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{{short description|Massive flood that destroyed Johnstown, Pennsylvania in 1889}}
{{Other uses|The Johnstown Flood (disambiguation)}}
{{Other uses}}
{{Infobox flood
{{use mdy dates|date=September 2023}}
| name = Johnstown Flood
{{Infobox weather event
| image location = Johnstown flood debris.jpg
| image = Johnstown flood debris.jpg
| image name = Debris above Pennsylvania Railroad bridge
| caption = Debris above the ] in ] following the flood
| image alt text = Debris litters and completely covers the ground above a Pennsylvania Railroad bridge. A small bridge and several mills and smokestacks are viewable in the distance.
| alt = Debris litters and completely covers the ground above a Pennsylvania Railroad bridge. A small bridge and several mills and smokestacks are viewable in the distance.
| duration = May 31, 1889
}}{{Infobox weather event/History
| total damages = ]17 million
| duration = May 31, 1889<ref name=WDL1>{{cite web|title=Johnstown, Pennsylvania, 1904|url=http://www.wdl.org/en/item/9571/|work=Library of Congress|publisher=World Digital Library|access-date=January 5, 2014}}</ref>
| total damages (USD) =
}}{{Infobox weather event/Effects
| total fatalities = 2,209
| damages = {{US$|17000000|1889|round=-7|about=yes}}
| areas affected = ], ], and ]
| fatalities = 2,208<ref name=McCullough>{{cite book|last1=McCullough|first1=David|title=The Johnstown Flood|date=1968|publisher=Simon & Schuster |isbn=978-0-671-20714-4|url=https://archive.org/details/johnstownflood00mccu}}</ref>
}}
| areas affected = ], ], and ] in Pennsylvania, U.S.
The '''Johnstown Flood''' (or '''Great Flood of 1889''' as it became known locally) occurred on May 31, 1889. It was the result of the ] of the ] situated on the ] {{convert|14|mi|km}} upstream of the town of ], ], made worse by several days of extremely heavy ]fall. The dam's failure unleashed a torrent of 20 million tons of water (4.8 billion U.S.&nbsp;gallons; 18.2 million cubic meters; 18.2 billion litres) from the reservoir known as ]. With a volume that temporarily equalled the flow of the ]<ref name="Perkins">, ''Science News,'' Vol.176 #11, 21 November 2009, accessed 14 October 2012</ref>, the flood killed 2,209 people<ref name="Gibson"> "Our 10 Greatest Natural Disasters," ''American Heritage'', August /September 2006.</ref> and caused US$17 million of damage.
}}{{Infobox weather event/Footer}}


The '''Johnstown Flood''', sometimes referred to locally as '''Great Flood of 1889''', occurred on Friday, May 31, 1889, after the ] of the ], located on the south fork of the ], {{convert|14|mi|km}} upstream of the town of ], Pennsylvania, United States. The dam ruptured after several days of extremely heavy rainfall, releasing 14.55 million cubic meters of water.<ref name=Colemanetal2016>{{cite journal|last1=Coleman|first1=Neil M.|last2=Kaktins|first2=Uldis|last3=Wojno|first3=Stephanie|title=Dam-Breach hydrology of the Johnstown flood of 1889 – challenging the findings of the 1891 investigation report|journal=Heliyon|volume=2|issue=6|pages=e00120|date=2016|doi=10.1016/j.heliyon.2016.e00120|doi-access=free |pmid=27441292|pmc=4946313|bibcode=2016Heliy...200120C }}</ref> With a volumetric flow rate that temporarily equaled the average flow rate of the Mississippi River,<ref name="Perkins"> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120925001731/http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/48598/title/Johnstown_Flood_matched_volume_of_Mississippi_River |date=2012-09-25 }}, ''Science News'', Vol.176 #11, 21 November 2009, accessed 14 October 2012</ref> the flood killed 2,208 people<ref name="Gibson">{{Cite web|title=Johnstown Flood National Memorial (U.S. National Park Service)|url=https://www.nps.gov/jofl/index.htm|access-date=2021-05-28|website=www.nps.gov|language=en}}</ref> and accounted for {{US$|17000000|1889|round=-7|about=yes}} in damage.
It was the first major ] effort handled by the new ], led by ]. Support for victims came from all over the ] and 18 foreign countries. After the flood, survivors suffered a series of legal defeats in their attempts to recover damages from the dam's owners. Public indignation at that failure prompted the development in American law changing a ]-based regime to ].

The ], led by ] and with fifty volunteers, undertook a major ] effort.<ref>{{cite web|title=Founder Clara Barton|url=http://www.redcross.org/about-us/history/clara-barton|publisher=The American National Red Cross|access-date=January 25, 2015}}</ref> Support for victims came from all over the U.S. and eighteen foreign countries. After the flood, survivors suffered a series of legal defeats in their attempts to recover damages from the dam's owners. This led in the 20th century to American law changing from a ]-based regime to one of ].

The events have been commemorated nationally as well as locally. The ] was established in 1964. The ] of the ] was established in 1986. Both are administered by the ].


==History== ==History==
] bridge downstream in the background]]
{{unreferenced section|date=May 2011}}
The village of Johnstown was founded by European Americans in 1800 by the ] immigrant Joseph Johns at the confluence of the ] and ] rivers, forming the ]. It began to prosper with the building of the ] in 1836, and the construction in the 1850s of the ] and the Cambria Iron Works. By 1889, Johnstown's industries had attracted numerous ] and ] immigrants. With a population of 30,000, it was a growing industrial community known for the quality of its ]. The city of ], Pennsylvania was founded in 1800 by Swiss immigrant Joseph Johns (anglicized from "Schantz") where the ] and ] rivers joined to form the ]. It began to prosper with the building of the ] in 1836.

Construction of the ] and the ] in the 1850s brought further industry to town, and eventually led to abandonment of the canal. By 1889, Johnstown's industries had attracted numerous Welsh and German immigrants to work. With a population of 30,000, it was a growing industrial community known for the quality of its steel.<ref name=nps>{{cite web|url=http://www.johnstownpa.com/History/hist19.html|title=Johnstown Flood of 1889 – Historic|access-date=15 February 2017}}</ref>
The high, steep hills of the narrow Conemaugh Valley and the ] range to the east kept development close to the riverfront areas. The valley had large amounts of runoff from rain and snowfall. The area surrounding Johnstown is prone to ] due to its location on the rivers, whose upstream watersheds include an extensive drainage basin of the Allegheny plateau. Adding to these factors, developers' artificial narrowing of the riverbed to maximize early industries left the city even more flood-prone. The Conemaugh River immediately downstream of Johnstown is hemmed in by steep mountainsides for approximately {{convert|10|mi|km|0}}. Today, a plaque at the scenic overlook on Pennsylvania Route 56 about {{convert|4|mi|km|0}} outside Johnstown cites this gorge as the deepest river gap in the entire United States east of the Rocky Mountains.{{Citation needed|date=January 2010}}

The high, steep hills of the narrow Conemaugh Valley and the Allegheny Mountains to the east restricted development of Johnstown, keeping it close to the riverfront areas. The valley received large amounts of ] from rain and snowfall. The area surrounding the city is prone to flooding due to its location on the rivers, whose upstream watersheds include an extensive ] of the Allegheny plateau. Adding to these factors, ] from the iron furnaces of the steel mills was dumped along the river to create more land for building and narrowed the riverbed.<ref name="weather"> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131226205316/http://www.weather.com/encyclopedia/flood/john89.html |date=2013-12-26 }}</ref> Developers' artificial narrowing of the riverbed to maximize early industries left the city even more flood-prone.<ref name="nps" />

Immediately downstream of Johnstown, the Conemaugh River is hemmed in by steep mountainsides for about {{convert|10|mi|km|0}}. A roadside plaque alongside ], which follows this river, proclaims that this stretch of valley is the deepest river gorge in North America east of the ].


===South Fork Dam and Lake Conemaugh=== ===South Fork Dam and Lake Conemaugh===
]
High above the city, the Commonwealth of ] built the ] between 1838 and 1853, as part of a cross-state canal system, the ]. Johnstown was the eastern terminus of the ], supplied with water by ], the ] behind the dam. As railroads superseded canal barge transport, the Commonwealth abandoned the canal and sold to the ]. The dam and lake were part of the purchase, and PRR sold them to private interests.<ref>{{cite web| last = Frank |first = Walter Smoter| url =http://smoter.com/flooddam/johnstow.htm|title = The Cause of the Johnstown Flood|year = 2004|publisher = Walter Smoter Frank}} According to the source, the article is a version of a May 1988 article in ''Civil Engineering'', pp. 63&ndash;66</ref>
]
High above the city, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania built the ] between 1838 and 1853 as part of a cross-state canal system, the ]. Johnstown was the eastern terminus of the ], supplied with water by ], the ] behind the dam.


As railroads superseded canal barge transport, the Commonwealth abandoned the canal and sold it to the Pennsylvania Railroad. The dam and lake were part of the purchase, and the railroad sold them to private interests.<ref name=frank>{{cite web| last = Frank |first = Walter Smoter| url =http://smoter.com/flooddam/johnstow.htm|title = The Cause of the Johnstown Flood|year = 2004|publisher = Walter Smoter Frank}} ''Civil Engineering'', pp. 63–66, May 1988</ref>
] led a group of speculators, including Benjamin Ruff, from ] to purchase the abandoned reservoir, modify it, and convert it into a private resort lake for their wealthy associates. Many were connected through business and social links to ]. Development included lowering the dam to make its top wide enough to hold a road, and putting a fish screen in the ] (the screen also trapped debris). These alterations are thought to have increased the vulnerability of the dam. The members built cottages and a clubhouse to create the ], an exclusive and private mountain retreat. Membership grew to include more than 50 wealthy Pittsburgh steel, ], and railroad ]s.{{Citation needed|date=January 2010}}


] led a group of Pittsburgh ], including Benjamin Ruff, to purchase the abandoned reservoir, modify it, and convert it into a private resort lake at a property for their wealthy associates. Many were connected through business and social links to ].
] at the club's site was {{convert|450|ft|m}} in elevation above Johnstown. The lake was about {{convert|2|mi|km}} long, approximately {{convert|1|mi|km}} wide, and {{convert|60|ft|m}} deep near the dam. The lake had a perimeter of {{convert|7|mi|km}} to hold 20&nbsp;million tons of water.{{Citation needed|date=January 2010}}


Development included lowering the dam to make its top wide enough to hold a road for a carriageway and putting a fish screen in the ]. Workers lowered the dam, which had been {{convert|72|ft|m}} high, by {{convert|3|ft|m}}.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Farabaugh |first=Patrick |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1260340723 |title=Disastrous floods and the demise of steel in Johnstown |date=2021 |others=Richard Burkert |isbn=978-1-4671-5001-9 |location=Charleston, SC |oclc=1260340723}}</ref> These alterations are thought to have increased the vulnerability of the dam. Moreover, a system of relief pipes and valves, a feature of the original dam which had previously been sold off for scrap, was not replaced. The club had no way of lowering the water level in the lake in case of an emergency.
The dam was {{convert|72|ft|m}} high and {{convert|931|ft|m}} long. Between 1881 when the club was opened, and 1889, the dam frequently sprang leaks. It was patched, mostly with mud and straw. Additionally, a previous owner had removed and sold for scrap the three cast iron discharge pipes that previously allowed a controlled release of water. There had been some speculation as to the dam's integrity, and concerns had been raised by the head of the Cambria Iron Works downstream in Johnstown.


The Pittsburgh speculators built cottages and a clubhouse to create the ], an exclusive and private mountain retreat. Membership grew to include more than fifty wealthy steel, coal, and railroad ]s.<ref name="museum"> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131104032631/http://www.jaha.org/FloodMuseum/clubanddam.html |date=2013-11-04 }}</ref> Lake Conemaugh at the club's site was {{convert|450|ft|m}} in elevation above Johnstown. The lake was about {{convert|2|mi|km}} long, about {{convert|1|mi|km}} wide, and {{convert|60|ft|m}} deep near the dam. The dam was {{convert|72|ft|m}} high and {{convert|931|ft|m}} long.
==The Great Flood of 1889==
{{Refimprove section|date=May 2011}}
On May 28, 1889, a storm formed over ] and ], moving east. When the storm struck the Johnstown-South Fork area two days later, it was the worst downpour that had ever been recorded in that part of the country. The ] estimated that {{convert|6|to|10|in|mm}} of ] fell in 24 hours over the entire region. During the night, small creeks became roaring torrents, ripping out trees and debris. ] lines were downed and rail lines were washed away. Before daybreak, the ] that ran through Johnstown was about to overwhelm its banks.


