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Now that's a tough photo-gig. The latter-day "kodak fiends" from Al-Reuters and AP should stop whining about their treatment at the hands of the US military in Iraq and count themselves lucky.

This storm is famous for the speed and thoroughness of the recovery.

1 posted on 09/03/2005 9:05:32 AM PDT by atomic conspiracy
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To: atomic conspiracy

My how times have changed. And not necessarily for the better.


2 posted on 09/03/2005 9:08:37 AM PDT by Jaysun (Democrats: We must become more effective at fooling people.)
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To: atomic conspiracy

Bump for GWB to read!


3 posted on 09/03/2005 9:08:56 AM PDT by US_MilitaryRules ( Don't let facts get in the way of a good a liberal rant.)
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To: atomic conspiracy

thank you


4 posted on 09/03/2005 9:11:23 AM PDT by anonymoussierra (Deus Meus, Credo in Te, Domine Iesu, Noverim Me,Iesu Dulcissime, Redemptor)
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To: atomic conspiracy

That's what we need NOW.

A no nonsense approach to crime. Caught in the act, line up at the wall and that's IT for you.


5 posted on 09/03/2005 9:13:00 AM PDT by nmh (Intelligent people recognize Intelligent Design (God).)
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To: All

http://www.fpl.com/storm/contents/hurricane_history.shtml

http://www.e11th-hour.org/resources/timelines/3worst.hurricanes.us.html

thank you all


6 posted on 09/03/2005 9:13:27 AM PDT by anonymoussierra (Deus Meus, Credo in Te, Domine Iesu, Noverim Me,Iesu Dulcissime, Redemptor)
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To: atomic conspiracy

Due to the huge number of dead bodies in Galveston, they tried burrying them at sea. Unfortunately, they started washing up on the beaches of Galveston a few days later.


7 posted on 09/03/2005 9:14:11 AM PDT by Paleo Conservative (France is an example of retrograde chordate evolution.)
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To: atomic conspiracy

Deadliest hurricane began century

By Deborah Sharp, USA TODAY

GALVESTON, Texas - Late at night, Georgeanna Holmes used to gather her great-grandchildren around to tell stories about surviving "The Storm," which is what islanders here still say 99 years after Galveston was struck by the deadliest hurricane in U.S. history.

Up to 10,000 people died, so many that for months bodies were burned by Galveston's "dead gangs," their members plied with whiskey and threatened at gunpoint to keep them at their horrifying task.

Islanders call it The Storm, as if there could be no other. But despite the comforts of sophisticated computer models and round-the-clock weather channels, a monster storm just like Galveston's could form at any time during this busier-than-average hurricane season.

Hurricane Dennis threatens to batter the southeastern U.S. coast this week, and Hurricane Bret roared ashore last week in Texas with 140-mph winds.

In a cautionary tale about complacency, author Erik Larson details the great hurricane of Sept. 8, 1900, in the new book, Isaac's Storm. The story probes the defiance of those who wouldn't believe such a killer could strike from the sea and marvels at how few today outside this city have heard about the hurricane, which killed more people than several better-known American disasters combined.

"Maybe something this bad wasn't acceptable. It had to be bleached from the national psyche if America was to go on," Larson says.

Few are alive who remember the storm that struck on Sept. 8, 1900, in a time before hurricanes were named. But vivid reminders of the toll it took live on in cemetery headstones, old photographs, family memories and the letters of survivors who poured out terror in 25-page missives.

" They were trying to communicate to people in other places how terrible it was," says Alice Wygant, director of the Galveston County Historical Museum. "So many people died, they ended up burning the bodies. The stench could be smelled 50 miles out at sea."

Bodies were everywhere after the storm. A hundred victims hung from a grove of cedar trees, deposited in branches by the 20-foot storm surge that swept shattered buildings and houses into a pile of debris three stories high. No one knows how many bodies never emerged from the sea, but many residents refused to eat scavenging crabs and shrimp for years afterward.

An orphans home near the beach was demolished by the storm. Ten nuns and 90 children died. Days later, searchers found a child dead on the beach. When they lifted the toddler, the body of another child and then another emerged from the sand. Eight children and a nun had tied themselves together with a clothesline in an attempt to defy the storm.

Bodies continued to be found until February the next year.

