm’s power, and many deaths and much destruction were reported by officials in San Juan.

Friday morning, the hurricane veered slightly to the north, on a direct line with South Florida, and maintained a steady forward movement at 14½ miles per hour.

In those days, there were no television weather reports, TV bulletins or hurricane sections of the newspaper. There weren’t even any radios in the 3-year-old town of Jupiter, DuBois remembered. As for telephones, there were only five or six, said Roy Rood, who was 10 at the time.

The community of some 300 people did have a couple of ways to learn about approaching hurricanes.

There was a naval radio station, which received weather reports, near the lighthouse. It flew flags and shot flares to warn of bad weather. And the McKay commercial radio station, with two towers near today’s Toney Penna Drive, received information by Morse code. From there, it was word of mouth.

On Saturday night, the 15th, the Weather Bureau advisory stated: "This hurricane is of wide extent and is attended by dangerous and destructive winds ... Storm warnings are now displayed from Miami to Titusville, Fla."

The next morning, the hurricane’s center passed slightly north of Nassau and was about 200 miles from Jupiter — still on course. The Weather Bureau issued another advisory: "Hoist hurricane warnings 10:30 a.m. Miami to Daytona ... Indications that hurricane center will reach the Florida coast near Jupiter early tonight. Emergency. Advise all interests. This hurricane is of wide extent and great severity. Every precaution should be taken against destructive winds and high tides on Florida east coast, especially West Palm Beach to Daytona."

In Jupiter, where there had been two or three days of wind and rain, people were getting the word.

"We had warnings but of course we didn’t have any radio or telephone," DuBois remembers.

She said her boys went from their home on the south side of the inlet to the station near the lighthouse, and came back with reports. "The last one was so chilling; they expected a tidal wave."

Harlow Rood, who was 20 at the time, recalls that a neighbor, Ben Holmes, came by the Rood home on County Line Road shortly after noon, to spread the news.

At around 2 p.m., the wind started blowing hard from the east.

A man at the lighthouse told the husband of Georgia Fortner, "If you have any way of getting out of here, get out."

Ann English later recalled that her family got word from the government radio station. Shirley Floyd remembered getting only one hour’s warning before the wind started blowing hard.

Young Carlin White was getting off the train, coming back from a visit to his father’s Oregon ranch, and saw "everyone in town (few as they were) ... busy gathering nails, boards and other necessary materials for the shoring up of their homes."

"Although we had ample warning," from a friend of a telegraph operator on Turks Island, he said, "none of us were prepared."

Preparations

Some people, though, were fortunate.

"I always had plenty of food on hand, so they all congregated at my house," DuBois said of her 11 family members.

As strong gusts of wind began, her father, two brothers and a sister arrived at the house built by DuBois’ husband, John. Her father wanted the family to ride out the hurricane in a reinforced concrete building on the government reservation, but John said his house would hold.

An ice chest was filled (there was no refrigerator), and food was cooked — bread, potatoes and a ham.

Concerned about the reports of high water, DuBois took a basket of supplies up to the old vacant house on a nearby hill, where John was born — today’s DuBois Museum — just in case the family had to move to safer ground.

Nearby at about 4 p.m., White — accompanied by his uncle — took his movie camera to the beach in the area of today’s Jupiter Inlet Park. Waves reached almost to the road as the hurricane churned the sea.

"The wind was so strong, we had difficulty standing," White later remembered. "In spite of this, I was able to get some motion pictures of the surf doing its utmost to destroy the beach dune line. I do not think I have ever observed such natural fury before. Little did I know this was quite mild in comparison to what was in store for Jupiter."

Farther up the river, at her riverfront home on Palm Point Drive, Anna Minear recalled, her family prepared to ride out the hurricane on the ground floor of their three-story house.

On County Line Road, the Roods didn’t know exactly when the storm would hit, but they were busy boarding up with wood left over from a fern shed. Mattresses were put on the floor, for the four or five people in the house, recalled Harlow Rood.

"Nobody had any plans made. We were just learning," Roy Rood said.