==Events of the flood==
On the morning of May 31, 1889, in a farmhouse on a hill just above the South Fork Dam, Elias Unger, then president of the South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club, awoke to the sight of Lake Conemaugh swollen after a night-long heavy rainfall. Unger ran outside in the still-pouring rain to assess the situation and saw that the water was nearly cresting the dam. He quickly assembled a group of men to save the face of the dam by trying to unclog the spillway; it was blocked by the broken fish trap and debris caused by the swollen waterline. Other men tried digging another spillway at the other end of the dam to relieve the pressure, without success. Most remained on top of the dam, some plowing earth to raise it, while others tried to pile mud and rock on the face to save the eroding wall.
]]]
]
]
]
]'s spillway as it appeared in 1980]]
]
]
On May 28, 1889, a ] formed over Nebraska and Kansas. By the time this weather pattern reached western Pennsylvania two days later, it had developed into what would be termed the heaviest rainfall event that had ever been recorded in that part of the U.S. The United States Army Signal Corps estimated that {{convert|6|to|10|in|mm}} of rain fell in 24 hours over the region.<ref name="frank" /> During the night of May 30, small creeks became roaring torrents, ripping out trees and debris. ]s were downed and rail lines were washed away. Before daybreak, the ] and Stoney Creek, which form the main stem of the Conemaugh River at their confluence in Johnstown, were threatening to overtop their banks.


On the morning of May 31, in a farmhouse on a hill just above the South Fork Dam, Elias Unger, president of the South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club, awoke to the sight of Lake Conemaugh swollen after a night-long heavy rainfall. Unger ran outside in the still-pouring rain to assess the situation and saw that the water was nearly cresting the dam. He quickly assembled a group of men to save the face of the dam by trying to unclog the spillway, where an iron grate and a broken fish trap had become obstructed with debris from the swollen waterline. Other men tried digging a ditch at the other end of the dam, on the western abutment which was lower than the dam crest. The idea was to let more water out of the lake to try to prevent overtopping of the crest in the center, where the dam was structurally weakest, but the effort was unsuccessful. Most men remained on top of the dam, some plowing earth to raise the crest above the water, while others tried to pile mud and rock on the face to save the eroding wall.
John Parke, an engineer for the South Fork Club, briefly considered cutting through the dam's end, where the pressure would be less, but decided against it. Twice, under orders from Unger, Parke rode on horseback to the nearby town of South Fork to the telegraph office to send warnings to Johnstown explaining the critical nature of the eroding dam. But the warnings were not passed to the authorities in town, as there had been many false alarms in the past of the South Fork Dam not holding against flooding. Unger, Parke, and the rest of the men continued working until exhausted to save the face of the dam; they abandoned their efforts at around 1:30 p.m., fearing that their efforts were futile and the dam was at risk of imminent collapse. Unger ordered all of his men to fall back to high ground on both sides of the dam where they could do nothing but wait. During the day in Johnstown, the situation worsened as water rose to as high as {{convert|10|ft|m}}<ref name="Lane, F.W. 1966 p.129">Lane, F.W. ''The Elements Rage'' (David & Charles 1966), p.129</ref> in the streets, trapping some people in their houses.


John Parke, an engineer for the South Fork Club, briefly considered cutting through the dam's end near the abutments, where the pressure would be less, in order to create another spillway, but eventually decided against it as doing so would have quickly ensured the failure of the dam. Twice, under orders from Unger, Parke rode on horseback to a telegraph office in the nearby town of ] to send warnings to Johnstown explaining the dangerous situation unfolding at the dam. Parke did not personally take a warning message to the telegraph tower – he sent a man instead.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Johnstown's Flood of 1889 - Power over Truth and the Science Behind the Disaster|last=Coleman|first=Neil|publisher=Springer International Publishing AG|year=2018|isbn=978-3-319-95215-4|location=Switzerland|pages=65}}</ref> The warnings ultimately were not passed to the authorities in Johnstown, however, as there had been many false alarms in the past of the dam not holding against flooding,<ref name="frank" /> and most people felt the danger was not serious enough to warrant urgent delivery of the messages. Unger, Parke, and the rest of the men continued working until exhaustion to save the face of the dam; they abandoned their efforts at around 1:30&nbsp;pm, fearing that their efforts were futile and recognizing that the dam was at risk of imminent collapse. Unger ordered all of his men to fall back to high ground on both sides of the dam where they could do nothing but watch and wait. During the day in Johnstown, the situation worsened as water levels rose to as high as {{convert|10|ft|m}}<ref name="Lane, F.W. 1966 p.129">Lane, F.W. ''The Elements Rage'' (David & Charles 1966), p.129</ref> in the streets, trapping some people in their houses.
At around 3:10 p.m., the South Fork Dam collapsed, freeing the 20 million tons of Lake Conemaugh to cascade down the Little Conemaugh River. It took about 40 minutes for the entire lake to drain of the water. The first town to be hit by the flood was the South Fork. The town was on high ground, and most of the people escaped by running up the nearby hills when they saw the dam spill over. Despite 20 to 30 houses being destroyed or washed away, only four people were killed.


Between 2:50 and 2:55&nbsp;pm the South Fork Dam breached.<ref>Kaktins, Uldis, Davis Todd, C., Wojno, S., Coleman, N.M. (2013). Revisiting the timing and events leading to and causing the Johnstown Flood of 1889. Pennsylvania History, v. 80, no. 3, 335–363.</ref> ] analysis of the Lake Conemaugh basin reveals that it contained 14.55 million cubic meters (3.843 billion gallons) of water at the moment the dam collapsed.<ref name="Colemanetal2016" /> Witnesses reported that the lake took only 35–45 minutes to empty completely after the dam began to fail, though modern dam-breach computer modeling reveals that it likely took approximately 65 minutes for most of the lake to empty.<ref name="Colemanetal2016" /> The first town to be hit by the flood was South Fork, immediately downstream; the town was on high ground, and most of the people escaped by running up the nearby hills when they saw the dam spill over. Between twenty and thirty houses were destroyed or washed away, and four people were killed.
On its way downstream toward Johnstown, the crest picked up debris, such as trees, houses, and animals. At the ], a {{convert|78|ft|m|sing=on}} high railroad bridge, the flood temporarily was stopped when debris jammed against the stone bridge's arch. But within seven minutes, the viaduct collapsed, allowing the flood to resume its course. Because of this, the surging river gained renewed hydraulic head, resulting in a stronger wave hitting Johnstown than otherwise would have been expected. The small town of Mineral Point, one mile (1.6&nbsp;km) below the Conemaugh Viaduct, was hit with this renewed force. About 30 families lived on the village's single street. After the flood, only bare rock remained. About 16 people were killed.


Continuing on its way downstream to Johnstown, {{convert|14|mi}} by river to the west, the water picked up debris such as trees, houses, and animals. At the Conemaugh Viaduct, a {{convert|78|ft|m|adj=mid|-high}} railroad bridge, the flood was momentarily stemmed when debris jammed against the stone bridge's arch. But within seven minutes, the viaduct collapsed, allowing the flood to resume its course. Owing to the delay at the stone arch, the flood waters gained renewed hydraulic head, resulting in a stronger, more abrupt wave of water hitting places downstream than otherwise might have been expected. The small town of ], {{convert|1|mi|spell=in}} below the viaduct, was the first populated place to be hit with this renewed force. About thirty families lived on the village's single street. After the flood, there were no structures, no ], no ] in Mineral Point – only the ] was left. The death toll here was approximately sixteen people. In 2009, studies showed that the flood's flow rate through the narrow valley exceeded {{convert|12000|m3/s|order=flip}}, comparable to the flow rate of the Mississippi River at its delta, which varies between {{convert|7000|and|20000|m3/s|order=flip|abbr=on}}.<ref name="Perkins" />
In 2009 researchers reported the results of studies showing that the volume of the flood through the narrow valley temporarily equalled the flow of the Mississippi River.
<blockquote>"The deluge released by the dam’s collapse carried more than 12,000 cubic meters of debris-filled water each second. Flow rates in the Mississippi River typically vary between 7,000 and 20,000 cubic meters per second."<ref name="Perkins">, ''Science News,'' Vol.176 #11, 21 November 2009, accessed 14 October 2012</ref></blockquote>


The village of East Conemaugh was next to be hit by the flood. One witness on high ground near the town described the water as almost obscured by debris, resembling "a huge hill rolling over and over".{citation needed|date=October 2012}} From his locomotive, the engineer John Hess heard the rumbling of the approaching flood and, fearing what it meant, he tried to warn people downriver: he tied down the train whistle and raced backward toward East Conemaugh. His warning saved many people who reached high ground, but at least 50 people died, including about 25 passengers stranded on trains in the town. Hess survived despite the flood picking up his locomotive and tossing it aside. The village of ] was the next populated area to fall victim to the flood. One witness on high ground near the town described the water as almost obscured by debris, resembling "a huge hill rolling over and over".<ref>JAHA {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130329151903/http://www.jaha.org/edu/flood/story/prr_reports_flood.html |date=2013-03-29 }}</ref> From his idle ] in the town's railyard, engineer John Hess heard and felt the rumbling of the approaching flood. Throwing his locomotive into reverse, he raced backward toward East Conemaugh, the whistle blowing constantly. His warning saved many people who reached high ground. When the flood hit, it picked up the still-moving locomotive off the tracks and floated it aside; Hess himself survived, but at least fifty people died, including about twenty-five passengers stranded on trains in the village.


Before hitting the main part of Johnstown, the flood surge hit the Cambria Iron Works at the town of Woodvale, sweeping up railroad cars and barbed wire in its moil. Of Woodvale's 1,100 residents, 314 died in the flood. Boilers exploded when the flood hit the Gautier Wire Works, causing black smoke seen by the Johnstown residents. Miles of its ] became entangled in the debris in the flood waters. Just before reaching the main part of Johnstown, the flood surge hit the Cambria Iron Works in the town of Woodvale, sweeping up railroad cars and ]. Of Woodvale's 1,100 residents, 314 died in the flood. Boilers exploded when the flood hit the Gautier Wire Works, causing black smoke seen by Johnstown residents. Miles of barbed wire became entangled with the rest of the debris in the flood waters.


Some 57 minutes after the South Fork Dam collapsed, the flood hit Johnstown. The residents were caught by surprise as the wall of water and debris bore down, traveling at {{convert|40|mph|km/h}} and reaching a height of {{convert|60|ft|m}} in places. Some, realizing the danger, tried to escape by running towards high ground. But most people were hit by the surging floodwater. Many people were crushed by pieces of debris, and others became caught in barbed wire from the wire factory upstream. Those who reached attics, or managed to stay afloat on pieces of floating debris, waited hours for help to arrive. Fifty-seven minutes after the dam collapsed, the flood reached Johnstown. Residents were caught by surprise as the wall of water and debris bore down, traveling at speeds of {{convert|40|mph|km/h}} and reaching a height of {{convert|60|ft|m}} in places. Some people, realizing the danger, tried to escape by running towards high ground, but most were hit by the surging floodwater in their homes and workplaces. Many people were crushed by pieces of debris, and others became caught in barbed wire from the wire factory upstream. Those who reached attics or roofs, or managed to stay afloat on pieces of floating debris, waited hours for help to arrive.
]


At Johnstown, the ], which was a substantial arched structure, carried the ] across the Conemaugh River. The debris carried by the flood formed a temporary dam at the bridge, resulting in the flood surge rolling upstream along the Stoney Creek River. Eventually, gravity caused the surge to return to the dam, causing a second wave to hit the city, but from a different direction.<ref>''History of the Johnstown Flood'', Willis Fletcher Johnson (1889), pp 61-64. Available on CD-ROM from , Between the Lakes</ref> The ], a substantial arched structure, carried the Pennsylvania Railroad across the Conemaugh River in the center of Johnstown. The debris carried by the flood, now including twisted steel rails, boxcars, entire buildings, and the bodies of the flood's victims, formed a temporary dam at the bridge, forcing the flood surge to roll upstream along the channel of the Stoney Creek River. Eventually, gravity caused the surge to return to the dam, resulting in a second wave that hit the city from a different direction.<ref>''History of the Johnstown Flood'', Willis Fletcher Johnson (1889), pp 61–64. Available on CD-ROM from {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061020021007/http://www.betweenthelakes.com/states/johnstown.htm |date=2006-10-20 }}, Between the Lakes</ref> Some people who had been washed downstream became trapped in an inferno as the debris that had piled up against the bridge caught fire; at least eighty people died there. The fire burned for three days. After floodwaters receded, the pile of debris at the bridge was seen to cover {{convert|30|acre|ha}}, and reached {{convert|70|ft|m}} in height. It took workers three months to remove the mass of debris, the delay owing in part to the huge quantity of barbed wire from the ironworks entangled with the wreckage. ] was eventually used.<ref>Lane, F.W. ''The Elements Rage'' (David & Charles 1966), p.131</ref>


== Victims ==
Some people who had been washed downstream became trapped in an inferno as the debris piled up against the Stone Bridge caught fire; at least 80 people died there. The fire at the Stone Bridge burned for three days. After floodwaters receded, the pile of debris at the bridge was seen to cover {{convert|30|acre|ha}}, and reached {{convert|70|ft|m}} in height. It took workers three months to remove the mass of debris, largely because it was bound by the steel wire from the ironworks. ] was eventually used to clear it.<ref>Lane, F.W. ''The Elements Rage'' (David & Charles 1966), p.131</ref>
] (1890)]]
The total death toll from the flood was calculated originally as 2,209 people,<ref name="WDL1" /> making the disaster the largest loss of civilian life in the U.S. at the time. This number of deaths was later surpassed by fatalities in the ] and the ]. However, as pointed out by historian ],<ref name="McCullough" /> a man reported as presumed dead had survived; Leroy Temple returned to Johnstown eleven years after the disaster and revealed he had extricated himself from the flood debris at the Stone Bridge, walked out of the valley, and moved to Beverly, Massachusetts. After the revelation of Temple's survival, the official death toll was 2,208.<ref name="McCullough" />


According to records compiled by the Johnstown Area Heritage Association, bodies were found as far away as Cincinnati, Ohio, and as late as 1911; 99 entire families died in the flood, including 396 children; 124 women and 198 men were widowed; 98 children were orphaned; and one third of the dead, 777 people, never were identified; their remains were buried at Johnstown's ].<ref name="JAHA"></ref><ref name="WDL1" />
Still standing and in use as a railroad bridge, the Stone Bridge is a landmark associated with survival and recovery from the flood. In 2008, it was restored in a project including new lighting as part of commemorative activities related to the flood.


