If 'vwaOwpSSf sar wr t ye "-y; n t SSBBBBBBSEBfiV" P- SECOND PART. fir ' m i v T . . a mum. Johnstown as it Looks on the First Anniversary of the Flood. A RESURRECTED CITT. Beconstruction Progressing Bapidly, but Not Half Finished Yet. A DAY OF SAD MEMOBIES. Saturday Will Eecall the Scenes and Incidents of Thai Eeign of Terror IS THE GREEN VALLEY OF DEATH. Pictorial Remembrances of the Wrecked Town, and Illustrations of. Rebuilding. THE PAST AXD PEESEXT COMPARED. Descriptions cr Johnstown as It Was Effort the Flood, the Day Atlcr the Deluge, and as It Sow Is. DETAILS OF THE SEW BCILDI5G0K EiCH STEEET Saturday trill be the first anniversary of the Johnstown food. It will be a day of sad memories in the Coneinaugh Valley, and its stricken people will again bend low in their anguish. Thousands of aching hearts will bleed anew. The wealth of a universe was showered upon the survivors of Johnstown, and kind hands have rebnilt many a dwelling, but nothing of all this will bring relief to the multitude of hearts that still pkad For the touch of a Tanlshed hand, Tbe sound of a voice that is still. Sunshine may make Saturday a beautiful day, but no sunbeam will quite pierce the somber shades of a grief such as wells up from the souls of hundreds of bereaved fam ilies. The flowers of spring are painting the word "Besergam" all over the Cone maugh hills, but deeper yet are planted the weeds or mourning. Birds of the neighbor ing mountains may make the air noisy with their blithe melody, but even that very air will be resonant with a more sorrowful cadence. It will be the sigh of this orphan, tbat widow. Ton lonely father, or the soli tary sister. From 20,000 relatives of nearly 3,000 dead these sighs will come on Satur day. What a heartrending rythm the air of heaven would contain if they were all audible ! Could Memory be No More! "Forget! Forget! Forget!" Everyman, woman and child in Johnstown is saying that. And a merciful Providence is help ing them to forget it all. Human happiness would be forever wrecked if the survivors of the Conemaueh Valley walked from day to day with the living picture of the flood's ruin be tore them. To this end those re markable scenes of bustle and activity com mon in Johnstown the past seven or eight months will go right on uninterruptedly on Saturday. There will be no cessation of toil. If possible, the people will work all the harder. "Why not stop work for the day, and go to their homes to spend the hours in quiet? vou ask. Homes! There were no homes left the great mass of the people. Every hour, every minute, spent in their new dwellings, amid the new things, only shows more plainly the empty chairs and the loss of all that was near and dear. Then why not go to the graves of the lost ones and spend the day in planting flowers there? Graves! "Why in Grandview Ceme tery to-day there are nearly 800 people buried who were unknown victims of the flood. Several hundred more victims were never found. Their bones are still beneath the sand of the treacherous rivers. There are practically but few known tombs to plant flowers upon ! Toll That Help Obliterate. ""Work! "Work! "Work! Forget! Forget!" "When people awake in Johnstown on Saturday morning that is what they will repeat to themselves. And again the world reaches out 'its hand to Johnstown this time to drop low about sacred thoughts and memories the veil of human sympathy. And the people in striving to "forget" have wrought a great change in Johnstown in one year's time. Their work shows good results. In reviewing the events of tbe ter rible disaster and the work of rebuilding the wrecked city, The Dispatch this morning separates the article on the subject in three parts, viz Johnstown as it was prior to the flood, Johnstown as it was the day after the calamity, and Johnstown as it stands to-day. L. E. Stofiel. IN ITS ZENITH. THE PROSPERITY OF JOHNSTOWN BE FORE THE CALAMITY. A City of Wonderful Growth An Industrial Gateway to Pittsburg How the Pur roDBdlnff Boroughs Thrived Substantial Buildings and a Large Population. Johnstown was always a marvel. It was a city built in a mountain fastness. There were no wide plains on which its streets could be laid out in checker-board fas'jion, broad acreage for its easy expansion in after years. The little delta upon which it was founded lay helplessly locked among tower ing hills. It was almost entirely hemmed in by these great rock-ribbed heights. Approached from any point of the com pass, it was a revelation to strangers. Bound eastward, the tourist, first passing through the gorge of the Conemaugh as it forms