Fortner’s family decided to leave the area. They piled into a Ford touring car and headed inland for Sebring (where the hurricane still found them).

English’s husband told her to take refuge at a two-story concrete grocery store off Alternate A1A on Eganfuskee Street, where about 20 people sought safety. He said he would stay at a silo on the Pennock Plantation, one of the community’s major employers, on the south side of the river near Pennock Point.

Still other shelters occupied by various people included a chicken shed and the back seat of a car. A number of black residents occupied a concrete school building in West Jupiter.

Another school, today’s central building of Jupiter Elementary, was the community’s main shelter. One recollection says 25 people gathered at the newly constructed building. The first arrivals came in the afternoon, and were joined by others as the hurricane strengthened.

The Hurricane Hits

"By dark, the storm was upon us with what I thought was its full strength," White remembered of the evening he spent in the dining room of his family’s Carlin House Hotel, just west of the DuBois home. "I could not imagine it getting worse. But it did. Much, much worse."

"We spent most of the time with our eyes glued to our three barometers. Our light came from two kerosene lanterns. We watched the barometers pulsate with every gust. Their needles dropped lower and lower."

At the weather station in West Palm Beach, the barometer was plunging. From a reading of 29.17 at 5 p.m., when the wind was 40 mph, it dropped to 28.54, with 60 mph winds, at 7:48 p.m. Eventually, it reached 27.45 — the lowest ever recorded in the United States until then.

And the wind rose.

"That roar, that continual roar while it’s going on is like having an express train going at 100 mph in your ear," Minear said. "It’s just awful."

"It has a very high-pitched kind of a whine to it," DuBois recalled.

"The sound effects are what’s scary," Roy Rood agreed.

In their various shelters, residents endured and waited.

People lay on the floor for protection at the elementary school.

The late James Bassett, who was 5, remembered being protected when "dad rolled a younger brother and me in a mattress."

"Our house came off the blocks," DuBois said. "The water came in under it, the waves were breaking in the yard." A chimney and cement block porch "was all that was holding our house together."

Foam from the waves blew against the window and "cabbage palms went down like grass," she later wrote.

As a joke, her father and brother-in-law shaved and got dressed, so they’d be "handsome corpses."

"This house shook," Roy Rood said. Sand was blowing and debris was flying. When tarpaper came off the roof and water came inside, Harlow drilled holes in the floor, so the water would drain out.

At the Carlin House, "The howl of the winds plus the noise of the rain hitting the east side of the hotel made conversation impossible," White said. "We had to shout at each other. Needless to say, no one slept."

At the Minear home, Anna Minear’s sons did sleep — on top of the dining room table. That was in case the water came in, which didn’t happen.

"I have never seen so much rain in my life," Mittie Bieger Bassett later remembered. "The wind blew our house right off the foundation. Then it set the house back down after rotating it 45 degrees. It was very strange, but not a dish or a window was broken."

Her family went to another nearby home, at Indiantown Road and Pennock Lane. Just after they arrived, a large pine tree blew down across the path they had taken.

The experience of James Bassett’s grandmother was even worse. Her back was broken when her home collapsed, and her husband carried her on his back as he crawled through the storm to Jupiter Elementary.

"They almost couldn’t hear him outside when he got there, but they let him in," Bassett said.

Lottie May Hay and her family huddled in her father’s Model T Ford. During the storm, they heard something banging over and over against the car.

Her father left the vehicle to check, she recalled, and "the first thing he saw was a bright light. It seemed to spring up out of the ground. Then it started bouncing up and down like a ball. It scared him half to death."

It’s believed to have been St. Elmo’s fire, a discharge of electricity that occurs during storms.

On Center Street, at Evelyn Dressell’s house, the water came so high that the living room furniture was floating. In other places, boat houses were lifted off cement blocks and scattered. Shirley Floyd wrote that her house "rocked so badly I got seasick."

At Pennock Plantation, English’s husband didn’t take refuge in the silo after all — which was fortunate for him. "The silo was the first structure to be blown over," she said. Where she was, at the store, men went up to the second floor to brace the window frames.