==Aftermath== == Investigation ==
] ]
On June 5, 1889, five days after the flood, the ] (ASCE) appointed a committee of four prominent engineers to investigate the cause of the disaster. The committee was led by the esteemed James B. Francis, a hydraulic engineer best known for his work related to canals, flood control, turbine design, dam construction, and hydraulic calculations. Francis was a founding member of the ASCE and served as its president from November 1880 to January 1882. The committee visited the site of the South Fork Dam, reviewed the original engineering design of the dam and modifications made during repairs, interviewed eyewitnesses, commissioned a ] survey of the dam remnants, and performed hydrologic calculations.
]
]
]
]'', June 15, 1889]]
The total death toll was 2,209, making the disaster the largest loss of civilian life in the United States at the time. It was later surpassed by fatalities in the ] and the ]. Some historians believe the ] killed more people in the U.S. than did the Johnstown Flood, but the official death toll was lower.


The ASCE committee completed their investigation report on January 15, 1890, but its final report was sealed and not shared with other ASCE members or the public.<ref name="Cole2017">{{cite journal|last1=Coleman|first1=Neil M.|last2=Wojno|first2=Stephanie|last3=Kaktins|first3=Uldis|date=2017|title=The Johnstown Flood of 1889 – Challenging the Findings of the ASCE Investigation Report|journal=Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs|volume=49|at=Paper No. 29-10|doi=10.1130/abs/2017NE-290358|number=2|bibcode=2017GSAA...4990358C }}</ref> At ASCE's annual convention in June 1890, committee member Max Becker was quoted as saying, "We will hardly report this session, unless pressed to do so, as we do not want to become involved in any ]."<ref name="Cole2017" /> Although many ASCE members clamored for the report, it was not published in the society's transactions until two years after the disaster, in June 1891.<ref name="Francis1891" /> William Shinn, a former partner of industrialist ], became the new president of ASCE in January 1890. He gave the investigation report to outgoing Becker to decide when to release it to the public. Becker kept it under wraps until the time of ASCE's convention in Chattanooga, Tennessee in 1890.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Coleman|first=Neil|title=Johnstown's Flood of 1889 - Power Over Truth and the Science Behind the Disaster|publisher=Springer International Publishing AG|year=2018|isbn=978-3-319-95215-4|location=Switzerland|pages=89}}</ref> The long-awaited report was presented at that meeting by James Francis. The other three investigators, William Worthen, Alphonse Fteley, and Max Becker, did not attend.
Ninety-nine entire families died in the flood, including 396 children. One hundred twenty-four women and 198 men were widowed, 98 children were orphaned. One-third of the dead, 777 people, were never identified; their remains were buried in the "Plot of the Unknown" in Grandview Cemetery in Westmont.


In its final report,<ref name="Francis1891">{{cite journal|last1=Francis|first1=J.B.|last2=Worthen|first2=W.E.|last3=Becker|first3=M.J.|last4=Fteley|first4=A.|date=1891|title=Report of the Committee on the Cause of the Failure of the South Fork Dam|journal=Transactions of the American Society of Civil Engineers|volume=v. XXIV|pages=431–469}}</ref> the ASCE committee concluded the dam would have failed even if it had been maintained within the original design specifications, i.e., with a higher embankment crest and with five large discharge pipes at the dam's base. This claim has since been challenged.<ref name="Colemanetal2016" /> A hydraulic analysis published in 2016 confirmed that the changes made to the dam by the South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club severely reduced its ability to withstand major storms.<ref name="Colemanetal2016" /> Lowering the dam by as much as {{convert|3|ft|m}} and failing to replace the discharge pipes at its base cut the dam's safe discharge capacity in half.<ref name="Colemanetal2016" /> This fatal lowering of the dam greatly reduced the capacity of the main spillway and virtually eliminated the action of an emergency spillway on the western abutment. Walter Frank first documented the presence of that emergency spillway in a 1988 ASCE publication.<ref name="frank" /> Its existence is supported by topographic data from 1889<ref name="Francis1891" /> which shows the western abutment to be about one foot lower than the crest of the dam remnants, even after the dam had previously been lowered as much as three feet by the South Fork Club.<ref name="Colemanetal2016" /> Adding the width of the emergency spillway to that of the main spillway yielded the total width of spillway capacity that had been specified in the 1847 design of William Morris, a state engineer.
It was the worst flood to hit the U.S. in the 19th century. Sixteen hundred homes were destroyed, $17 million in property damage was done, and {{convert|4|sqmi|km2}} of downtown Johnstown were completely destroyed. Clean-up operations continued for years. Although Cambria Iron and Steel's facilities were heavily damaged, they returned to full production within a year and a half.


== Legal ==
Working seven days and nights, workmen replaced the huge stone railroad ], which had been nearly destroyed by the flood. The ] restored service to ], {{convert|55|mi|km}} away, by June 2. Food, clothing, medicine, and other provisions began arriving by rail. ]s traveled by railroad. Johnstown’s first call for help requested ] and ]s. The ] expert "Dynamite Bill" Flinn and his 900-man crew cleared the wreckage at the Stone Bridge. They carted off debris, distributed food, and erected temporary housing. At its peak, the army of relief workers totaled about 7,000.
In the years following the disaster, some survivors blamed the members of the South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club for their modifications to the dam that lowered its level and gradually blocked a spillway. They were also accused of failing to maintain the dam properly, so that it was unable to contain the additional water of the unusually heavy rainfall.


The club was successfully ] in court by the firm of Knox and Reed (later ]), whose partners ] and ] were both club members. Knox and Reed successfully argued that the dam's failure was a natural disaster which was an ]. No legal compensation was ever paid to the survivors of the flood.<ref>{{Cite web|title=The Johnstown Flood |last=Christie |first= Robert D.|work= The Western Pennsylvania Historical Magazine |volume=54 |date= April 1971 |issue=2 |url=https://journals.psu.edu/wph/article/download/3110/2941+%26cd%3D2%26hl%3Den%26ct%3Dclnk%26gl%3Dus%26client%3Dfirefox-b-1-d|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190603175721/https://journals.psu.edu/wph/article/download/3110/2941%2B%26cd%3D2%26hl%3Den%26ct%3Dclnk%26gl%3Dus%26client%3Dfirefox-b-1-d|archive-date=2019-06-03|access-date=2020-06-25}}</ref>
One of the first outsiders to arrive was ] (1821-1912), ], founder and president of the ]. Barton arrived on June 5, 1889, to lead the group's first major disaster relief effort; she did not leave for more than 5 months. She and many other volunteers worked tirelessly. Donations for the relief effort came from all over the United States and overseas. $3,742,818.78 was collected for the Johnstown relief effort from within the U.S. and 18 foreign countries, including ], ], ], ], ], and ].


Neither the club nor its members was ever held legally responsible for the disaster. This perceived injustice is considered to have aided the acceptance, in later cases, of a new definition of "], joint, and several liability," so that even a "non-negligent defendant could be held liable for damage caused by the unnatural use of land."<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.nationalgeographic.org/thisday/may31/johnstown-flood/ |title="May 31, 1889 CE: Johnstown Flood", ''National Geographic''. Retrieved June 3, 2019. |access-date=June 3, 2019 |archive-date=July 10, 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190710205818/https://www.nationalgeographic.org/thisday/may31/johnstown-flood/ |url-status=dead }}</ref>
Frank Shomo, the last known survivor of the 1889 flood, died March 20, 1997, at the age of 108.<ref name=Shomo>{{cite news | title = Frank Shomo, Infant Survivor Of Johnstown Flood, Dies at 108 | date = March 24, 1997 | newspaper = ] | last1 = Pace | first1 = Eric | page = | url = http://www.nytimes.com/1997/03/24/us/frank-shomo-infant-survivor-of-johnstown-flood-dies-at-108.html | accessdate = November 10, 2010 | archiveurl = http://www.webcitation.org/5u8lzVHQX | archivedate = November 10, 2010 }}</ref>


Individual members of the South Fork Club, millionaires in their day, contributed to the recovery in Johnstown. Along with about half of the club members, co-founder Henry Clay Frick donated thousands of dollars to the relief effort. After the flood, Andrew Carnegie built the town a new library.<ref>McCullough, David (1968). ''The Johnstown Flood.'' ISBN 978-0-671-20714-4. page 264.</ref>
==Subsequent floods==
Floods have continued to be a concern for Johnstown, which had major flooding in 1894, 1907, and 1924. The most significant flood of the first half of the 20th century was the ] Flood of March 1936. It also reached Pittsburgh, where it was known as the Great ].


Popular feeling ran high, as is reflected in Isaac G. Reed's poem:<poem>
On the night of July 19, 1977, a storm dropped heavy rains on the watershed above the city and the rivers began to rise. By dawn, the city was under water that reached as high as {{convert|8|ft|m}}. Seven counties were declared a disaster area, suffering $200 million in property damage and 80 people died. Forty were killed by the ] failure. Another 50,000 were rendered homeless as a result of the "]". Markers on one corner of City Hall at 401 Main Street show the height of the crests of the 1889, 1936, and 1977 floods.
Many thousand human lives-
Butchered husbands, slaughtered wives
Mangled daughters, bleeding sons,
Hosts of martyred little ones,
(Worse than ])
Sent to heaven before their time;
Lovers burnt and sweethearts drowned,
Darlings lost but never found!
All the horrors that hell could wish,
Such was the price that was paid for— fish!<ref>{{cite book|last1=Zebrowski|first1=Ernest|title=Perils of a Restless Planet: Scientific Perspectives on Natural Disasters|date=1998|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=9780521654883|page=81}}</ref><ref>https://archive.org/stream/StillCastingShadowsASharedMosaicOfU.s.HistoryVol.I1620-1914/StillCastingShadows1_djvu.txt (in which, text-search for text "Mining a similar vein")</ref>
</poem>


==Aftermath==
==Court case and recovery ==
===Immediately afterward===
In the years following the disaster, some people blamed the members of the ] for their modifications to the dam and failure to maintain it properly. The club had bought and redesigned the dam to turn the area into a vacation retreat in the mountains. They were accused of failing to maintain the dam properly, so that it was unable to contain the additional water of the unusually heavy rainfall.
]
The Johnstown Flood was the worst flood to hit the U.S. in the 19th century, and to date, the worst to strike Pennsylvania.<ref>{{Cite web |title=The worst natural disaster in Pennsylvania history was the Johnstown Flood of 1889, which killed over 2,000 people |url=https://vocal.media/history/the-worst-natural-disaster-in-pennsylvania-history-was-the-johnstown-flood-of-1889-which-killed-over-2-000-people |access-date=2024-02-25 |website=History |language=en}}</ref> 1,600 homes were destroyed, $17&nbsp;million in property damage levied (approx. $550&nbsp;million in 2022), and {{convert|4|sqmi|km2}} of downtown Johnstown were completely destroyed. Debris at the Stone Bridge covered thirty acres,<ref name=JAHA/> and clean-up operations were to continue for years. Cambria Iron and Steel's facilities were heavily damaged; they returned to full production within eighteen months.<ref name=WDL1/>


Working seven days and nights, workmen built a wooden ] to temporarily replace the Conemaugh Viaduct, which had been destroyed by the flood. The Pennsylvania Railroad restored service to Pittsburgh, {{convert|55|mi|km}} away, by June 2. Food, clothing, medicine, and other provisions began arriving by rail. Morticians traveled by railroad. Johnstown's first call for help requested coffins and undertakers. The demolition expert "Dynamite Bill" Flinn and his 900-man crew cleared the wreckage at the Stone Bridge. They carted off debris, distributed food, and erected temporary housing. At its peak, the army of relief workers totaled about 7,000.
The club was successfully defended by the firm of Knox and Reed (now ]), whose partners ] and James Hay Reed were both Club members. The Club was never held legally responsible for the disaster. The court held the dam break to have been an ], and granted the survivors no legal compensation.


One of the first outsiders to arrive was ], the founder and president of the ].<ref name="WDL1" /> Barton arrived on June 5, 1889, to lead the group's first major disaster relief effort; she did not leave for more than five months. Donations for the relief effort came from all over the U.S. and overseas. $3,742,818.78 was collected for the Johnstown relief effort from within the U.S. and 18 foreign countries, including ], ], ], Great Britain, Australia, and the ].
Individual members of the club, millionaires in their day, contributed significantly to the recovery. Along with about half of the club members, ] donated thousands of dollars to the relief effort in Johnstown. After the flood, ], already known as an industrialist and philanthropist, built the town a new library.


