STEAMER WRECKED; 1,500
PERISH
EXCURSION BOAT EASTLAND BECOMES TOMB OF HUNDREDS
Lists and Turns on Side While at
Dock in Chicago River as Start With Holiday Crowd Was About
to Be Made-Heart Rending Scenes Enacted as Rescue Efforts
Prove Futile
CHICAGO, July 24 --
Deputy Coroner David Jones and Shire John E. Traeger of Cook County, who are directing the work of removing the bodies from the hull will reach from 1200 to 1500.
Shortly after noon, more than 600 bodies had been recovered. More were rapidly being taken from the hull and others were being picked from various places along the river.
OFFICERS
ARRESTED
The
crowding of passengers to one side of the boat is supposed
to have caused the tragedy, but the authorities, not satisfied
with this explanation, ordered the arrest of officers of the
boat. Captain Harry Pedersen and Dell Fisher, first mate,
were taken to police headquarters. A panic of the worst kind
struck the passengers when the boat began to turn over.
Best
accounts of witnesses said the steamer rolled slightly twice
and then turned further, that hundreds of screaming and struggling
men, women and children slid across the sloping decks, fought
for room on the companionways, clutched companions, deck chairs,
or any other object that came handy. Women and children by
the hundreds were caught between decks and scratched faces,
torn clothing, and bruised bodies of the dead bore mute evidence
of the desperation with which they fought for a chance for
life.
TRAGEDY
OVER IN FIVE MINUTES
The
whole tragedy occupied less than five minutes. Members of
the crew shouted warnings, Capt. Pedersen ordered the lower
deck ports opened and directed all passengers ashore. There
was no change, however, for such measure to succeed. Some
seven thousand tickets had been distributed for the excursion
and five steamers were chartered by the company. The Eastland
was the first to receive its quota and when its chartered
capacity was reached, the federal inspectors ordered no more
to be taken aboard. The boat was docked on the south side
of the river when hundreds, hurrying to the boat, were turned
back from it. They streamed across the Clark street bridge
to the steamer Theodore Roosevelt, which was to take the second
boat load.
Screams
of the Eastland victims halted this rush and the bridge was
jammed with people until it was feared it would collapse.
It was cleared by the police. Every resource of the city was
turned to the rescue work.
Remembering
the Iroquois disaster, mercantile concerns in the vicinity
hurried motor trucks to the scene laden with blankets to warm
the living or cover the dead. Pulmoters by the score were
sent to the dock where more than three hundred physicians
treated the rescued or partially drowned.
DIVERS
IN SERVICE
For
the first two hours, attempts were made to revive every person
taken from the wreck. Then as the hopelessness of resuscitating
became apparent, divers were summoned to explore the depths
of the boat. Equipped with ropes, they groped their way to
the innermost recesses of the hull. Every other minute their
assistants were signaled to "pull" and another victim was
added to the numbered dead. It was the result of the divers'
work that caused the coroner and police estimates to mount
above 1,000.
The
police and fire tugs organized river craft into a rescue fleet.
Boats were directed to cruise down the river and watch for
bodies and the sanitary canal trustees were asked to close
the dam at Lockport, Ill., thus shutting off the current of
the river, in order to aid in this work.
CITY
IN MOURNING
Rumors
of disaster spread rapidly. It's full disginificance was realized
when motor trucks piled high with blanketed forms, rolled
through the loop district to morgues and undertaking establishments.
"It's worse then the Iroquois," was the word that went about
the streets and immediately the city went into mourning. The
American and Federal League baseball games were called off:
many theatres announced their doors will be closed tonight:
churches summoned their members to pray for the dead and offer
comfort to the living. Flags were lowered to half mast and
mourning symbols were draped on many establishments.
Gray,
leaden clouds that overhung the city early in the day grew
heavier toward noon and a steady drizzle turned into rain.
Watchers at the wreck held their places and despite the discomforting
conditions, searchers for missing persons continued their
wearying rounds of the morgues.
The
identification of victims offered comparatively few difficulties,
practically all having been drowned. Measures were taken by
the police and electrical company to systematize the work
of identification. These were in full operation later in the
day. Investigations have been started by federal steamship
inspectors, city police, county coroner, and state's attorney.
The activity of this last official hints at possible submission
of the results of his investigation to the grand jury.
CAUSE
OF ACCIDENT
Few
hours, inquiry caused the investigating officials to lean
strongly towards the theory that the peculiar construction
of the boat was responsible for the accident. The Eastland
was equipped with water ballast so that it could enter the
harbor of South Haven, Mich., and other shallow ports and
river mouths. When approaching such entries the water would
be forced from the tanks, reducing the boat's draft. The ballast
would be taken on again when the vessel emerged from the harbor.
It is
the theory of officials that most of the ballast had been
forced from the tanks in anticipation of a heavy load today.
The steamer was thus rendered top heavy, it is thought, and
this, if a fact, would explain why she capsized so quickly.
CURRENT
A FACTOR
The strength of the river current is
another factor that engaged attention in connection with the
possibility that the keel had grounded in the mud of the river
bed. Those who discussed this theory thought that the current,
working against the pull of the hawsers toward the dock made
a fulcrum of the keel and turned the steamer over. This theory,
too, is based largely on the alleged top heavy condition of
the vessel.