the Packsaddla in Chestnnt TIM. thenlplnnging into the shades of Laurel I Hilif isied with wonder if that could be an I iron mill, pointing to the black Cambria smokestacks as he caught a glimpse of them from the gap at Sang Hollow, where the train comes out of the mountain. A Gateway to Pittsburg. Descending the Allegheniesthe traveler from the East watched the tortuous wind ings of the Little Conemaugh as it dashed and foamed westward down the great mouuJf ain slope. Nothing can be wilder than the valley below where South Fork creek enters the river, and there, within a few miles of Johnstown, the traveler's first thoughts were about fishing and hunting. He least expected to find there a bustling, prosperous city, and presently, when, from the gap at Mineral Point, he saw church steeples a score of them large business blocks and monster manufacturing establishments, as tonishment was his only expression. To create and rear a metropolis there in that wild, and, lrom its geographical environ ments, almost impenetrable region, has struck many a man as a triumph. "Why, I thought the first iron mills we would see were at Pittsburg," an English tourist was once heard to say as the train stopped at Johnstown, "and here they are planted down among these mountains." "Aye," was the reply, "but Johnstown is the gateway to Pittsburg." How Is Mad Grown. On Friday morning, May 31, 1889, Johns town was tbe center of population of about 30,000. The town was incorporated in 1831, and started out with less than 700 residents. From its very inception it was an important place in the affairs of Pennsylvania. The eligible passes of the mountains which sur rounded it made it the basis of operations in bnilding the old State canal and the cele brated Allegheny Portage Eailroad. When these joint enterprises began running they brought mnch of the through travel of the United States through Johnstown. The town was where the Portage railroad ended and the western division of the canal com menced. It thus became the depot of traffic and travel. Nor was this condition of things changed much after the Pennsylvania Bail road was built and the canal abandoned. The projectors of the new railroad enterpfise believed they would lose nothing by leaving Hollidaysburg to the south and Ebensburg to the north of their main line, but they could not afford to slight Johnstown in this manner. That town had too much business and had become too powerful to be passed by. An Impetus to Industry. From the building of the Cambria Iron Works in 1853 dates the genuine progress of Johnstown. The surrounding mountains were rich in coal, ore and limestone, and the beginning of the work of constructing the Pennsylvania Eailroad gave an immense impetus to this industry. It was evidently foreseen what the influence of railroads on the iron business would be, and Johnstown proposed to be ready for the iron age. In- ripprl far Tl!llr n IRAQ tliA nnil nfttio mountains in that neighborhood had been --, - .. . wv ...w v.wv v. .u j """ ' : T ' lOtVEE END OF JOHNSTOWN AFTEE THE FLOOD. worked by charcoal furnaces. It was in 1852 that the Cambria Iron Company was chartered, but it was a kw years before such an immense establishment as the projectors proposed could be made to run smoothly and with any reasonable promise of financial re turn. The man who finally did make the enterprise a success was Hon. Daniel J. Morrell. It was while servinc at its head that he was elected to Congress, and after ward to the Presidency of the American Iron and Steel Association. A Great Enterprise. By 1871 the Cambria works was not sur passed in size by any of the mills at Pitts burg. Since then it has steadily grown. At the time of the flood the concern covered dozens of acres of ground, operated 35 miles of railroad tracks about its buildings, worked its own coal mines and coke works ovens, and owned 1,500 cars on which to move raw and finished materials. More than 7,000 men were in the company's em ploy at this date one year ago. Nearly a mile above their main factories the company also operated the Gauticr Steel Works, and tbe buildings were enormous in size. With such an army of workmen, and with nearly 1,000 tenement houses owned by the company and rented to their em ployes, this cornapation of course contrib uted immeasurably to the growth of Johns town. Owing to the extreme narrowness of the valley at this point, and the smallness of the delta on which the business portion of Johnstown is built, thepopulation spread to the neighboring hillsides lor homes. Then they crossed over the summits of some