Frank Shomo, the last known survivor of the 1889 flood, died March 20, 1997, at the age of 108.<ref name=Shomo>{{cite news|title=Frank Shomo, Infant Survivor Of Johnstown Flood, Dies at 108 |date=March 24, 1997 |newspaper=The New York Times |last1=Pace |first1=Eric |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1997/03/24/us/frank-shomo-infant-survivor-of-johnstown-flood-dies-at-108.html |access-date=November 10, 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140718092818/http://www.nytimes.com/1997/03/24/us/frank-shomo-infant-survivor-of-johnstown-flood-dies-at-108.html |archive-date=July 18, 2014 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
==Effect on the development of American law==
<gallery>
Survivors were unable to recover damages in court because of the club's lack of resources. First, the wealthy club owners had designed the club's financial structure to keep their personal assets separated from it and, secondly, it was difficult for any suit to prove that any particular owner had behaved negligently. Though the former reason was probably more central to the failure of survivors' suits against the club, the latter received coverage and extensive criticism in the national press.
File:After the Flood at Johnstown -- Main Street.jpg|Authorities averting looting on Main Street, as depicted in a June 15, 1889, illustration in ''Harper's Weekly'' (This was shown satirically in the 1978 book ''] Goes to Pieces'' as "The morning after the final concert of ].")
File:Remmants of house in Johnstown Flood.jpg|A house almost completely destroyed in the flood
File:Johnstown Tree in House.jpg|The John Schultz house in Johnstown, Pennsylvania after the flood. Skewered by a huge tree uprooted by the flood, the house floated down from its location on Union Street to the end of Main. Six people, including Schultz, were inside the house when the flood hit; all survived.
File:JOFL destruction.jpg|View of lower Johnstown three days after the flood
File:Johnstown Main Street 1889 flood.jpg|Main Street after flood
File:Wea00785 - Flickr - NOAA Photo Library.jpg|Ruins of the Hulbert House
File:Galveston - 1900 wreckage.jpg|Copy of the preceding picture was resold 11 years later as part of the ]
</gallery>


===Subsequent floods===
As a result of this criticism, in the 1890s, state courts around the country adopted ''],'' a British common-law preceden,t which had formerly been largely ignored in the United States. State courts' adoption of ''Rylands'', which held that a non-negligent defendant could be held liable for damage caused by the unnatural use of land, foreshadowed the legal system's 20th-century acceptance of ].<ref>Jed Handelsman Shugerman, Note, "The Floodgates of Strict Liability,", ''110 Yale L.J.'' 333 (2000) </ref>
Floods have continued to be a concern for Johnstown, which had major flooding in 1894, 1907, 1924, 1936, and 1977. The biggest flood of the first half of the 20th century was the ] ]. That flood also reached Pittsburgh, where it was known as the ]. Following the 1936 flood, the ] dredged the Conemaugh River within the city and built concrete river walls, creating a channel nearly {{convert|20|ft|m}} deep. Upon completion, the Corps proclaimed Johnstown "flood free".


The new river walls withstood ] in 1972, but on the night of ], a severe thunderstorm dropped {{convert|11|in|cm}} of rain in eight hours on the watershed above the city and the rivers began to rise. By dawn, the city was under water that reached as high as {{convert|8|ft|m}}. Seven counties were declared a ], suffering $200&nbsp;million in property damage, and 78 people died. Forty were killed by the ] failure. Another 50,000 were rendered homeless as a result of this "]". Markers on a corner of City Hall at 401 Main Street show the height of the crests of the 1889, 1936, and 1977 floods.
=="Johnstown Flood" tax==
As a result of the extensive damage from the 1936 flood, the ] imposed an emergency tax on all alcohol sold in the Commonwealth to raise money for recovery. The "temporary" 10% tax was intended to help pay for clean up, recovery, and assistance to flood victims. The tax was never rescinded and, in 1963 it was raised to 15% and in 1968 to 18% (on top of the statewide 6% sales tax). The nearly $200 million in annual revenues from this tax now goes into the general fund for discretionary use by lawmakers.<ref></ref>


=={{Anchor|Legacy}} Legacy ==
According to the ]:
]]]
<blockquote>"All liquors sold by the ]] are subject to this 18 percent tax, which is calculated on the price paid by the consumer including mark-up, handling charge and federal tax. The first sale of liquor also is subject to the sales and use tax at the time of purchase."<ref></ref></blockquote>
At Point Park in Johnstown, at the confluence of the Stonycreek and Little Conemaugh rivers, an ] burns in memory of the flood victims.


The ] in Johnstown is now operated by the Johnstown Area Heritage Association.<ref name="Johnstown Area Heritage Association">{{Cite web|title=Johnstown Flood Museum|date=2020|publisher=]|access-date=2020-01-02|url=https://www.jaha.org/attractions/johnstown-flood-museum//}}</ref> It has adapted it for use as the ].
==Legacy==
*At Point Park in Johnstown, at the confluence of the Stonycreek and Little Conemaugh rivers, an "eternal flame" burns in memory of the flood victims.
*The Carnegie Library is now owned by the Johnstown Historical Society, which has adapted it for use as The Flood Museum.
*Portions of the Stone Bridge have been made part of the ], established in 1969 and managed by the ].


Portions of the Stone Bridge have been made part of the ]. This includes a park and was established in 1969 and managed by the ]. In 2008, the bridge was restored in a project including new lighting as part of commemorative activities related to the flood.
==In popular culture==
By the early twentieth century, entertainers developed an exhibition portraying the flood, using moving scenery, light effects, and a live narrator. It was featured as a main attraction at the ] of 1909, where it was seen by 100,000 and presented as "our time's greatest electromechanical spectacle".<ref name="Johansson"/> The stage was {{convert|82|ft|m}} wide, and the show employed a total of 13 stagehands.<ref name="Johansson">, ''Pittsburgh Post-Gazette,'' 30 July 2011</ref><ref>, ''Hvar 8 dag'', issue 41, 11 July 1909, at Runeberg website</ref>


Supporters of the memorial also believed it was important to gain control over the remaining buildings and property of the former South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club, in order to have full interpretation. The area and contributing buildings were designated as the ] in 1986 and added to the ]. It is also administered by the National Park Service.
==Books==
{{(Organize by type, non-fiction first, add publication dates, alphabetical by author and title)}} The flood has been the subject or setting for numerous histories, novels and other works.


Combined with the failure of the ] less than a year later, the Flood brought national attention to the issue of dam safety.<ref name=":2">{{Cite web |date=2015-11-18 |title=Arizona's 1890 dam disaster killed more than 100 people - The Prescott Daily Courier - Prescott, Arizona |url=http://dcourier.com/main.asp?SectionID=1&SubSectionID=1&ArticleID=48987 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151118011026/http://dcourier.com/main.asp?SectionID=1&SubSectionID=1&ArticleID=48987 |archive-date=2015-11-18 |access-date=2022-10-18}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |title=THE ARIZONA DISASTER.; MORE PEOPLE THAN REPORTED BELIEVED TO HAVE BEEN DROWNED. | work=The New York Times |url=https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1890/02/24/106038068.html?pageNumber=1 |access-date=2022-10-18 |language=en}}</ref>
===History===
*Gertrude Quinn Slattery, who survived the flood as a six year-old girl, later published a memoir, ''Johnstown and Its Flood'' (1936).
*The historian ] published ''The Johnstown Flood'' (1968) as his first book, and won two ]s and numerous awards for his later biographies and histories.


===Effect on the development of American law===
===Fiction===
] in Johnstown, Pennsylvania]]
*Rosalyn Alsobrook wrote ''Emerald Storm'' (1985), a mass market historical romance set in Johnstown. The characters Patricia and Cole try to reunite with each other and loved ones after the flood.
Survivors of the flood were unable to recover damages in court because of the South Fork Club's ample resources. First, the wealthy club owners had designed the club's financial structure to keep their personal assets separated from it and, secondly, it was difficult for any suit to prove that any particular owner had behaved negligently. Though the former reason was probably more central to the failure of survivors' suits against the club, the latter received coverage and extensive criticism in the national press.
*] wrote the historical novel '']'' (2001), based on events of the flood. She weaves fictional characters into a plot featuring historical figures in cameos. It was a '']'' Notable Book of the Year.
* Judith Redline Coopey wrote '','' which is self-published. The protagonist, Pamela Gwynedd McCrae, tells her story in flashbacks from 1889-1939.
*Marden A. Dahlstedt wrote the young adult novel, ''The Terrible Wave'' (1972), featuring a young girl as the main character, inspired by the memoir of Gertrude Quinn (Slattery), who was six years old at the time of the flood.
*] featured the flood in his novel, ''The Americans'' (1979), set in 1890 and the final book in the series of '']''.
*] noted the flood in his novel, '']'' (1897), as the disaster that destroyed the family of the minor character "Pennsylvania Pratt."


As a result of this criticism, in the 1890s, state courts around the country adopted '']'', a British ] precedent which had formerly been largely ignored in the United States. State courts' adoption of ''Rylands'', which held that a non-negligent defendant could be held liable for damage caused by the unnatural use of land, foreshadowed the legal system's 20th-century acceptance of ].<ref>{{cite journal|last=Shugerman|first=Jed Handelsman|date=2000|title=Note: The Floodgates of Strict Liability: Bursting Reservoirs and the Adoption of ''Fletcher v. Rylands'' in the Gilded Age|url=https://www.yalelawjournal.org/note/the-floodgates-of-strict-liability-bursting-reservoirs-and-the-adoption-of-ligfletcher-v-rylandslig-in-the-gilded-age|journal=Yale Law Journal|volume=110|pages=333–377|doi=10.2307/797576|jstor=797576|number=2}}</ref>
===Fantasy/Sci fi===
*Michael Dudek refers to the Johnstown Flood in his short, self-published work, ''The Fairytale of the Morley Dog''. It tells about Morley's dog, a folktale known to Johnstown residents. A statue of Morley's dog, "Johnstown's best friend", was erected in a park at Main and Market streets.
*The '']'' novel '']'' (2006) (third part of the '']'' mini-series) by ] recreates the Johnstown Flood set on another planet.<ref>{{cite book
| last = Ayers
| first = Jeff
| authorlink =
| coauthors =
| title = ]
| publisher = ]
| year = 2006
| location =
| pages = 431–432
| url =
| doi =
| id =
| isbn = 1-4165-0349-8 }}</ref>
*]'s fantasy novel, ''The Flood Disaster,'' features two students assigned a project on the flood who travel back in time.
*]'s fantasy novel '']'' (1996) features two time travelers who were unable to warn the Johnstown population of the coming disaster.
*]'s novel ''Julie'', features a teenage girl living in a small Pennsylvania town below an earthen dam in the 1930s; its events parallel the Johnstown Flood.
*Paul Mark Tag's science fiction novel ''Prophecy'' features the flood.


== Depiction in media ==
===Poetry===
*] (March 1825 – 29 September 1902) wrote "The Pennsylvania Disaster" (Lane, F.W. The Elements Rage (David & Charles 1966)) about the flood.<ref name="Lane, F.W. 1966 p.129"/>


===Short stories=== ===Film and television===
* ], a 1926 American silent ] directed by ] and starring ]. A print is held at ].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.silentera.com/PSFL/data/J/JohnstownFlood1926.html |title=Silent Era : Progressive Silent Film List |access-date=February 15, 2017}}</ref><ref name="Mouse"/>
*Brian Booker's "A Drowning Accident", in '']'' (Issue #57, May 30, 2005), was largely based on the Johnstown Flood of 1889.<ref></ref>
* ''The Johnstown Flood'', a 1946 animated film. ] uses time-reversal power to undo the flood and prevent the dam from breaking in the first place. One of a series of cartoons where he stops disasters that actually happened.<ref name="Mouse">{{cite web |title=Remembering the Johnstown Flood |url=https://www.jaha.org/attractions/johnstown-flood-museum/flood-history/remembering-the-johnstown-flood/ |publisher=Johnstown Area Heritage Association |access-date=December 1, 2024 |quote=In 1926, the Johnstown Flood became the subject of a major Hollywood film starring Janet Gaynor, and 20 years later a Mighty Mouse cartoon treated the disaster.}}</ref>
*] featured the flood in her "To This Water (Johnstown, Pennsylvania, 1889)", in her collected '']'' (1994).
* '']'', a 1977 film was filmed in Johnstown. Renamed to the fictitious "Charlestown" for the film, there are several references to an also-fictitious "1938 flood", when the character Reg Dunlop (]) refers to a statue of a dog that had warned the town of the coming flood. Radio announcer Jim Carr also refers to Charlestown's nickname "Flood City".
* ], a 1989 short documentary film which won the ] in 1990.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.oscars.org/oscars/ceremonies/1990 |title=The 62nd Academy Awards (1990) Nominees and Winners |access-date=December 1, 2024 |work=] |publisher=AMPAS |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110706095721/http://www.oscars.org/awards/academyawards/legacy/ceremony/62nd-winners.html |archive-date=July 6, 2011 }}</ref>
* ], an episode of the 2012 miniseries docudrama.<ref>{{cite web |title=The Men Who Built America - Blood Is Spilled/Bloody Battles(Season 1, Episode 4/Season 1, Episode 102) |date=October 30, 2012 |url=https://tv.apple.com/us/episode/blood-is-spilled/umc.cmc.49s6qbs13renibvugqft2srp6 |publisher=] |access-date=December 1, 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=The Men Who Built America - Blood Is Spilled (Season 1, Episode 4) |url=https://www.amazon.com/The-Men-Who-Built-America/dp/B07F2BRS2K/ref=sr_1_1 |publisher=] |access-date=December 1, 2024}}</ref>