City leaders turned to fire after they tried sea burials, loading 700 corpses onto a barge taken 18 miles out into the Gulf of Mexico. They tried weighing down the bodies, but scores of bloated corpses washed back onto the beach, carried on "waves like hearses," said a writer of the time.

Johnny Holmes, 46, used to listen to his great-grandmother Georgeanna, who told of seeking refuge in the attic as the sea swept across the island. One survivor described the water rising four feet in four seconds.

Bodies floated everywhere, including so many children who had been frolicking in excitement only hours earlier, before Galveston realized the rain and unusual pounding waves prefaced a murderous storm.

"Her husband had a long pole, and he was passing it to the ones floating in the water who were still alive," says Holmes, recalling Georgeanna's stories. " Going through that storm was like getting shot. You just don't forget."

In 1900, Galveston was a sophisticated seaport of 38,000, prosperous from the cotton trade and richer in millionaires than even Newport, R.I. It was the first city in Texas with phones and electricity, and its residents enjoyed a grand lifestyle: an opera house, 50 miles of streetcar track and foreign consulates for 19 countries.

But then came the hurricane and after that, a cotton crisis from the boll weevil insect that some believe arrived on the winds of the storm. Galveston never regained its earlier glory. Oil supplanted cotton as king, and Houston, about 50 miles northwest, became the new center of commerce.

Today, Galveston has about 60,000 residents. The city is mainly a playground for vacationing Texans. As in other hurricane-prone coastal resorts, newcomers have built mansions on stilts just steps from the sea on this barrier island.

"Enjoy them while you can," warns Greg Schumann, a hurricane hazards researcher at Texas A&M University. "To me, that's disposable housing ."

Galveston has a strange ambivalence about the 1900 storm. The tragedy was the city's defining moment. But a hurricane is the kind of repeatable event that civic boosters would just as soon forget.

Even so, as the 99th anniversary of the hurricane approaches, The Great Storm documentary plays on the hour at Pier 21, a tourist attraction in the historic downtown.

The theater's assistant manager, Patti Phillips, says descendants of survivors come from all over with storm memories and related emotions surprisingly intact.

"It's part of our heritage. For people who survived, that storm was a bond," she says.

One resident tells of wedding guest lists defined by which family gave another refuge in The Storm. Another recalls two elderly Rotary Club members talking about The Storm at a 1960s meeting, when one suddenly realized that the other's father had saved him as a boy.

"There were six grown men crying," Bill Cherry says.

Yet the city's only memorial is a pink granite stone, its moss-touched inscription nearly hidden at Lakeview Cemetery: "To The Unknown Who Perished In The Storm Of Sept. 8, 1900."


9 posted on 09/03/2005 9:21:35 AM PDT by Rome2000 (Peace is not an option)
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To: Flyer; humblegunner; Allegra; TheMom; Xenalyte; thackney; Eaker; stevie_d_64; TXBSAFH; ...

Galveston 1900 storm ping


14 posted on 09/03/2005 9:26:37 AM PDT by pax_et_bonum
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To: pitbully

ping


18 posted on 09/03/2005 10:10:23 AM PDT by granite (I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work.)
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To: atomic conspiracy

Despoiling the dead... what for? Looking for jewelry? Haven't heard any looting stories like that about NO, but it would be logical that looters are ransacking, or have ransacked, bodies.


20 posted on 09/03/2005 10:18:49 AM PDT by drlevy88
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To: atomic conspiracy

The following links will give anyone a sense of what went on, the aftermath, the carnage, the clean up, the raising of the island some 13 feet.. 8,000 dead out of some 38,000 residents.

Photos are available at the following link
http://www.1900storm.com/photographs/index.lasso

The 1900 Storm with several links
http://www.1900storm.com/

The Galveston Storm of 1900
http://www.noaa.gov/galveston1900/


21 posted on 09/03/2005 10:20:38 AM PDT by deport (If you want something bad enough, there's someone who will sell it to you. Even the truth your way.)
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To: atomic conspiracy

Not long ago I read the history of the JOHNSTOWN FLOOD. Looters there were shot on sight and the newspapers reported that most of the looters were "Eastern Europeans, Italians and Hungarians".
One would think the newspapers were anti-Immigrant.


25 posted on 09/03/2005 11:51:15 AM PDT by Ruy Dias de Bivar (Islam, the religion of the criminally insane.)
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