of these hills and built their houses in the ad jacent valleys. Snrronndlna; Boroughs Created. Thus were the surronnding boroughs created. They grew and flourished. Cluster ing all abont Johnstown they made the parent city their market place. Though different in name, they were all one at heart. Cambria's men lived in all of the boroughs, and though the separate town Councils re! fused to consolidate, that pretty little pnrk on Johnstown's main street was the prome nade and common property of all the 30,000 people in the eight or ten miles of Cone maugh Valley. Of these surrounding boroughs Conemaugh borough was the most prosperous. It was incorporated in 1849 and was thickly settled up to Green Hill. The population at the time of the flood was supposed to be about 3.200 souls. Still hisher up the river iB Woodvale. It was laid out in 1854. Here were located the works of the Johnstown Manufacturing Company, and the Chemical Company. People lived Iu 300 Mine Homes. East Conemaugh and Franklin, half a mile farther up the river, were in turn suburbs for Woodvale. Coming back to Johnstown we find Kernsville on the south shore of Stony creek. It was verv thickly populated at the time of the flood, Morris street being a business thoroughfare, with all its cross streets thickly settled. Kerns ville was to Johnstown proper what Alle gheny City is to Pittsburg. Below Johns town city was Millville, incorporated in 1658. Here are the rolling mills and the foundry. On Prospect Hill $re located hundreds of workmen's homes. On the western bank of Conemaugh river lay Cam bria, which was surveyed in 1853 and incor porated in 1862. Its residences were made up entirely of the company's employes. Cambria was reputed to have had at the time THE PITTSBURG of the flood a population of 2,200. That in cluded Morrellville. Jobnstown's Substantial Character. As the market place for this large population the heart of Johnstown was most substantially built up. Large stores lined Washington, Main and Clinton streets. The iron company put up large brick buildings as offices. Opposite stood the Cambria Library, a gift to the citi zens in 1881. It was fitted up elegantly, had commodious reading rooms and 8,000 vol umes of standatd books. Close by stood the Cambria Club House, another handsome in stitution of the iron company. In the li brary and club house was inaugurated a system of popular education in 1881 for the benefit of the workmen. Competent in structors taught free classes of mechanical and free-hand drawing, writing, mathemat ics, chemistry, geology and political econ omy. Prosperity took many other forms. A hospital was erected on Prospect Hill in 1886. Large, handsome store blocks, were built three and four stories high, and some of the stateliest residences of which Western Pennsylvania could boast ornamented that part of to wn known as the Point. Hundreds of th2 smaller artisans had got to that point where they had built and now owned their own homes. A degree of thrift and prosper ity marked the whole population. Several banks were snpported, and back of the busi ness men was a solidity that promised much. Ann thia WIB day May 31, 1889. Jinu mis was tionnstown at tne dawn of THE DESTROYING GIANT. THE TREMENDOUS POWER THAT LURKED IN SOUTH FORK RESERVOIR. Weight nnd Velocity of the Vast Body of Water Greater Than Nlnsara Dow it Crashed Woodrnlo Out of Existence und Descended Upon Johnstown. For several days there had been heavy rains in the Allegheny Mountains. But on Thursday night, May 30, began that phe nomenal rainfall which, lasting several hours, resulted in swelling -every mountain stream to enormons proportions. The old canal reservoir, known as Lake Conemaugh, lay close to the water-shed, and into it poured all the surplus of the week's rain. The lake, although discharging its best through a contracted spill-way, gradually arose at the rate of a loot an hour for several hours before the break. The water at its normal level lay seven or eight feet below the crest of the dam, so that by 2:30 on Friday afternoon the stream was level with the crest of the dam and began to flow over the top of it. Calamity then seemed certain. It was apparent that no earth dam was capable of sustaining such a vast body1 of water, or oj long remaining solid with streamlets running over it. Tbe Giant Unchanged. The great dam gave way at 3 o'clock. Eye witnesses say tbat it burst with a loud report like thunder. -A year has passed, and the grass is now ! "l' '' ' "'i miTi ni-- urn m - r i . i.mi .,i ...