===In film and television=== ===Theater===
*"A True History of the Johnstown Flood" by ].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://leisureblogs.chicagotribune.com/the_theater_loop/2010/03/true-history-johnstown-flood-goodman-theatre-review-chris-jones-2-stars.html |title=Theater Loop – Chicago Theater News & Reviews – Chicago Tribune |access-date=February 15, 2017}}</ref>
*'']'' (1926) is an ] silent ] directed by ]. A print is held at ].<ref></ref>
*By the early 20th century, entertainers developed an exhibition portraying the flood, using moving scenery, light effects, and a live narrator. It was featured as a main attraction at the Stockholm Exhibition of 1909, where it was seen by 100,000 and presented as "our time's greatest electromechanical spectacle",<ref name="Johansson"/> and was probably the Johnstown Flood attraction at the 1908 ] at ], London, which was seen by 715,000 people.<ref>{{Cite web |last=thelondonphile |title=Franco-British Exhibition |url=https://thelondonphile.com/tag/franco-british-exhibition/ |access-date=2021-06-08 |website=thelondonphile |date=April 25, 2012 |language=en}}</ref> The stage was {{convert|82|ft|m}} wide, and the show employed a total of 13 stagehands.<ref name="Johansson">, ''Pittsburgh Post-Gazette'', 30 July 2011</ref><ref>, ''Hvar 8 dag'', issue 41, 11 July 1909, at Runeberg website</ref>
*An episode of the 1940s cartoon '']'' featured the Johnstown Flood.
* ], a 1946 animated film
* ], a 1989 short documentary film


===In music=== ===Music===
* "]", written by singer-songwriter ] in 1969, contains the lyrics "What ever happened to those faces in the old photographs{{\}}I mean, the little boys{{\}} Boys? Hell they were men{{\}} Who stood knee deep in the Johnstown mud{{\}} In the time of that terrible flood{{\}} And they listened to the water, that awful noise{{\}} And then they put away the dreams that belonged to little boys."<ref>{{cite web |last1=Jorgensen |first1=Richard |title=APOLLO 11: "The world all stopped to watch it…" |url=https://medium.com/@Rjorg/apollo-11-the-world-all-stopped-to-watch-it-daa42704fcd |publisher=] |access-date=December 3, 2024 |date=July 20, 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Shindell |first1=Matthew |title=Apollo Playlist Part 2: Music Inside Apollo, Musical Critique from Outside Apollo |url=https://airandspace.si.edu/stories/editorial/apollo-playlist-part-2-music-inside-apollo-musical-critique-outside-apollo |publisher=] |access-date=December 3, 2024 |date=July 22, 2019}}</ref>
*Angela Easterling released a track called "Johnstown, Pennsylvania" on her 2011 album, ''Beguiler''.
* "]", a track from ]'s 1982 album ], mentions a song titled "Night of the Johnstown Flood".<ref>{{cite web |title=Highway Patrolman - Nebraska |url=https://brucespringsteen.net/track/highway-patrolman/ |publisher=]/ Bruce Springsteen.Net |access-date=December 3, 2024}}</ref>
*The Canadian musician ] released an album ''.''

*]'s song "]", from the '']'' album (1982), refers to the event.
===Literature===
*The folksinger ] in his song "Mother Country", noted attempts to save the people of Johnstown, among heroic acts by Americans.

==== Poems ====
*"The Pennsylvania Disaster", a poem by ]<ref>{{cite web|first1=William|last1=McGonagall|title=The Pennsylvania Disaster|url=http://www.mcgonagall-online.org.uk/gems/the-pennsylvania-disaster|website=McGonagall Online|date=1889}}</ref>
*"]", a poem by ].{{Cite wikisource | title = Poems (1898)/By the Conemaugh| last = Coates| first = Florence Earle | year = 1889}}

==== Short stories ====
* Brian Booker's "A Drowning Accident", in '']'' (Issue #57, May 30, 2005), was largely based on the Johnstown Flood of 1889.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.one-story.com/index.php?page=story&story_id=57|title=One Story|access-date=February 15, 2017|archive-date=December 20, 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161220073736/http://www.one-story.com/index.php?page=story&story_id=57|url-status=dead}}</ref>
* ] featured the flood in her "To This Water (Johnstown, Pennsylvania, 1889)", in her collected '']'' (1994).<ref>{{cite book |last1=Goho |first1=James |title=Caitlin R. Kiernan: A Critical Study of Her Dark Fiction |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4en5DwAAQBAJ&pg=PA103 |publisher=] |access-date=December 3, 2024 |page=103 |date=2020|isbn=978-1-4766-8089-7 }}</ref>
* Donald Keith's science fiction serial ''Mutiny in the Time Machine'' was published in '']'' magazine beginning in Dec 1962. It involved a Boy Scout troop discovering a time machine and travelling to Johnstown just prior to the flood.<ref>{{cite web|last=Boy Scouts of America, Inc|date=December 1, 1962|title=Boys' Life|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GTvxk06NVkoC&pg=PA16|publisher=Boy Scouts of America, Inc.}}</ref>
* Jim Shepard's ''Privilege'', in '']'',<ref>
{{cite magazine |last=Shepard |first=Jim |title=Fall 2023 |url=https://pshares.org/product/fall-2023/ |magazine=] |access-date=November 4, 2023}}</ref> (Fall 2023 Issue) is a story of historical fiction based on the Johnstown Flood of 1889.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Weber |first1=Jacob |title=Have DiCaprio play Colonel Unger and it'll be a perfect bookend to his career: "Privilege" by Jim Shepard (Best American Short Stories 2024) |url=https://workshopheretic.blogspot.com/2024/11/have-dicaprio-play-colonel-unger-and.html |publisher=Workshop Heretic |access-date=December 3, 2024 |date=November 29, 2024}}</ref>

==== Historical works ====
* Willis Fletcher Johnson wrote in 1889 a book called ''History of the Johnstown Flood'' (published by Edgewood Publishing Co.), one of the first accounts of the flood published as a book.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Johnson |first1=Willis Fletcher |title=History of the Johnstown Flood |url=https://www.gutenberg.org/files/41271/41271-h/41271-h.htm |publisher=Edgewood Publishing Company |access-date=December 3, 2024 |date=1889|via=]}}</ref>
* James Herbert Walker wrote a 40-page pamphlet in 1889 called ''The Johnstown Horror!!! Or Valley of Death, Being a Complete and Thrilling Account of the Awful Floods and Their Appalling Ruin''. Published by the National Publishing Company, the pamphlet was being sold in New York City less than a week after the disaster and was later ex] |access-date=December 3, 2024 |date=1889}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Walker |first1=James Herbert |title=The Johnstown Horror!!!, Or, Valley of Death: Being a Complete and Thrilling Account of the Awful Floods and Their Appalling Ruin |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jikWAAAAYAAJ |publisher=National Publishing Company/H.J. Smith & Company |access-date=December 3, 2024 |date=1889}}</ref>
* Gertrude Quinn Slattery, who survived the flood as a six-year-old girl, published a memoir entitled ''Johnstown and Its Flood'' in 1936.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Slattery |first1=Gertrude Quinn |title=Johnstown and Its Flood |date=1936 |publisher=The Dorrance Press |url=https://archive.org/details/johnstown1936slat/page/n5/mode/2up |access-date=December 3, 2024|via=]}}</ref>
* Historian and author ]'s first book was '']'' (1968), published by Simon & Schuster.
* Weatherman and author Al Roker wrote ''Ruthless Tide: The Heroes and Villains of the Johnstown Flood, America's Astonishing Gilded Age Disaster''.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Matthews |first1=Larry |title=Book Review - Ruthless Tide: The Heroes and Villains of the Johnstown Flood, America's Astonishing Gilded Age Disaster |url=https://www.washingtonindependentreviewofbooks.com/bookreview/ruthless-tide-the-heroes-and-villains-of-the-johnstown-flood-americas-astonishing-gilded-age-disaster |publisher=] |access-date=December 3, 2024 |date=June 25, 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Roker |first1=Al |title=Ruthless Tide: The Heroes and Villains of the Johnstown Flood, America's Astonishing Gilded Age Disaster |date=2018 |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-06-244552-0 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vMmXDQAAQBAJ |access-date=December 3, 2024}}</ref>

==== In fiction ====
* Marden A. Dahlstedt wrote the young adult novel ''The Terrible Wave'' (1972), featuring a young girl as the main character.<ref>{{cite web |title=The Terrible Wave (Review) |url=https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/a/marden-dahlstedt/the-terrible-wave/ |publisher=] |access-date=December 4, 2024 |date=September 1, 1972}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Johnstown Flood - Suggested Reading |url=https://www.nps.gov/jofl/learn/education/suggestedreading.htm |publisher=] |access-date=December 4, 2024}}</ref>
* ] featured the flood in his novel ''The Americans'' (1979), set in 1890 and the final book in the series of '']''.
* ] wrote the historical novel '']'' (2001), based on events of the flood. The book was a ''New York Times'' Notable Book of the Year.
* ]'s fantasy novel ''The Flood Disaster'', features two students assigned a project on the flood who travel back in time.
* ]'s fantasy novel '']'' (1967) features two time travelers who were unable to warn the Johnstown population of the coming disaster.
* ] wrote ''The Wedding Quilt Bride'' (2001), which tells the story of a romance between a member of the club's granddaughter and a man brought in to see if the dam was really in trouble. It follows him trying to convince the people of the danger and then the flood.
* Mary Hogan's ''The Woman in the Photo'' (2016) is about two young women, one in present-day America and one in Johnstown, Pennsylvania in 1889, before and during the Flood.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Johnson |first1=Arleigh |title=The Woman in the Photo - Review |url=https://historicalnovelsociety.org/reviews/the-woman-in-the-photo/ |publisher=Historical Novel Society |access-date=December 4, 2024 |date=August 2016}}</ref>
* The '']'' novel '']'' (2006) (third part of the '']'' mini-series) by ] recreates the Johnstown Flood set on another planet.<ref>{{cite book |last=Ayers |first=Jeff |title=Voyages of Imagination |title-link=Voyages of Imagination |publisher=Pocket Books |year=2006 |isbn=978-1-4165-0349-1 |pages=431–432}}</ref>


==See also== ==See also==
* ]
* ] disaster * ] disaster
* ] disaster * ] disaster
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==Bibliography== ==Bibliography==
* {{cite EB1911 |wstitle=Johnstown (Pennsylvania) |display=Johnstown |volume=15 |page=475}}

*Coleman, Neil M. ''Johnstown's Flood of 1889 – Power Over Truth and the Science Behind the Disaster'' (2018). Springer International Publishing AG. 256 pp. <nowiki>978-3-319-95215-4</nowiki> <nowiki>978-3-319-95216-1</nowiki> (eBook)
{{1911}}
*Coleman, N.M., C. Davis Todd, et al. 2009. "Johnstown flood of 1889 – destruction and rebirth" (Presentation 76-9). Geological Society of America meeting. Oct. 18-21. Portland, Ore. *Coleman, Neil M., Wojno, Stephanie, and Kaktins, Uldis. (2017). The Johnstown Flood of 1889 – Challenging the Findings of the ASCE Investigation Report. Paper No. 29-10. Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs. Vol. 49, No. 2. https://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2017NE/webprogram/Paper290358.html. {{doi|10.1130/abs/2017NE-290358}}.
*Coleman, Neil M., Kaktins, Uldis, and Wojno, Stephanie (2016). Dam-Breach hydrology of the Johnstown flood of 1889 – challenging the findings of the 1891 investigation report, Heliyon, {{doi|10.1016/j.heliyon.2016.e00120}}
*Davis T., C., et al. 2009. "A determination of peak discharge rate and water volume from the 1889 Johnstown flood" (Presentation 76-10). Geological Society of America meeting. Oct. 18-21. Portland, Ore.
*Coleman, Neil M., Wojno, Stephanie, and Kaktins, Uldis. (2016). Dam-breach hydrology of the Johnstown Flood of 1889 – Challenging the findings of the 1891 investigation report. Paper No. 178-5. Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs. Vol. 48, No. 7. https://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2016AM/webprogram/Paper283665.html. {{doi|10.1130/abs/2016AM-283665}}
* Johnson, Willis Fletcher. ''History of the Johnstown Flood'' (1889).
*Coleman, Neil M., Davis Todd, C., Myers, Reed A., Kaktins, Uldis (2009). "Johnstown flood of 1889 – destruction and rebirth" (Presentation 76-9). Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs, Vol. 41, No. 7, p.&nbsp;216.
* McCullough, David. ''The Johnstown Flood'' (1968); ISBN 0-671-20714-8
*Davis T., C., Coleman, Neil M., Meyers, Reed A., and Kaktins, Uldis (2009). A determination of peak discharge rate and water volume from the 1889 Johnstown Flood (Presentation 76-10). Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs, Vol. 41, No. 7, p.&nbsp;216.
* O'Connor, R. ''Johnstown - The Day The Dam Broke'' (1957).
*Kaktins, Uldis, Davis Todd, C., Wojno, S., Coleman, N.M. (2013). Revisiting the timing and events leading to and causing the Johnstown Flood of 1889. Pennsylvania History, v. 80, no. 3, 335–363.
* Johnson, Willis Fletcher. ''''.
* McCullough, David. ''The Johnstown Flood'' (1968); {{ISBN|0-671-20714-8}}
* O'Connor, R. ''Johnstown – The Day The Dam Broke'' (1957)


==External links== ==External links==
{{Commons category}} {{Commons category}}
* , National Park Service * , National Park Service
* – Johnstown Area Heritage Association
*
* ''Three Rivers Tribune'' (Three Rivers Michigan) #45 Vol. XI June 7, 1889
*
*
*
*
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* {{cite book|author=Ernest Zebrowski|title=Perils of a Restless Planet: Scientific Perspectives on Natural Disasters|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8krlt1-IFkcC&pg=PA81|year=1999|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-65488-3}}
* A of the Johnstown flood
*
* , ''Journal of Tort Law''
* , ''Science News,'' Vol.176 #11, 21 November 2009 *
* ''The Tribune-Democrat'', May 25, 2014. Retrieved July 22, 2019.
*

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{{Johnstown, Pennsylvania}} {{Johnstown, Pennsylvania}}
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Latest revision as of 06:14, 9 December 2024

Massive flood that destroyed Johnstown, Pennsylvania in 1889 For other uses, see Johnstown Flood (disambiguation).