BOAT DISASTERS OF RECENT YEARS
| Year |
Steamship |
Lost |
|
1890 |
Steamer Shanghai, burned |
300 |
|
1891 |
Steamer Utorsia, collision |
563 |
|
1892 |
Steamer Nanchow, foundered |
509 |
|
1893 |
Steamer Victoria, collision |
360 |
|
1894 |
Steamer Horn Head, sunk by iceberg |
62 |
|
1895 |
Steamer Chicora, vanished
in Lake Michigan |
26 |
|
1895 |
Steamer Colina, wrecked |
171 |
|
1896 |
Steamer Copernicus, sunk |
152 |
|
1897 |
Steamer Kapunda, foundered |
300 |
|
1898 |
Steamer La Bourgogne, collision |
540 |
|
1904 |
Steamer General Slocum, burned |
958 |
|
1904 |
Steamer Norge, wrecked on reef
|
750 |
|
1905 |
Steamer
Hilda, sunk |
123 |
|
1906 |
Steamer Valencia, foundered
|
119 |
|
1906 |
Steamship Sirio, foundered |
225 |
|
1906 |
Brazilian Cruiser Aquidaban, sunk |
212 |
| 1907
|
Steamer Larchmont, lost |
185 |
|
1907 |
Steamer Hong Kong, struck rock |
130 |
|
1907 |
Steamer Berlin, wrecked |
125 |
|
1907 |
Steamer Lakota, struck reef |
??? |
|
1907 |
Steamship Columbia, wrecked |
70 |
|
1912 |
Liner Titanic, struck iceberg |
1,500 |
|
1913 |
Liner Volturno, burned |
135 |
|
1914 |
Liner Monroe, sunk in collision |
49 |
|
1914 |
Empress of Ireland, sunk in collision |
968 |
|
1915 |
Liner Lusitania, sunk by torpedo |
1,259 |
|
1915 |
Eastland, Chicago River, turned turtle |
1,500 |
|
CHICAGO,
July 24 -- From five hundred to one thousand men, women and
children were drowned in full view of thousands on the bridges
and shore when the big steel steamer Eastland , loaded with
2,500 employees of the Western Electric company, their families
and friends, on their annual holiday, turned turtle at her dock
at the Clark street bridge in the Chicago river shortly before
8 o'clock this morning.
For some
reason not clearly explained by the owners of the Eastland,
the heavily loaded lake liner began to list while still tied
to the dock. As the hawsers loosened the craft rolled over
on her side and floated toward the middle of the river. Officers
and crew shouted warnings, but it was too late.
SICKENING
SCENES
A moment
later, amid shrieks and screams of women and children and shouting
and cursing of men, the Eastland turned over on her side, rolling
heavily. Then, in the middle of the Chicago river, was enacted
a catastrophe that promises to exceed the Iroquois theatre horror
for tragic details and bizarre setting.
For in
addition to the thousands of Chicago 8 o'clock business crowds
streaming from the north side across Rush street, Clark street,
and Wells street bridges on foot, surface cars, elevated trains,
and automobiles there were grouped along both sides of the
river close to ten thousand vitally interested spectators,
most of them relatives, friends and acquaintances of victims
who had come down either to see the people off on the big
annual junket to Michigan City, or to go on one of the four
other big lake steamers chartered by the Western Electric
company employees.
PROMPT
WORK OF RESCUE
For aboard
the steamers Petoskey, Theodore Roosevelt, Racine, and Maywood,
were thousands more of the Western Electric crowd waiting for
the big Eastland to move, as the Eastland was scheduled to head
the procession of five steamers across the lake to Michigan
City.
United
States life savers, Chicago police, firemen, crews of lake
boats and hundreds of volunteers with motorboats and launches
joined in the rescue work. Within a few minutes, the Eastland,
with its hundreds of passengers perched on her upturned side
were surrounded by a flotilla of city fireboats, police boats,
lifeboats, and motor boats. The steamer Theodore Roosevelt
hastily cleared of its big crowd of passengers, was turned
into a temporary morgue.
DROWNED
LIKE RATS
Hundreds
of women, cut and bleeding from bruises, with clothing partially
gone, were dragged from the river and driven to hospitals, with
men from Lake Shore Drive and other north side residence districts
using their automobiles for ambulances.
Several
hundred women and children who had gone below decks were caught
without a single chance for life. They were in the cabins
and drowned or trampled to death while firemen and lake steamer
men chopped holes in eevry available doorway and port hole
in the steel side of the overturned steamer.
The big
steamer, lying on her side in midstream, presented a strange,
uncanny sight. ON its curved side stood hundreds of passengers
who had stood over the railings. They stood or crouched awaiting
rescue. All about the sides of the steamer in the water was
greatest commotion with motor boats, tugs and other small
craft rescuing drowning persons from the river.
From
moment to moment women, some hysterical and some half insensible,
with torn, wet clothing clinging to their bodies, were dragged
from the water by rescuers and then taken ashore as the smaller
craft filled up. Police reserves, answering disaster calls,
cleared the Wells Street and Clark Street bridges of thousands
and drove the crowds back one square from the river front
to give the ambulance squads an opportunity to work in resuscitation
and removal of victims.
The screams
and shrieks of those caught in state rooms, cabins and other
points below the decks were maddening. Firemen, policemen,
and other rescuers worked heroically and fought desperately
to release those imprisoned. But the disaster was too great,
too sudden, and two unexpected.
PLACES
DEATH LIST AT 1,000
From
hour to hour, the death list grew and at 11:00, three hours
after the ill-fated Eastland broker her last hawser and capsized,
First Deputy Superintendent of Police Herman Schuettler made
this statement:
"Three hundred
and fifty bodies have been recovered and I believe that 1,000
in all perished. I believe that other bodies will be recovered
when the inner compartments of the boat are reached. We are
recovering bodies rapidly and the list of dead is growing
fast. My estimate of 1,000 dead is based on information I
got from a purser of the boat who had a narrow escape."
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