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Education Materials

Category: Flood Museum

Johnstown Weekly Tribune: “Our Calamity”

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Editor George Swank, June 14, 1889

Johnstown Weekly Tribune: “Before the Reservoir Came”

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Johnstown Weekly Tribune
Editor George Swank, June 14, 1889
Johnstown Tribune editor George Swank had started an article on the flooding early on May 31 before the dam broke. He rewrote this account

Photo gallery: stereo (3-D) views of flood destruction

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Many photographers took special “stereo views” that made their photos look three-dimensional. First they took the pictures with a camera that had two lenses (like binoculars). The pictures

Pennsylvania Railroad testimony describing the flood

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PRR Testimony Describing the Flood
J. P. Wilson, South Fork Coal Mines Supervisor

Survivor Stories: George M. Graham, M.D.

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From Port Royal, Juniata County, PA; a train passenger
I stepped on the platform of one of the gondola cars, and looking east of the river, I saw what appeared like a bank of water coming with fearful

Survivor Stories: Colonel John P. Linton

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Shortly before 4 o’clock we heard the loud and doleful whistling of the engines at the mill, which surely betokens a fire, and which we at the time supposed to be such an alarm. I have been info

Survivor Stories: Charles R. Phipps

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This was about 4 P.M. In a few minutes the water began to enter the room. We started to take up the carpets, but in less than half a minute some one burst into the room, exclaiming “The reservoir ha

Survivor Stories: Miss J. Louise Mueller

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Thrusting my head through an open window, and looking north-easterly, from which direction seemed to be coming an awful something, I saw what filled me with indescribable horror. A mountain of darknes

A Canine Hero?

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No one knows for sure whether this hero story is true or not. The little girl in this photo was saved from drowning in the flood when her family’s dog swam to her and towed her to safety.
Based

Were There Warnings? Telegrams from South Fork

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Telegrams from South Fork
The telegraph warning from South Fork was sent to the railroad operator west of Mineral Point who had been in constant communication with South Fork all morning. However,

Fact or Fiction? “The Peerless Rider,” Part 2

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John Parke as “Paul Revere” of South Fork
John Parke may have been the inspiration for the “Peerless Rider.” Read his own words below. How well does it match the “Paul Re

Fact or Fiction? “The Peerless Rider,” Part 1

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Within a few days of the flood a rumor started spreading through the press about a “Paul Revere of Johnstown,” who rode down the valley on horseback warning people that the dam had broken

Photo Gallery: Photographers Tell The Story of Flood Damage and Destruction

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After the Flood, photographers flocked to Johnstown. It was the biggest story since the assassination of President Lincoln in 1865. And it was definitely a story that had to be seen to be believed!
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The Johnstown Horror

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A collection of newspaper stories sold as a book

Photo gallery: Artifact survivors

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These artifacts, in the collection of the Johnstown Flood Museum, were swept along in the flood waters, just as their owners were. Some have stories that have been passed down to us. Others’ sto

Library of Congress flood photography

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After the Flood, photographers flocked to Johnstown. It was the biggest story since the assassination of President Lincoln in 1865. And it was definitely a story that had to be seen to be believed!
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Illustrations from magazines and newspapers

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In 1889 most printing presses were not able to print photographs. Printing photos was very expensive, so only books contained photographs. Newspapers and magazines used drawings to illustrate their st

Survivor stories: who stayed and who left

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Stayed in Johnstown

Name
Occupation
Address in 1896 Directory

Barbour, George
Laborer
Owns home 318 Second St.

Beck, Andrew
Laborer
Rents home 138 Gautier St.

Butler, Mary M

Home 610 Frankli

Photo gallery: panoramic views of downtown Johnstown

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About 1888, before the flood.

1889, soon after the flood.

1904 (sour

Beale’s reports: Children and the school

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Rev. David Beale

Beale’s reports: Sheltering and rebuilding

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Rev. Beale reports on shelters and rebuilding

Beale’s reports: Hospitals

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Rev. Beale reports on hospitals in the wake of the flood.

The care of the dead

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Rev. David Beale

Consolidation: Bringing the boroughs together

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Arthur J. Moxham
Before the Flood, every neighborhood in the Johnstown area was actually a separate borough or village. They had separate mayors and governing councils. Johnstown itself was a borough.

Statement of the Union Benevolent Association

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Helen Moxham and Cyrus Elder

Official Report of the State Board of Health

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By Benjamin Lee, A.M., M.D., Ph.D.