Johnstown Flood
Debris litters and completely covers the ground above a Pennsylvania Railroad bridge. A small bridge and several mills and smokestacks are viewable in the distance.Debris above the Stone Bridge in Johnstown following the flood
Meteorological history
DurationMay 31, 1889
Overall effects
Fatalities2,208
DamageUS$17,000,000 (equivalent to about $580,000,000 in 2023)

The Johnstown Flood, sometimes referred to locally as Great Flood of 1889, occurred on Friday, May 31, 1889, after the catastrophic failure of the South Fork Dam, located on the south fork of the Little Conemaugh River, 14 miles (23 km) upstream of the town of Johnstown, Pennsylvania, United States. The dam ruptured after several days of extremely heavy rainfall, releasing 14.55 million cubic meters of water. With a volumetric flow rate that temporarily equaled the average flow rate of the Mississippi River, the flood killed 2,208 people and accounted for US$17,000,000 (equivalent to about $580,000,000 in 2023) in damage.

The American Red Cross, led by Clara Barton and with fifty volunteers, undertook a major disaster relief effort. Support for victims came from all over the U.S. and eighteen foreign countries. After the flood, survivors suffered a series of legal defeats in their attempts to recover damages from the dam's owners. This led in the 20th century to American law changing from a fault-based regime to one of strict liability.

The events have been commemorated nationally as well as locally. The Johnstown Flood National Memorial was established in 1964. The National Historic Landmark District of the South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club was established in 1986. Both are administered by the National Park Service.

History

The remaining abutment of the South Fork Dam with the US-219 highway bridge downstream in the background

The city of Johnstown, Pennsylvania was founded in 1800 by Swiss immigrant Joseph Johns (anglicized from "Schantz") where the Stonycreek and Little Conemaugh rivers joined to form the Conemaugh River. It began to prosper with the building of the Pennsylvania Main Line Canal in 1836.

Construction of the Pennsylvania Railroad and the Cambria Iron Works in the 1850s brought further industry to town, and eventually led to abandonment of the canal. By 1889, Johnstown's industries had attracted numerous Welsh and German immigrants to work. With a population of 30,000, it was a growing industrial community known for the quality of its steel.

The high, steep hills of the narrow Conemaugh Valley and the Allegheny Mountains to the east restricted development of Johnstown, keeping it close to the riverfront areas. The valley received large amounts of runoff from rain and snowfall. The area surrounding the city is prone to flooding due to its location on the rivers, whose upstream watersheds include an extensive drainage basin of the Allegheny plateau. Adding to these factors, slag from the iron furnaces of the steel mills was dumped along the river to create more land for building and narrowed the riverbed. Developers' artificial narrowing of the riverbed to maximize early industries left the city even more flood-prone.

Immediately downstream of Johnstown, the Conemaugh River is hemmed in by steep mountainsides for about 10 miles (16 km). A roadside plaque alongside Pennsylvania Route 56, which follows this river, proclaims that this stretch of valley is the deepest river gorge in North America east of the Rocky Mountains.

South Fork Dam and Lake Conemaugh

Remains of the South Fork Dam abutment with US-219 downstream in the background as it appeared in 1980
Remains of South Fork Dam showing construction details of the dam as it appeared in 1980

High above the city, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania built the South Fork Dam between 1838 and 1853 as part of a cross-state canal system, the Main Line of Public Works. Johnstown was the eastern terminus of the Western Division Canal, supplied with water by Lake Conemaugh, the reservoir behind the dam.

As railroads superseded canal barge transport, the Commonwealth abandoned the canal and sold it to the Pennsylvania Railroad. The dam and lake were part of the purchase, and the railroad sold them to private interests.

Henry Clay Frick led a group of Pittsburgh speculators, including Benjamin Ruff, to purchase the abandoned reservoir, modify it, and convert it into a private resort lake at a property for their wealthy associates. Many were connected through business and social links to Carnegie Steel.

Development included lowering the dam to make its top wide enough to hold a road for a carriageway and putting a fish screen in the spillway. Workers lowered the dam, which had been 72 feet (22 m) high, by 3 feet (0.91 m). These alterations are thought to have increased the vulnerability of the dam. Moreover, a system of relief pipes and valves, a feature of the original dam which had previously been sold off for scrap, was not replaced. The club had no way of lowering the water level in the lake in case of an emergency.

The Pittsburgh speculators built cottages and a clubhouse to create the South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club, an exclusive and private mountain retreat. Membership grew to include more than fifty wealthy steel, coal, and railroad industrialists. Lake Conemaugh at the club's site was 450 feet (140 m) in elevation above Johnstown. The lake was about 2 miles (3.2 km) long, about 1 mile (1.6 km) wide, and 60 feet (18 m) deep near the dam. The dam was 72 feet (22 m) high and 931 feet (284 m) long.

Events of the flood

The north end of the dam abutment and the farm of Elias Unger, now the visitor center of the Johnstown Flood Museum
View of the lake bed from top of the dam
May 1889 view of the broken dam from the roadway
May 5, 2013 view of the center section of the dam that gave way
Lake Conemaugh's spillway as it appeared in 1980
Wreck of Pullman cars and engines at Conemaugh
1889 view of debris field with Stone Bridge in the left center

On May 28, 1889, a low-pressure area formed over Nebraska and Kansas. By the time this weather pattern reached western Pennsylvania two days later, it had developed into what would be termed the heaviest rainfall event that had ever been recorded in that part of the U.S. The United States Army Signal Corps estimated that 6 to 10 inches (150 to 250 mm) of rain fell in 24 hours over the region. During the night of May 30, small creeks became roaring torrents, ripping out trees and debris. Telegraph lines were downed and rail lines were washed away. Before daybreak, the Little Conemaugh River and Stoney Creek, which form the main stem of the Conemaugh River at their confluence in Johnstown, were threatening to overtop their banks.

On the morning of May 31, in a farmhouse on a hill just above the South Fork Dam, Elias Unger, president of the South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club, awoke to the sight of Lake Conemaugh swollen after a night-long heavy rainfall. Unger ran outside in the still-pouring rain to assess the situation and saw that the water was nearly cresting the dam. He quickly assembled a group of men to save the face of the dam by trying to unclog the spillway, where an iron grate and a broken fish trap had become obstructed with debris from the swollen waterline. Other men tried digging a ditch at the other end of the dam, on the western abutment which was lower than the dam crest. The idea was to let more water out of the lake to try to prevent overtopping of the crest in the center, where the dam was structurally weakest, but the effort was unsuccessful. Most men remained on top of the dam, some plowing earth to raise the crest above the water, while others tried to pile mud and rock on the face to save the eroding wall.

John Parke, an engineer for the South Fork Club, briefly considered cutting through the dam's end near the abutments, where the pressure would be less, in order to create another spillway, but eventually decided against it as doing so would have quickly ensured the failure of the dam. Twice, under orders from Unger, Parke rode on horseback to a telegraph office in the nearby town of South Fork to send warnings to Johnstown explaining the dangerous situation unfolding at the dam. Parke did not personally take a warning message to the telegraph tower – he sent a man instead. The warnings ultimately were not passed to the authorities in Johnstown, however, as there had been many false alarms in the past of the dam not holding against flooding, and most people felt the danger was not serious enough to warrant urgent delivery of the messages. Unger, Parke, and the rest of the men continued working until exhaustion to save the face of the dam; they abandoned their efforts at around 1:30 pm, fearing that their efforts were futile and recognizing that the dam was at risk of imminent collapse. Unger ordered all of his men to fall back to high ground on both sides of the dam where they could do nothing but watch and wait. During the day in Johnstown, the situation worsened as water levels rose to as high as 10 feet (3.0 m) in the streets, trapping some people in their houses.

Between 2:50 and 2:55 pm the South Fork Dam breached. Lidar analysis of the Lake Conemaugh basin reveals that it contained 14.55 million cubic meters (3.843 billion gallons) of water at the moment the dam collapsed. Witnesses reported that the lake took only 35–45 minutes to empty completely after the dam began to fail, though modern dam-breach computer modeling reveals that it likely took approximately 65 minutes for most of the lake to empty. The first town to be hit by the flood was South Fork, immediately downstream; the town was on high ground, and most of the people escaped by running up the nearby hills when they saw the dam spill over. Between twenty and thirty houses were destroyed or washed away, and four people were killed.

Continuing on its way downstream to Johnstown, 14 miles (23 km) by river to the west, the water picked up debris such as trees, houses, and animals. At the Conemaugh Viaduct, a 78-foot-high (24 m) railroad bridge, the flood was momentarily stemmed when debris jammed against the stone bridge's arch. But within seven minutes, the viaduct collapsed, allowing the flood to resume its course. Owing to the delay at the stone arch, the flood waters gained renewed hydraulic head, resulting in a stronger, more abrupt wave of water hitting places downstream than otherwise might have been expected. The small town of Mineral Point, one mile (1.6 km) below the viaduct, was the first populated place to be hit with this renewed force. About thirty families lived on the village's single street. After the flood, there were no structures, no topsoil, no subsoil in Mineral Point – only the bedrock was left. The death toll here was approximately sixteen people. In 2009, studies showed that the flood's flow rate through the narrow valley exceeded 420,000 cubic feet per second (12,000 m/s), comparable to the flow rate of the Mississippi River at its delta, which varies between 250,000 and 710,000 cu ft/s (7,000 and 20,000 m/s).

The village of East Conemaugh was the next populated area to fall victim to the flood. One witness on high ground near the town described the water as almost obscured by debris, resembling "a huge hill rolling over and over". From his idle locomotive in the town's railyard, engineer John Hess heard and felt the rumbling of the approaching flood. Throwing his locomotive into reverse, he raced backward toward East Conemaugh, the whistle blowing constantly. His warning saved many people who reached high ground. When the flood hit, it picked up the still-moving locomotive off the tracks and floated it aside; Hess himself survived, but at least fifty people died, including about twenty-five passengers stranded on trains in the village.

Just before reaching the main part of Johnstown, the flood surge hit the Cambria Iron Works in the town of Woodvale, sweeping up railroad cars and barbed wire. Of Woodvale's 1,100 residents, 314 died in the flood. Boilers exploded when the flood hit the Gautier Wire Works, causing black smoke seen by Johnstown residents. Miles of barbed wire became entangled with the rest of the debris in the flood waters.

Fifty-seven minutes after the dam collapsed, the flood reached Johnstown. Residents were caught by surprise as the wall of water and debris bore down, traveling at speeds of 40 miles per hour (64 km/h) and reaching a height of 60 feet (18 m) in places. Some people, realizing the danger, tried to escape by running towards high ground, but most were hit by the surging floodwater in their homes and workplaces. Many people were crushed by pieces of debris, and others became caught in barbed wire from the wire factory upstream. Those who reached attics or roofs, or managed to stay afloat on pieces of floating debris, waited hours for help to arrive.

The Stone Bridge, a substantial arched structure, carried the Pennsylvania Railroad across the Conemaugh River in the center of Johnstown. The debris carried by the flood, now including twisted steel rails, boxcars, entire buildings, and the bodies of the flood's victims, formed a temporary dam at the bridge, forcing the flood surge to roll upstream along the channel of the Stoney Creek River. Eventually, gravity caused the surge to return to the dam, resulting in a second wave that hit the city from a different direction. Some people who had been washed downstream became trapped in an inferno as the debris that had piled up against the bridge caught fire; at least eighty people died there. The fire burned for three days. After floodwaters receded, the pile of debris at the bridge was seen to cover 30 acres (12 ha), and reached 70 feet (21 m) in height. It took workers three months to remove the mass of debris, the delay owing in part to the huge quantity of barbed wire from the ironworks entangled with the wreckage. Dynamite was eventually used.