How high the wind reached may never be known. At 8:15 p.m., the anemometer cups at the West Palm Beach weather station blew away when the wind reached 75 mph. By 9 p.m., with the barometer at 27.87, officials estimated the velocity had doubled. Shortly after 10 p.m., the bureau estimated a wind speed of 160 mph.

Other estimates were even higher. "That was a bad one — almost 200 mph winds," Minear said.

Harrowing Experiences

The lighthouse keeper, Capt. Charles Seabrook, had a big problem. The beacon recently had been modernized from a mineral oil light to an electric lamp, and the rotation mechanism also had been connected to power lines — and now the electricity was out. Seabrook tried to start the emergency diesel generator, but it wouldn’t respond. The 68-year-old lighthouse was dark in this vicious storm.

Seabrook found the old mineral lamps, but the light would have to be turned by hand — and Seabrook’s hand had blood poisoning, with red streaks running up his arm.

Franklin, 17, his oldest son, volunteered to make the perilous climb up the lighthouse, which was swaying as much as 17 inches. The boy started up and was blown back four times as he tried to climb the steep winding stairway. But finally, he reached the top. And for four hours in the height of the hurricane, as glass was shattered and wind threatened to tear the mechanism away, he rotated the light’s mantle by hand.

Farther south, a home on a sand hill west of today’s U.S. 1, north of Juno Beach, blew away. Its occupants, a couple named Marcinski, "went through nearly the entire storm crawling on their hands and knees along the old Celestial Railroad right of way," White later wrote.

From about 7 p.m., when the hurricane was reaching its peak, until 5 a.m. the next day, the couple slowly made its way — traveling 3 miles to a gas station near the Carlin House.

"Both were badly bruised from being tossed around by the wind," White wrote. "Many times they became separated and had to grope around to find one another."

Aftermath

The ship’s bell on the DuBois’ back porch was ringing, and that was good news. It meant the wind had changed and the storm was passing.

Sunrise revealed a new world to the residents of Jupiter.

"There wasn’t a home ... that escaped damage," Mrs. Bassett later remembered.

"Mother found only one dry room in our whole house," George Mae Walker recalled. "The house was tilted to one side, but we managed."

"Britt Lanier’s brand new stucco house was blown down flat and all of the new furniture ruined," English wrote.

DuBois wrote that her father, brothers and sisters went home to find their house "had done a merry-go-round about the central chimney. The stairs were at odd angles, dishes broken and the house off the blocks."

Her own home "hung from the chimney and porch in a sad posture," she wrote. "All the underpinnings had been washed about like chessmen scattered with a careless hand."

The windows on the second and third floors of Minear’s house had broken, letting in the wind and sending the dormer into the middle of the river.

Although their home stood, the Rood property was a mess, with all the fern sheds down. After getting the water out of their house, Roy Rood’s mother found one dry spot in the building, put a mattress there and went to sleep.

Boathouses had been ripped off cement blocks, and the weather station was severely damaged — later to be completely removed. At the naval radio station, two 300-foot towers had been uprooted and the concrete footers torn out. A pavilion located where Beach Road now meets the ocean was washed away.

Telephone poles were knocked down, cars turned over and 17 windmills destroyed at the Pennock Plantation.

Flooding was extensive, waist deep in places. Center Street was under water and after the storm, people used rowboats to get around. One motorist put a blanket in front of his car to push a wave ahead of the vehicle. East of the railroad bridge, a boat was floated out of a boathouse by the high water, and the river rose 8 feet to the railroad trestle.

In West Jupiter, six people who had taken refuge in the school building were killed. Only those who stayed under the oak and metal desks survived. And a girl less than 1 year old had been killed when she and her father, who was holding her, were blown into some debris.

People "were just stunned," DuBois said.

Residents checked on one another. And many people who had not taken refuge in the school on Loxahatchee Drive now gathered there — "almost the entire population," White remembered — bringing the total to around 300.