Relief supplies distributed

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Statement showing supplies furnished this Department for distribution by certain Relief Committees, by J.L. Spangler

National Guard report on relief work, by Lt. Colonel J.L. Spangler

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Official Statement as to the Johnstown Flood and the General Relief Work Performed

Photo gallery: rebuilding and remembering

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From ruin to recovery

Survivors were dependent on relief efforts almost entirely. They were able to salvage some items, but not enough to return to a semblence of t

Photo Gallery: Rescue and recovery after the Johnstown Flood of 1889

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Rescue the Living
The first night after the Flood was filled with terror for survivors. The floodwave had carried most people away from where they were and dumped them somewhere else. Many were injure

Healing takes time: a recovery timeline

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Events in Johnstown’s recovery, June-December 1889

Path of the Flood map

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Topographic Map of the Conemaugh Valley, published in June 1889 in Harper’s Weekly magazine. Conemaugh Lake in the east was the result of damming South Fork Creek. When the South Fork dam failed

Survivor story: Rev. H.L. Chapman

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Pastor of the Franklin Street Methodist Church, Chapman and his family lived in a parsonage in the middle of town. On the day of the flood, he opened his front door to see a boxcar rolling down the st

Flood survivors and their addresses before the flood

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Click on the survivors’ names to read their stories.

Name
Occupation
Address

Barbour, George
Laborer*
Boards at 120 Maple Ave, Woodvale*

Beale, Rev. Dr. David
Pastor
Presbyterian Church

Survivor story: Mr. Henry Viering

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For several days after the flood Mr. Henry Viering, the well-known furniture dealer at the corner of Railroad and Jackson Streets, suffered great bodily pain from injuries received on the fatal Friday

Survivor story: Mr. W.B. Tice

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Survivor story: Mr. Morrell Swank

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Mr. Morrell Swank tells of the thrilling and terrible experience of himself and family on that ever-memorable Friday evening, as follows:

Survivor story: Emma Robb

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Rev. Beale writes of a pair of mother-daughter heroines.

Survivor story: C.C. Ramsey

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Survivor story: Gertrude Quinn

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Survivor story: Mrs. Samuel C. Poland

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[Rev. Beale writes] The following letter was written to Mrs. Beale by our next-door neighbor, Mrs. Dr. S. C. Poland. One of her children had been in the parsonage until the water had become two and a

Survivor story: Mr. Edward Mayhew

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Survivor story: Colonel John P. Linton

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Survivor story: Mr. William F. Lewis

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Survivor story: Victor Heiser

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Victor Heiser was 16 at the time of the flood. He left Johnstown after the disaster and became a world-renowned physician. This account is from his autobiography.

Survivor story: Alexander N. Hart, J. Fleming

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Survivor story: Anna Fenn

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Mr. & Mrs. John Fenn’s story

Survivor story: Mr. Josiah T. Evans

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Survivor stories: Father Davin

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Survivor stories: Mary M. Butler

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Resided before the flood at 112 Morris Street, Kernville

Survivor stories: Dr. David Beale

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From Rev. Dr. David Beale’s book Through the Johnstown Flood

Survivor stories: Mr. George Barbour

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The following letter was written by Mr. George Barbour to a relative in Chambersburg, PA:

The Comeback Path: The Five Rs

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Activity: What on Earth do we do next?

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Photo gallery: Destruction all around

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After the Flood, photographers flocked to Johnstown. It was the biggest story since the assassination of President Lincoln in 1865. And it was definitely a story that had to be seen to be believed!
Cl

Photo gallery: Destruction after the flood

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These photos are from “stereo views” that made photos look three-dimensional. Learn more about stereo cards and stereopticons on this page.
To help you see as much as possible from these

Photo gallery: Flood survivors

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There aren’t many pictures of the day after the Flood, since people were too busy saving their lives and helping others. Besides, most cameras and photo equipment was lost in the Flood. Within d

Stereopticon

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Stereo viewer used to look at stereo photo cards
Many photographers took special “stereo views” that made their photos look three-dimensional. First they took the pictures with a camera th

Johnstown before the great flood

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Use the tool “Reading a Photograph” to help you see as much as possible in these photographs.

Aerial view of Johnstown.

South Fork Fishing & Hunting Club photo gallery

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Use the tool “Reading a Photograph” to help you see as much as possible in these photographs.

Canoeing on Lake Conemaugh at the South Fork Fishing & Huntin

South Fork Dam photo gallery

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Be sure to use the tool “Reading a Photograph” to help you see as much as possible in these photographs.

The dam and the South Fork Reservoir in the 1880s.

Views of Johnstown’s Stone Bridge

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Be sure to use the tool “Reading a Photograph” to help you see as much as possible in these photographs.

Washington Street Bridge, 1884.

Lumbering picture gallery

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Clear-cutting forests leads to environmental problems
The first 10 images are used courtesy of the Pennsylvania State Archives; the final image is from JAHA archives. Be sure to use the tool “Readin

Pennsylvania Canal and Portage Railroad picture gallery

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Canal connects Johnstown to the world
To help you see as much as possible from these photos, use the tool “Reading a Photograph.”