Victims

A contemporary rendition of the Johnstown Flood scene at the Stone Bridge by Kurz and Allison (1890)

The total death toll from the flood was calculated originally as 2,209 people, making the disaster the largest loss of civilian life in the U.S. at the time. This number of deaths was later surpassed by fatalities in the 1900 Galveston hurricane and the September 11 attacks. However, as pointed out by historian David McCullough, a man reported as presumed dead had survived; Leroy Temple returned to Johnstown eleven years after the disaster and revealed he had extricated himself from the flood debris at the Stone Bridge, walked out of the valley, and moved to Beverly, Massachusetts. After the revelation of Temple's survival, the official death toll was 2,208.

According to records compiled by the Johnstown Area Heritage Association, bodies were found as far away as Cincinnati, Ohio, and as late as 1911; 99 entire families died in the flood, including 396 children; 124 women and 198 men were widowed; 98 children were orphaned; and one third of the dead, 777 people, never were identified; their remains were buried at Johnstown's Grandview Cemetery.

Investigation

South Fork Dam legend showing construction details of the dam

On June 5, 1889, five days after the flood, the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) appointed a committee of four prominent engineers to investigate the cause of the disaster. The committee was led by the esteemed James B. Francis, a hydraulic engineer best known for his work related to canals, flood control, turbine design, dam construction, and hydraulic calculations. Francis was a founding member of the ASCE and served as its president from November 1880 to January 1882. The committee visited the site of the South Fork Dam, reviewed the original engineering design of the dam and modifications made during repairs, interviewed eyewitnesses, commissioned a topographic survey of the dam remnants, and performed hydrologic calculations.

The ASCE committee completed their investigation report on January 15, 1890, but its final report was sealed and not shared with other ASCE members or the public. At ASCE's annual convention in June 1890, committee member Max Becker was quoted as saying, "We will hardly report this session, unless pressed to do so, as we do not want to become involved in any litigation." Although many ASCE members clamored for the report, it was not published in the society's transactions until two years after the disaster, in June 1891. William Shinn, a former partner of industrialist Andrew Carnegie, became the new president of ASCE in January 1890. He gave the investigation report to outgoing Becker to decide when to release it to the public. Becker kept it under wraps until the time of ASCE's convention in Chattanooga, Tennessee in 1890. The long-awaited report was presented at that meeting by James Francis. The other three investigators, William Worthen, Alphonse Fteley, and Max Becker, did not attend.

In its final report, the ASCE committee concluded the dam would have failed even if it had been maintained within the original design specifications, i.e., with a higher embankment crest and with five large discharge pipes at the dam's base. This claim has since been challenged. A hydraulic analysis published in 2016 confirmed that the changes made to the dam by the South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club severely reduced its ability to withstand major storms. Lowering the dam by as much as 3 feet (0.91 m) and failing to replace the discharge pipes at its base cut the dam's safe discharge capacity in half. This fatal lowering of the dam greatly reduced the capacity of the main spillway and virtually eliminated the action of an emergency spillway on the western abutment. Walter Frank first documented the presence of that emergency spillway in a 1988 ASCE publication. Its existence is supported by topographic data from 1889 which shows the western abutment to be about one foot lower than the crest of the dam remnants, even after the dam had previously been lowered as much as three feet by the South Fork Club. Adding the width of the emergency spillway to that of the main spillway yielded the total width of spillway capacity that had been specified in the 1847 design of William Morris, a state engineer.

Legal

In the years following the disaster, some survivors blamed the members of the South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club for their modifications to the dam that lowered its level and gradually blocked a spillway. They were also accused of failing to maintain the dam properly, so that it was unable to contain the additional water of the unusually heavy rainfall.

The club was successfully defended in court by the firm of Knox and Reed (later Reed Smith LLP), whose partners Philander Knox and James Hay Reed were both club members. Knox and Reed successfully argued that the dam's failure was a natural disaster which was an Act of God. No legal compensation was ever paid to the survivors of the flood.

Neither the club nor its members was ever held legally responsible for the disaster. This perceived injustice is considered to have aided the acceptance, in later cases, of a new definition of "strict, joint, and several liability," so that even a "non-negligent defendant could be held liable for damage caused by the unnatural use of land."

Individual members of the South Fork Club, millionaires in their day, contributed to the recovery in Johnstown. Along with about half of the club members, co-founder Henry Clay Frick donated thousands of dollars to the relief effort. After the flood, Andrew Carnegie built the town a new library.

Popular feeling ran high, as is reflected in Isaac G. Reed's poem:

Many thousand human lives-
Butchered husbands, slaughtered wives
Mangled daughters, bleeding sons,
Hosts of martyred little ones,
(Worse than Herod's awful crime)
Sent to heaven before their time;
Lovers burnt and sweethearts drowned,
Darlings lost but never found!
All the horrors that hell could wish,
Such was the price that was paid for— fish!

Aftermath

Immediately afterward

1889 view of Johnstown, Pennsylvania several months after the Great Flood

The Johnstown Flood was the worst flood to hit the U.S. in the 19th century, and to date, the worst to strike Pennsylvania. 1,600 homes were destroyed, $17 million in property damage levied (approx. $550 million in 2022), and 4 square miles (10 km) of downtown Johnstown were completely destroyed. Debris at the Stone Bridge covered thirty acres, and clean-up operations were to continue for years. Cambria Iron and Steel's facilities were heavily damaged; they returned to full production within eighteen months.

Working seven days and nights, workmen built a wooden trestle bridge to temporarily replace the Conemaugh Viaduct, which had been destroyed by the flood. The Pennsylvania Railroad restored service to Pittsburgh, 55 miles (89 km) away, by June 2. Food, clothing, medicine, and other provisions began arriving by rail. Morticians traveled by railroad. Johnstown's first call for help requested coffins and undertakers. The demolition expert "Dynamite Bill" Flinn and his 900-man crew cleared the wreckage at the Stone Bridge. They carted off debris, distributed food, and erected temporary housing. At its peak, the army of relief workers totaled about 7,000.

One of the first outsiders to arrive was Clara Barton, the founder and president of the American Red Cross. Barton arrived on June 5, 1889, to lead the group's first major disaster relief effort; she did not leave for more than five months. Donations for the relief effort came from all over the U.S. and overseas. $3,742,818.78 was collected for the Johnstown relief effort from within the U.S. and 18 foreign countries, including Russia, France, Germany, Great Britain, Australia, and the Ottoman Empire.

Frank Shomo, the last known survivor of the 1889 flood, died March 20, 1997, at the age of 108.

  • Authorities averting looting on Main Street, as depicted in a June 15, 1889, illustration in Harper's Weekly (This was shown satirically in the 1978 book MAD Goes to Pieces as "The morning after the final concert of The Who.") Authorities averting looting on Main Street, as depicted in a June 15, 1889, illustration in Harper's Weekly (This was shown satirically in the 1978 book MAD Goes to Pieces as "The morning after the final concert of The Who.")
  • A house almost completely destroyed in the flood A house almost completely destroyed in the flood
  • The John Schultz house in Johnstown, Pennsylvania after the flood. Skewered by a huge tree uprooted by the flood, the house floated down from its location on Union Street to the end of Main. Six people, including Schultz, were inside the house when the flood hit; all survived. The John Schultz house in Johnstown, Pennsylvania after the flood. Skewered by a huge tree uprooted by the flood, the house floated down from its location on Union Street to the end of Main. Six people, including Schultz, were inside the house when the flood hit; all survived.
  • View of lower Johnstown three days after the flood View of lower Johnstown three days after the flood
  • Main Street after flood Main Street after flood
  • Ruins of the Hulbert House Ruins of the Hulbert House
  • Copy of the preceding picture was resold 11 years later as part of the 1900 Galveston hurricane Copy of the preceding picture was resold 11 years later as part of the 1900 Galveston hurricane

Subsequent floods

Floods have continued to be a concern for Johnstown, which had major flooding in 1894, 1907, 1924, 1936, and 1977. The biggest flood of the first half of the 20th century was the St. Patrick's Day flood of March 1936. That flood also reached Pittsburgh, where it was known as the Pittsburgh Flood of 1936. Following the 1936 flood, the United States Army Corps of Engineers dredged the Conemaugh River within the city and built concrete river walls, creating a channel nearly 20 feet (6.1 m) deep. Upon completion, the Corps proclaimed Johnstown "flood free".

The new river walls withstood Hurricane Agnes in 1972, but on the night of July 19, 1977, a severe thunderstorm dropped 11 inches (28 cm) of rain in eight hours on the watershed above the city and the rivers began to rise. By dawn, the city was under water that reached as high as 8 feet (2.4 m). Seven counties were declared a disaster area, suffering $200 million in property damage, and 78 people died. Forty were killed by the Laurel Run Dam failure. Another 50,000 were rendered homeless as a result of this "100-year flood". Markers on a corner of City Hall at 401 Main Street show the height of the crests of the 1889, 1936, and 1977 floods.

Legacy

The former South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club, now the Johnstown Flood National Memorial

At Point Park in Johnstown, at the confluence of the Stonycreek and Little Conemaugh rivers, an eternal flame burns in memory of the flood victims.

The Carnegie Library in Johnstown is now operated by the Johnstown Area Heritage Association. It has adapted it for use as the Johnstown Flood Museum.

Portions of the Stone Bridge have been made part of the Johnstown Flood National Memorial. This includes a park and was established in 1969 and managed by the National Park Service. In 2008, the bridge was restored in a project including new lighting as part of commemorative activities related to the flood.

Supporters of the memorial also believed it was important to gain control over the remaining buildings and property of the former South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club, in order to have full interpretation. The area and contributing buildings were designated as the National Historic Landmark District in 1986 and added to the National Register of Historic Places. It is also administered by the National Park Service.

Combined with the failure of the Walnut Grove Dam less than a year later, the Flood brought national attention to the issue of dam safety.

Effect on the development of American law

Location of the South Fork Reservoir at Johnstown Flood National Memorial in Johnstown, Pennsylvania

Survivors of the flood were unable to recover damages in court because of the South Fork Club's ample resources. First, the wealthy club owners had designed the club's financial structure to keep their personal assets separated from it and, secondly, it was difficult for any suit to prove that any particular owner had behaved negligently. Though the former reason was probably more central to the failure of survivors' suits against the club, the latter received coverage and extensive criticism in the national press.

As a result of this criticism, in the 1890s, state courts around the country adopted Rylands v. Fletcher, a British common law precedent which had formerly been largely ignored in the United States. State courts' adoption of Rylands, which held that a non-negligent defendant could be held liable for damage caused by the unnatural use of land, foreshadowed the legal system's 20th-century acceptance of strict liability.

Depiction in media

Film and television

Theater

  • "A True History of the Johnstown Flood" by Rebecca Gilman.
  • By the early 20th century, entertainers developed an exhibition portraying the flood, using moving scenery, light effects, and a live narrator. It was featured as a main attraction at the Stockholm Exhibition of 1909, where it was seen by 100,000 and presented as "our time's greatest electromechanical spectacle", and was probably the Johnstown Flood attraction at the 1908 Franco-British Exhibition at Shepherd's Bush, London, which was seen by 715,000 people. The stage was 82 feet (25 m) wide, and the show employed a total of 13 stagehands.

Music

  • "Mother Country", written by singer-songwriter John Stewart in 1969, contains the lyrics "What ever happened to those faces in the old photographs / I mean, the little boys / Boys? Hell they were men / Who stood knee deep in the Johnstown mud / In the time of that terrible flood / And they listened to the water, that awful noise / And then they put away the dreams that belonged to little boys."
  • "Highway Patrolman", a track from Bruce Springsteen's 1982 album Nebraska, mentions a song titled "Night of the Johnstown Flood".

Literature

Poems

Short stories

  • Brian Booker's "A Drowning Accident", in One Story (Issue #57, May 30, 2005), was largely based on the Johnstown Flood of 1889.
  • Caitlín R. Kiernan featured the flood in her "To This Water (Johnstown, Pennsylvania, 1889)", in her collected Tales of Pain and Wonder (1994).
  • Donald Keith's science fiction serial Mutiny in the Time Machine was published in Boys' Life magazine beginning in Dec 1962. It involved a Boy Scout troop discovering a time machine and travelling to Johnstown just prior to the flood.
  • Jim Shepard's Privilege, in Ploughshares, (Fall 2023 Issue) is a story of historical fiction based on the Johnstown Flood of 1889.

Historical works

  • Willis Fletcher Johnson wrote in 1889 a book called History of the Johnstown Flood (published by Edgewood Publishing Co.), one of the first accounts of the flood published as a book.
  • James Herbert Walker wrote a 40-page pamphlet in 1889 called The Johnstown Horror!!! Or Valley of Death, Being a Complete and Thrilling Account of the Awful Floods and Their Appalling Ruin. Published by the National Publishing Company, the pamphlet was being sold in New York City less than a week after the disaster and was later ex[anded to a book of over 400 pages.
  • Gertrude Quinn Slattery, who survived the flood as a six-year-old girl, published a memoir entitled Johnstown and Its Flood in 1936.
  • Historian and author David McCullough's first book was The Johnstown Flood (1968), published by Simon & Schuster.
  • Weatherman and author Al Roker wrote Ruthless Tide: The Heroes and Villains of the Johnstown Flood, America's Astonishing Gilded Age Disaster.