"Just about everybody in town was there, both blacks and whites," Hay recalled.

The school became the community’s center for dispensing help. A Dr. Strode, who was driving through the area with a load of vaccine and chlorine tablets, went to the school and inoculated residents. White, who assisted Strode, later said that doctor deserved much of the credit for preventing an epidemic.

Some people continued to sleep in the building, and the Red Cross served meals for several days there. The Red Cross provided other aid, as well, such as rolls of tarpaper to residents whose roofs were damaged.

Despite the destruction and deaths in Jupiter, that community was lucky. After crossing the coast, the hurricane had ravaged its way to the Glades, where it created a night of horror. Lake Okeechobee overflowed its earthen dike in the Belle Glade, Pahokee and South Bay areas. More than 1,800 people were killed.

The Red Cross phoned Henry Pennock in Jupiter and asked him to send a truck to the Glades. He didn’t know what it was for, but sent a vehicle. The driver learned it was to haul bodies to Miami.

The trip was all right, the driver later said, as long as the truck kept moving to avoid the smell. After making one trip, however, the driver told Pennock the next day he didn’t believe he could make another such journey. Nothing more was said.

After traveling northward through the center of Florida, the hurricane had hugged the coast through South Carolina, then turned inland — making its way through the mountains of North Carolina and Virginia, passing over Pittsburgh, crossing Lake Ontario, and reaching oblivion in Canada.

Total damage in the U.S. was $26.2 million. "If we had something like that now," said forecaster Clark, "we estimate the damage along the Southeast Florida coast would be $5 billion."

"It took us awhile to get over it," DuBois said. "It was rather depressing."

"I thought it triggered the whole recession" in this area, she said. "That put the end to the real estate boom, without a doubt."

Still, Roy Rood noted, the residents were strong.

"Most of the people who came to Florida were pretty hardy people," he said, and visitors still came in the winter.

"Anyone who was tough enough to stand the mosquitoes wasn’t worried about a hurricane," said Troy Wood, another veteran of the storm.

And one week after the hurricane, at Sunday church services held at the school, DuBois said, people were singing God Will Take Care Of You "like I’ve never heard them sing it."



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Extended News; News/Current Events; US: Florida
KEYWORDS: 1928; frances; hurricane; hurricanefrances
See also: Florida's forgotten storm: The Hurricane of 1928

They are in their 80s and 90s now, much of their memories fogged by time, but even 75 years later, the details come flooding back.

The sting of the wind whipping their faces. The look of terror in the eyes of their parents. The desperation that held them to broken planks or fallen trees as entire buildings tumbled in the raging floodwaters.

But it is the bodies that haunt the survivors of the worst storm in Florida history. Too many to count, too decomposed to identify, rotting so quickly that none got a decent funeral. The black migrant workers, making up three-quarters of the dead, didn't even get so much as a marker.

In modern-day South Florida, it is the 61 killed and the $26 billion destruction caused by Hurricane Andrew in 1992 that serve as the benchmark for how ferocious weather systems can get.

But the survivors of the Great Okeechobee Hurricane of Sept. 26, 1928, know better. They know that whole towns can be washed away in a matter of hours, wiping out generations of families with no one left to identify the dead. They know a storm that killed half the population of western Palm Beach County and left every corner of the county tattered and broken.

They know a hurricane that exacted $16 billion in damage in today's dollars, enough to pitch South Florida into the Great Depression a year before the rest of the country. But it is the loss of life that separates this storm from almost any other. Between 2,500 and 3,000 county residents died that day, making it the second-deadliest natural disaster in U.S. history, behind the Galveston, Texas, hurricane of 1900.

"I don't know if I ever really completely got over it," said Frank Stallings, 95, who thinks often of the horror of that summer day. "It was a harrowing thing."

Today, though, so few are aware of the devastation inflicted that the 1928 hurricane is known simply as the Forgotten Storm.

Forgotten, historians and survivors suggest, because politicians at the time downplayed the storm's severity, fearful of dampening the tourism keeping the region afloat. Forgotten because officials failed to adequately document the destruction for future generations. Forgotten because the vast majority of those who died were black migrant workers, segregated in life and abandoned in death.