Boat going through the

Views of Johnstown’s Rivers

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Conemaugh and Stoneycreek Rivers and their tributaries
Be sure to use the tool “Reading a Photograph” to help you see as much as possible in these photographs.

Johnstown and Conemaugh Valley Topography

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The shape of the land shapes the land’s history. See the tool “Reading a photograph” before you start!

Painting of Conemaugh River by George Hetze

Maps of Johnstown and the Flood of 1889

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Map of Johnstown’s original street plan

Map of Johnstown showing Pennsylvania Canal basin (ca. 1840-50)

The “Paul Revere of Johnstown”: Fact or fiction?

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The Paul Revere of Johnstown: True or False?
This is the title of the following story, which was printed in the book The Johnstown Horror, or, Valley of death being a complete and thrilling account o

George Swank writes about warnings in the Johnstown Tribune

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Newspaper and Telephones

In the Tribune plant over the post-office on Franklin Street, Swank and his assistants had begun the last work on the Johnstown Weekly Tribune for May 31. Some of the force

Engineer Hess ties the whistle down

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PRR Testimony

Engineer J. C. Hess tells his story
…We heard the flood coming. We didn’t see it but we heard the noise of it coming.
Q. What was the noise of it like?
A. It was like a hurrican

Pennsylvania Railroad interview transcripts about the safety of the dam

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PRR Testimony about the Safety of the South Fork Dam
Statement of W. N. Hays

Q. What was said about the reservoir breaking?
A. Some said it was liable to break, and others said there was no danger. I

Telephone warnings

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Newspaper and Telephones

The Pennsylvania Railroad trains left Pittsburgh at scheduled time on the morning of May 31. The New York and Chicago Limited (No. 2) departed for the east at 7:15 a.m. The D

Hettie Ogle’s telegraph

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Were There Warnings?

Hettie Ogle’s “Last Message” telegram
Many versions grew up of the story of Hettie Ogle, a telegraph operator who kept at her post to send out river gauge rep

Mineral Point telegraph operator

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Were there warnings? Another Hero Racing with Death
This is the title of the following story, which was printed in the book The Johnstown Horror, or, Valley of death being a complete and thrilling ac

Telegrams from South Fork

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Were there warnings?
Telegrams from South Fork

The telegraph warning from South Fork was sent to the railroad operator west of Mineral Point who had been in constant communication with South Fork all

The Great Storm in the Susquehanna Valley

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Floods on the West Branch of the Susquehanna River

The West Branch of the Susquehanna drains northern Cambria County before … [it] receives waters from the counties of Clearfield, Clinton, Came

The Great Storm in the Conemaugh Valley

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The Great Storm of 1889
The greatest PA rainfall of the century
A wet year
…The greatest rainfall in Pennsylvania during the century played its part [in the Flood] also. The records of the Franklin

Storey’s river width measurements

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Riverbank measurements, 1854 and 1907
Henry Wilson Storey measured the river channels in 1907 and compared them to the widths in 1854 to see how much they had narrowed.

Little Conemaugh

Location
Di

Johnstown neighbors discuss the narrowing riverbanks the morning before the Flood

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Development Narrows the Rivers
Rev. David Beale relays a conversation early on May 30

Rev. David Beale quotes The Engineering News of New York

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First person account of the disaster, scientifically viewed
Through the courtesy of the Engineering News of New York I am permitted to insert the following extracts from its columns. The proprietors s

Engineering and building record: special report on the Johnstown Flood, June 1889

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Witness of the dam break: first-person account by G.W. Brown

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History of the Dam: The dam’s last moments

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The rain keeps coming
The downpour of the great storm continued with an undiminished strength during the afternoon and evening of May 31. The rain over the watershed of the South Fork Dam fell at the

History of the Dam: South Fork Fishing & Hunting Club Repairs

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[The property was bought by the newly formed South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club in 1879 to create a recreational lake and retreat. The Reservoir was renamed Lake Conemaugh]

History of the Dam: Under Pennsylvania Railroad ownership

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…The railroad company maintained a watchman at the reservoir to protect its machinery and to drive off the residents who coveted the lead wipings in the exposed joints of the sluice pipes. On July 1

History of the Dam: The South Fork Reservoir of the Pennsylvania Canal

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The South Fork Reservoir had originally been planned and built to supply the Pennsylvania Canal with water during the dry season. Although the State Works possessed a dam across the Conemaugh east of

The Johnstown Flood of 1889

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It rained and rained
At approximately 3:00 pm on May 31, 1889, the South Fork Dam gave way, unleashing 20 million tons of water into the valley below. In its path, were Johnstown and the surrounding c