In fiction

  • Marden A. Dahlstedt wrote the young adult novel The Terrible Wave (1972), featuring a young girl as the main character.
  • John Jakes featured the flood in his novel The Americans (1979), set in 1890 and the final book in the series of The Kent Family Chronicles.
  • Kathleen Cambor wrote the historical novel In Sunlight, In a Beautiful Garden (2001), based on events of the flood. The book was a New York Times Notable Book of the Year.
  • Peg Kehret's fantasy novel The Flood Disaster, features two students assigned a project on the flood who travel back in time.
  • Murray Leinster's fantasy novel The Time Tunnel (1967) features two time travelers who were unable to warn the Johnstown population of the coming disaster.
  • Colleen Coble wrote The Wedding Quilt Bride (2001), which tells the story of a romance between a member of the club's granddaughter and a man brought in to see if the dam was really in trouble. It follows him trying to convince the people of the danger and then the flood.
  • Mary Hogan's The Woman in the Photo (2016) is about two young women, one in present-day America and one in Johnstown, Pennsylvania in 1889, before and during the Flood.
  • The Star Trek: The Original Series novel Rough Trails (2006) (third part of the Star Trek: New Earth mini-series) by L.A. Graf recreates the Johnstown Flood set on another planet.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Johnstown, Pennsylvania, 1904". Library of Congress. World Digital Library. Retrieved January 5, 2014.
  2. ^ McCullough, David (1968). The Johnstown Flood. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-671-20714-4.
  3. ^ Coleman, Neil M.; Kaktins, Uldis; Wojno, Stephanie (2016). "Dam-Breach hydrology of the Johnstown flood of 1889 – challenging the findings of the 1891 investigation report". Heliyon. 2 (6): e00120. Bibcode:2016Heliy...200120C. doi:10.1016/j.heliyon.2016.e00120. PMC 4946313. PMID 27441292.
  4. ^ Sid Perkins, "Johnstown Flood matched volume of Mississippi River" Archived 2012-09-25 at the Wayback Machine, Science News, Vol.176 #11, 21 November 2009, accessed 14 October 2012
  5. "Johnstown Flood National Memorial (U.S. National Park Service)". www.nps.gov. Retrieved May 28, 2021.
  6. "Founder Clara Barton". The American National Red Cross. Retrieved January 25, 2015.
  7. ^ "Johnstown Flood of 1889 – Historic". Retrieved February 15, 2017.
  8. "The Johnstown Flood Of 1889", The Weather Channel Archived 2013-12-26 at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ Frank, Walter Smoter (2004). "The Cause of the Johnstown Flood". Walter Smoter Frank. Civil Engineering, pp. 63–66, May 1988
  10. Farabaugh, Patrick (2021). Disastrous floods and the demise of steel in Johnstown. Richard Burkert. Charleston, SC. ISBN 978-1-4671-5001-9. OCLC 1260340723.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  11. "The South Fork Fishing & Hunting Club and the South Fork Dam", Johnstown Flood Museum Archived 2013-11-04 at the Wayback Machine
  12. Coleman, Neil (2018). Johnstown's Flood of 1889 - Power over Truth and the Science Behind the Disaster. Switzerland: Springer International Publishing AG. p. 65. ISBN 978-3-319-95215-4.
  13. Lane, F.W. The Elements Rage (David & Charles 1966), p.129
  14. Kaktins, Uldis, Davis Todd, C., Wojno, S., Coleman, N.M. (2013). Revisiting the timing and events leading to and causing the Johnstown Flood of 1889. Pennsylvania History, v. 80, no. 3, 335–363.
  15. JAHA "Johnstown Flood Museum: Pennsylvania Railroad Interview Transcripts" Archived 2013-03-29 at the Wayback Machine
  16. History of the Johnstown Flood, Willis Fletcher Johnson (1889), pp 61–64. Available on CD-ROM from "Johnstown" Archived 2006-10-20 at the Wayback Machine, Between the Lakes
  17. Lane, F.W. The Elements Rage (David & Charles 1966), p.131
  18. ^ "Statistics about the great disaster", Johnstown Flood Museum,The Johnstown Area Heritage Association. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
  19. ^ Coleman, Neil M.; Wojno, Stephanie; Kaktins, Uldis (2017). "The Johnstown Flood of 1889 – Challenging the Findings of the ASCE Investigation Report". Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs. 49 (2). Paper No. 29-10. Bibcode:2017GSAA...4990358C. doi:10.1130/abs/2017NE-290358.
  20. ^ Francis, J.B.; Worthen, W.E.; Becker, M.J.; Fteley, A. (1891). "Report of the Committee on the Cause of the Failure of the South Fork Dam". Transactions of the American Society of Civil Engineers. v. XXIV: 431–469.
  21. Coleman, Neil (2018). Johnstown's Flood of 1889 - Power Over Truth and the Science Behind the Disaster. Switzerland: Springer International Publishing AG. p. 89. ISBN 978-3-319-95215-4.
  22. Christie, Robert D. (April 1971). "The Johnstown Flood". The Western Pennsylvania Historical Magazine. Archived from the original on June 3, 2019. Retrieved June 25, 2020.
  23. ""May 31, 1889 CE: Johnstown Flood", National Geographic. Retrieved June 3, 2019". Archived from the original on July 10, 2019. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
  24. McCullough, David (1968). The Johnstown Flood. ISBN 978-0-671-20714-4. page 264.
  25. Zebrowski, Ernest (1998). Perils of a Restless Planet: Scientific Perspectives on Natural Disasters. Cambridge University Press. p. 81. ISBN 9780521654883.
  26. https://archive.org/stream/StillCastingShadowsASharedMosaicOfU.s.HistoryVol.I1620-1914/StillCastingShadows1_djvu.txt (in which, text-search for text "Mining a similar vein")
  27. "The worst natural disaster in Pennsylvania history was the Johnstown Flood of 1889, which killed over 2,000 people". History. Retrieved February 25, 2024.
  28. Pace, Eric (March 24, 1997). "Frank Shomo, Infant Survivor Of Johnstown Flood, Dies at 108". The New York Times. Archived from the original on July 18, 2014. Retrieved November 10, 2010.
  29. "Johnstown Flood Museum". Johnstown Area Heritage Association. 2020. Retrieved January 2, 2020.
  30. "Arizona's 1890 dam disaster killed more than 100 people - The Prescott Daily Courier - Prescott, Arizona". November 18, 2015. Archived from the original on November 18, 2015. Retrieved October 18, 2022.
  31. "THE ARIZONA DISASTER.; MORE PEOPLE THAN REPORTED BELIEVED TO HAVE BEEN DROWNED". The New York Times. Retrieved October 18, 2022.
  32. Shugerman, Jed Handelsman (2000). "Note: The Floodgates of Strict Liability: Bursting Reservoirs and the Adoption of Fletcher v. Rylands in the Gilded Age". Yale Law Journal. 110 (2): 333–377. doi:10.2307/797576. JSTOR 797576.
  33. "Silent Era : Progressive Silent Film List". Retrieved February 15, 2017.
  34. ^ "Remembering the Johnstown Flood". Johnstown Area Heritage Association. Retrieved December 1, 2024. In 1926, the Johnstown Flood became the subject of a major Hollywood film starring Janet Gaynor, and 20 years later a Mighty Mouse cartoon treated the disaster.
  35. "The 62nd Academy Awards (1990) Nominees and Winners". Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. AMPAS. Archived from the original on July 6, 2011. Retrieved December 1, 2024.
  36. "The Men Who Built America - Blood Is Spilled/Bloody Battles(Season 1, Episode 4/Season 1, Episode 102)". Apple TV+. October 30, 2012. Retrieved December 1, 2024.
  37. "The Men Who Built America - Blood Is Spilled (Season 1, Episode 4)". Amazon (company). Retrieved December 1, 2024.
  38. "Theater Loop – Chicago Theater News & Reviews – Chicago Tribune". Retrieved February 15, 2017.
  39. ^ Shelley Johansson of the Johnstown Flood Museum, "First Person: The Swedish Johnstown flood", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, 30 July 2011
  40. thelondonphile (April 25, 2012). "Franco-British Exhibition". thelondonphile. Retrieved June 8, 2021.
  41. "Johnstowns undergång", Hvar 8 dag, issue 41, 11 July 1909, at Runeberg website
  42. Jorgensen, Richard (July 20, 2019). "APOLLO 11: "The world all stopped to watch it…"". Medium (website). Retrieved December 3, 2024.
  43. Shindell, Matthew (July 22, 2019). "Apollo Playlist Part 2: Music Inside Apollo, Musical Critique from Outside Apollo". National Air and Space Museum. Retrieved December 3, 2024.
  44. "Highway Patrolman - Nebraska". Sony Music/ Bruce Springsteen.Net. Retrieved December 3, 2024.
  45. McGonagall, William (1889). "The Pennsylvania Disaster". McGonagall Online.
  46. "One Story". Archived from the original on December 20, 2016. Retrieved February 15, 2017.
  47. Goho, James (2020). Caitlin R. Kiernan: A Critical Study of Her Dark Fiction. McFarland & Company. p. 103. ISBN 978-1-4766-8089-7. Retrieved December 3, 2024.
  48. Boy Scouts of America, Inc (December 1, 1962). "Boys' Life". Boy Scouts of America, Inc.
  49. Shepard, Jim. "Fall 2023". Ploughshares. Retrieved November 4, 2023.
  50. Weber, Jacob (November 29, 2024). "Have DiCaprio play Colonel Unger and it'll be a perfect bookend to his career: "Privilege" by Jim Shepard (Best American Short Stories 2024)". Workshop Heretic. Retrieved December 3, 2024.
  51. Johnson, Willis Fletcher (1889). "History of the Johnstown Flood". Edgewood Publishing Company. Retrieved December 3, 2024 – via Project Gutenberg.
  52. "Catalog Description of James Walker's book "The Johnstown Horror!!!"". Penn State University Press. 1889. Retrieved December 3, 2024.
  53. Walker, James Herbert (1889). "The Johnstown Horror!!!, Or, Valley of Death: Being a Complete and Thrilling Account of the Awful Floods and Their Appalling Ruin". National Publishing Company/H.J. Smith & Company. Retrieved December 3, 2024.
  54. Slattery, Gertrude Quinn (1936). Johnstown and Its Flood. The Dorrance Press. Retrieved December 3, 2024 – via Internet Archive.
  55. Matthews, Larry (June 25, 2018). "Book Review - Ruthless Tide: The Heroes and Villains of the Johnstown Flood, America's Astonishing Gilded Age Disaster". Washington Independent Review of Books. Retrieved December 3, 2024.
  56. Roker, Al (2018). Ruthless Tide: The Heroes and Villains of the Johnstown Flood, America's Astonishing Gilded Age Disaster. HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-06-244552-0. Retrieved December 3, 2024.
  57. "The Terrible Wave (Review)". Kirkus Reviews. September 1, 1972. Retrieved December 4, 2024.
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  59. Johnson, Arleigh (August 2016). "The Woman in the Photo - Review". Historical Novel Society. Retrieved December 4, 2024.
  60. Ayers, Jeff (2006). Voyages of Imagination. Pocket Books. pp. 431–432. ISBN 978-1-4165-0349-1.

Bibliography

  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Johnstown" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 15 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 475.
  • Coleman, Neil M. Johnstown's Flood of 1889 – Power Over Truth and the Science Behind the Disaster (2018). Springer International Publishing AG. 256 pp. 978-3-319-95215-4 978-3-319-95216-1 (eBook)
  • Coleman, Neil M., Wojno, Stephanie, and Kaktins, Uldis. (2017). The Johnstown Flood of 1889 – Challenging the Findings of the ASCE Investigation Report. Paper No. 29-10. Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs. Vol. 49, No. 2. https://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2017NE/webprogram/Paper290358.html. doi:10.1130/abs/2017NE-290358.
  • Coleman, Neil M., Kaktins, Uldis, and Wojno, Stephanie (2016). Dam-Breach hydrology of the Johnstown flood of 1889 – challenging the findings of the 1891 investigation report, Heliyon, doi:10.1016/j.heliyon.2016.e00120
  • Coleman, Neil M., Wojno, Stephanie, and Kaktins, Uldis. (2016). Dam-breach hydrology of the Johnstown Flood of 1889 – Challenging the findings of the 1891 investigation report. Paper No. 178-5. Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs. Vol. 48, No. 7. https://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2016AM/webprogram/Paper283665.html. doi:10.1130/abs/2016AM-283665
  • Coleman, Neil M., Davis Todd, C., Myers, Reed A., Kaktins, Uldis (2009). "Johnstown flood of 1889 – destruction and rebirth" (Presentation 76-9). Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs, Vol. 41, No. 7, p. 216.
  • Davis T., C., Coleman, Neil M., Meyers, Reed A., and Kaktins, Uldis (2009). A determination of peak discharge rate and water volume from the 1889 Johnstown Flood (Presentation 76-10). Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs, Vol. 41, No. 7, p. 216.
  • Kaktins, Uldis, Davis Todd, C., Wojno, S., Coleman, N.M. (2013). Revisiting the timing and events leading to and causing the Johnstown Flood of 1889. Pennsylvania History, v. 80, no. 3, 335–363.
  • Johnson, Willis Fletcher. History of the Johnstown Flood (1889).
  • McCullough, David. The Johnstown Flood (1968); ISBN 0-671-20714-8
  • O'Connor, R. Johnstown – The Day The Dam Broke (1957)

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