Their graves, unmarked and untended for generations, more than reflect the racial climate of the times. They expose a shameful chapter in Palm Beach County history, one public officials are only now working to repair.

To survivors, white or black, history's indifference to so seismic an event is offensive, whatever the reason.

"We didn't have great, big buildings like they have now," said Alice Forbes Mutchler. "All we had was dead people, and people don't count."

Mutchler, 98, can't forget. To her, the howl of the wind, the screams of the drowning, the sight of sheer devastation live with her still.

Such detail is the legacy left by survivors, historical accountings and area natives who grew up on the lore of the storm, resurrecting with each retelling a lesson South Florida will never outgrow.

To them, the Storm of '28 will forever be remembered as Black Sunday, the night when death blew down Palm Beach County's back door.

Landfall

Even before the unnamed storm, packing 150 mph winds, slammed ashore in West Palm Beach, it had killed 1,500 in the Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico and the Bahamas.

Within moments of making landfall on a Palm Beach County shoreline, its fierce winds left a trail of destruction from Pompano Beach to Jupiter. Sailboats were thrown from their moors, buildings in downtown West Palm Beach splintered and popped, choking Clematis Street with debris. The Episcopal Church on Swinton Avenue in Delray Beach was flattened, and in Boca Raton, railcars were blown off their tracks and a third of the buildings were demolished.

The first hit by the violent weather, the coastal communities paid dearly. Four people died in Jupiter. In seaside Lake Park, then called Kelsey City, Fred and Ana Nelms were escaping their falling home when the vicious winds swept the couple's infant from the new father's arms, killing the baby instantly. But as the Category 4 monster raged westward, it saved its most crippling blow for the small farming communities that lined Lake Okeechobee's southern shore. Between Clewiston and Canal Point, 6,000 people lived and worked, and nearly half would perish before the light of day.

It was not the wind, said Roy Rood, 9 at the time and hunkered down in relative safety under an upright piano in his family's Jupiter home. It was the water that devastated the people of the Glades.

A 5-foot muck dike, built to hold back Lake Okeechobee's waves during summer rains, crumbled in the frenzied waters, unleashing a storm surge with the fury of a tidal wave.

"Nobody seemed to be too much alarmed," said Stallings, 20 then and boarded up with his family in their Belle Glade grocery store, "until the water started coming in."

One family strapped the children to a fallen tree. Some in Belle Glade rushed up the water tower, kicking at anyone who got in their way. In the farming communities surrounding South Bay and Pahokee, thousands of field workers hunkered down in flimsy homes, many doomed to drown.

In South Bay, Ed Forbes, a boat captain, got a call on the town's only telephone, saying a deadly storm was headed his way. He and his sons alerted as many of the community's 400 residents as they could, knocking on doors and corralling 200 to the safest spot Forbes could fathom: a construction barge moored in a nearby canal.

"Nearly all the people who didn't get on the barge, some part of their family was lost," said Mutchler, Forbes' daughter. "One woman floated as far as Belle Glade, five miles away. She was alive but the waters beat her up so badly, it beat all her clothes off and beat her black and blue."

On the barge, Mutchler, five months pregnant, held her 7-month-old daughter above the knee-deep water, as her father and brothers feverishly bailed out a waterlogged bilge system with pots.

Miles away, Mutchler's cousin, Vernie Boots, was hanging to a broken plank. His family had taken shelter in a two-story home in Sebring Farms, west of South Bay. The house flooded within minutes, reaching the group's perch in the rafters and forcing them to cut a hole in the roof with an ax.

Boots, 14 at the time, was thrown to the surface of the water just as the house broke into pieces. Clinging to a piece of the roof during a tormented, hours-long ride, Boots and his brother survived.

His mother, who couldn't swim, his ailing father and a younger brother didn't.

Recovering bodies

Just as the killer storm had caught the people of the Glades unprepared, so too did the sheer volume of the dead it left behind.

