J.H.W. Stele to Sayers, September 11-12, 1900
On Saturday, September 8, 1900, a hurricane of almost
unimaginable force smashed into the Texas coast at Galveston. Winds
reached as high as 120 miles per hour. The storm surge inundated the
city to a depth of 15 feet, and the great amount of debris in the
water acted as a battering ram against the city as the waves rose
and fell. Two-thirds of the buildings of the city were destroyed,
and between 6000 and 8000 people killed in the city (the total death
toll along the coast was 10,000 to 12,000). It was the worst natural
disaster in United States history. Scenes of unbelievable horror and
suffering followed for weeks after the disaster.
In the aftermath, Galveston lost its status as one of
the leading commercial centers of the South. Nearby Houston emerged
as the center the Texas oil industry and as a major port following
the completion in 1914 of the Houston ship channel to the Gulf of
Mexico.
But the citizens of Galveston were determined to rebuild.
They developed the commission form of government still in use in many
cities today. And, they built a remarkable seawall, six miles long,
and raised the grade of the city as much as 17 feet. In this extraordinary
effort, over 2000 buildings were jacked up and filling pumped underneath,
including a 3000-ton church.
Several storms as powerful as the 1900 storm have hit
the United States in the years since, and at least two -- the 1935
Florida Keys storm and Hurricane Camille in 1969 -- were more powerful.
But none had the loss of life that makes the Galveston storm unique
among natural disasters.
Perhaps a survivor who lost everything in the storm,
including his wife and newborn baby, best summed up the losses inflicted
by the Great Storm of 1900. Speaking of his life before the storm,
he later said: "It seems as a dream, of a thing that never was."
"Texas
Rising "

"Texas
Rising "
J.H.W. Stele to Sayers, September 11-12,
1900, Records of Joseph Draper Sayers, Texas Office of the Governor,
Archives and Information Services Division, Texas State Library and
Archives Commission.