Armies of volunteers built pine boxes to bury the bodies. Large trucks were commissioned to carry the dead to gravesites on higher, drier ground. And Frank Stallings and his father, whose grocery store was flattened but whose family lived, joined others in recovering the dead.

"We were hauling bodies out of the water two and three at a time," said Stallings, recalling the faces he recognized in the lifeless piles. Sickened by the sight and, even more so, the stench, he couldn't eat for days.

The task proved more than anyone could handle. By the fifth day, the bodies were rotting in the heat, causing a health hazard.

"The Health Department instructed my father to build a fire and destroy the bodies because they were getting too far along," Stallings said.

The experience haunted his father until his death, he added, especially the memory of a birthday bracelet he recognized on a toddler girl.

"She had proudly shown it to him two months before," Stallings recalled. "He said the hardest thing he ever had to do was throw that little girl's body on that fire."

The burned remains, along with those of many others -- 1,600 in all -- were trucked to Port Mayaca on the lake's eastern shore. Makeshift graveyards in roadside ditches from Pahokee to Sebring contain the remains of scores of others. Sixty-nine white people were buried in pine boxes at Woodlawn Cemetery in West Palm Beach. Another 674 black people were dumped, unceremoniously and without a sign to mark the spot, in a 20-foot hole in the city's pauper cemetery, forgotten for more than 70 years.

The number of known graves approaches 2,500, but more bodies were never found, swallowed whole by the Everglades muck or left to the elements after the government called off the search for lack of money.

Recognition

It was a hurricane that scared the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers into its first major flood-control effort in South Florida, one that pushed the Hoover administration to build a towering, 40-foot-high dike where the modest, earthen barrier lost its battle.

But only now, 75 years later, are authorities recognizing the enormous toll the hurricane took on the people of the Glades.

This summer, the National Hurricane Center increased the death toll from 1,836 to 2,500, with an asterisks suggesting the total could be 3,000. The long-neglected West Palm Beach pauper cemetery is finally getting its memorial monuments. And after so many years passed without notice, the storm's 75th anniversary will be honored with remembrance ceremonies, photo exhibits, even a re-enactment of the burial procession, throughout this month.

For Vera Farrington of Delray Beach, whose mother died in 1993 -- long before authorities took notice of a storm that wiped out most of her family -- the recognitions are bittersweet.

"I'm so sorry that they weren't doing this when my mother was around to see it," said Farrington, who was born a few months after the storm. "That [experience] weighed heavily on her. I think this would have been some closure for her."

Nicole Sterghos Brochu can be reached at nbrochu@sun-sentinel.com or 561-243-6603.



This was also known as the Lake Okeechobee Hurricane that killed thousands when Indiantown and Lake Okeechobee flooded.
1 posted on 09/02/2004 11:11:56 AM PDT by RedBloodedAmerican
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To: Howlin

ping


2 posted on 09/02/2004 11:12:35 AM PDT by RedBloodedAmerican
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To: RedBloodedAmerican

Excellent post!


3 posted on 09/02/2004 11:18:06 AM PDT by Laura Earl (No rest for the wicked.)
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To: RedBloodedAmerican

I've been through a Category 5 hurricane, Camille in 1969.It was nothing to play with. Even at that late date with the advance warning we were able to have,many people died. The coast was devastated.I remember having to have tetanus shots,and the snakes that were left everywhere.My future husband was on the police force then and had to help find and round up elderly people to bring them to safe (relatively speaking)havens.They had to hold hands in a chain,and some kept getting blown out of line. Two-story houses were flooded.


4 posted on 09/02/2004 11:22:51 AM PDT by mrsmel
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To: RedBloodedAmerican

Excellent post!

.45MAN and I are scheduled to move back to south FL in 10 days after spending nearly 6 years in Atlanta. I hope and pray there is a south FL to move back to.

Are you in harm's way?

Praying for all of the Florida FReepers. May God have mercy.


5 posted on 09/02/2004 11:24:43 AM PDT by dansangel ("Kerry would let Paris decide when America needs defending. I want Bush to decide. " - Zell Miller)
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To: RedBloodedAmerican

I was in Donna in 1960 as a child. I remember the "St Elmo's Fire". I was like mini-lightning bolts erupting from the streets of St. Pete, Fla.


6 posted on 09/02/2004 11:30:05 AM PDT by groanup (Our kids sleep soundly because soldiers, sailors, airmen and marines stand ready to die for us.)
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To: RedBloodedAmerican

hope it's not so destrucive!


7 posted on 09/02/2004 11:30:59 AM PDT by beyond the sea (Free Martha Mitchell......... and Jail Teraaaaaayza)
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To: RedBloodedAmerican; 4ConservativeJustices

ping


8 posted on 09/02/2004 11:42:03 AM PDT by Ff--150 (The masses have no habit of self reliance or original action. -- Anon.)
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To: Ff--150
Franklin, 17, his oldest son, volunteered to make the perilous climb up the lighthouse, which was swaying as much as 17 inches. The boy started up and was blown back four times as he tried to climb the steep winding stairway. But finally, he reached the top. And for four hours in the height of the hurricane, as glass was shattered and wind threatened to tear the mechanism away, he rotated the light’s mantle by hand.

God would that we had such bravery today, and applauded it.

9 posted on 09/02/2004 11:47:04 AM PDT by 4CJ (||) Our sins put Him on the Cross, His love for us kept Him there (||)
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To: 4ConservativeJustices
"God would that we had such bravery today, and applauded it."

I know!!! WHo was going to see it anyway!?? Ships would have been history at that time?

10 posted on 09/02/2004 12:10:11 PM PDT by Ff--150 (The masses have no habit of self reliance or original action. -- Anon.)
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To: dansangel
Daytona.

I forget which freeper just told me they were from Juno, Fl.

My Uncles mom is Anna Minear. The Pennocks, Minears and Dubois' were pioneers down there, and somewhat related through marriage. I lived in Anna's house for some time. It's a beautiful house on the Loxahatchee, a Sears catalog home built around 1900. It survived the '28 hurricane and many others. Those people had it very rough, not the advance warning like we have now.
11 posted on 09/02/2004 12:15:08 PM PDT by RedBloodedAmerican
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To: RedBloodedAmerican
Those people had it very rough, not the advance warning like we have now.

So true - but the homes they lived in were built far better than what is put together today. The fact that Anna's house survived is testament in itself.

I lived in Juno in the late 80's and more recently, before moving to Atlanta, in Sebastian and Palm Bay. We're moving back to Palm Beach County on the 13th.

I'm *never* leaving FL again!

12 posted on 09/02/2004 12:21:09 PM PDT by dansangel ("Kerry would let Paris decide when America needs defending. I want Bush to decide. " - Zell Miller)
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To: RedBloodedAmerican

I'm really worried about the Vertical Assembly Building at Kennedy Space Center. If it falls our space program falls with it. Damages would be in the billions from that single building.


13 posted on 09/02/2004 12:52:53 PM PDT by darth
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To: dansangel
That house is so sturdy that when she sold it in the late 1980's, the new owner had the house lifted, dug out a cellar, put in a new foundation and rotated it 180° with no damage to the home, and it's a 3 story structure. I don't know why he rotated it. a 40' long screen porch looking out over the river now looks at a cul-de-sac. :/

Do a search for Tyndall House. Thats where they lived while it was being built! We used to play in it when we were kids.
14 posted on 09/02/2004 12:55:34 PM PDT by RedBloodedAmerican
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To: darth

I thought about that too, but if I recall, it also is a shelter.


15 posted on 09/02/2004 12:57:01 PM PDT by RedBloodedAmerican
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To: RedBloodedAmerican
Good article.

sw

16 posted on 09/02/2004 6:27:18 PM PDT by spectre (Spectre's wife)
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To: darth

Happened twice, didn't it?


17 posted on 09/29/2004 7:15:11 AM PDT by RedBloodedAmerican
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