- . : r. - . r.. . PITTSBURG-, THURSDAY, MAT 29, 1890. growing on the bed of that reservoir. Walk ing quietly over it, it is almost impossib.2 to conceive the gigantic power which was set loose from its forest-clad sides that afternoon. At its normal condition this basin held 480,000,000 cnbio feet of water, but at the break it contained nearly 640, 000,000 cubic feet, or say 20,000t000 net tons. How vast a bodv of water this is will be better appreciated by comparing it with Niagara Falls. The discharge over the falls is in the neighborhood of 18,000,000 cubic feet per -minute. An Awful Force, It would therefore take nearly 35 minutes for Niagara Falls to discharge an equal body of water. The reservoir was emptied, all but the last harmless drippings, in .just about that time, so that during its continu ance a body of water substantially equal to the vast flood of Niagara Falls was pouring through the 429 feet gap in the dam. The to'al energy communicated to the water, Which had to eTMPnd Unslf in onmn wav before the water could come to rest, and which was in fact nearly all expended be- BAFT OF "WRECKAGE ABOVE THE STONE BRIDGE. Sketched by The Dispatch Artist Saturday, June 1, 1889. tween the dam and Johnstown bridge, was the inconceivably vast aggregate represented by 20,000,000 tons falling 400 feet. The Destruction Beelns. With every inch and foot of progress this terrible force increased. Engineers say that under this theory the water would have had a velocity of about 100 miles an hour. That, due to tbe 160-leet fall of Niagara Falls, is about 70 miles per hour. So that, allowing for all frictional losses, the man who re ceived the direct blow of water had about the same chances of escaping alive as he would have had had he received a blow from Niagara Falls itself. Down the valley of the Conemaugh it swept. Mineral Point was entirelvwiped out. East Conemaugh was almost depopulated and every building swept away. Of the 300 or 400 houses in Woodvale but one was left, that bein thejarge flouring mill. The whole end of it" was wrecked. Over 200 dwellings and two scores of stores in Cone maugh borough were picked up and dashed to pieces. Intermingled with all this wreck age were the fragments of half a dozen rail road bridges, the iron from several freight carsj whole sections of passenger coaches, while the water had actually played "foot ball" with 30 locomotives. In and among all this ruin hundreds of people struggled for their lives. And every minute marked a dying gasp of some. Bearing on its breast this awfnl mass of debris and carrying to death these hundreds of human beings, the flood reached Johns town proper at either 4 o'clock or 4:10. And in 15 minutes Johnstown too was a wreck. Street after street succumbed. Block after block went to pieces. The gloom of night settled down upon a ruined city. What the dawn of day on Saturday dis closed is given in another section of this ar ticle. THE EAILROAD BEBOTLT. Tho Qnlck Kocovery or tbe P. E. K., From Its Losses Along the Concmnugb. A million dollars would hardly cover the loss of the Pennsylvania Eailroad between SouthFork station and Sang Hollow. Tracks, it will be remembered, were washed away by the mile, costly bridges were broken to CLEARING AtVAY THE WEECE: AT THE STONE BRIDGE. Sketched by The Dispatch Artist Thursday, Juno 6, 1889. pieces, and hundreds of cars smashed to splinters and more than 30 locomotives ruined. The traffic of the line was delayed for nearly one month. All this damage has been repaired. The bridges between Johnstown and South Fork station have been constructed entirely of stone, in design and shape much like the great stone bridge which withstood the flood at Johnstown. New roadbeds have been built, and much of the land, filled in several feet deep by the sand of the inunda tion, has been reclaimed with steam shovels. The Pennsylvania Eailroad in that region is solider than it ever was. It took nearly all year, however, to effect this change, and the tents and huts of the hundreds of labor ers grew to be a familiar sight along the Conemaugh. , THE AWFUL BLIGHT. Johnstown as it Appeared on the Morning After the Flood. DESOLATION ON EVERY BIDE. Two-Thirds of the City Bereft of Its Homes and Business Blocks. A BARREN WASTE D0WH AT THE P0IHT. The Blockade of Wreckage oa llain Street aaa the Knln Eierywhere. Washington street parallels the river. Originally there stood between it and the I stream the B. & O. freight yards, storage depots and freight sheds, besides a couple of small hotels, the Opera House, and Wood, Morrell & Co.'s big store. They weie all washed away except the store, and as shown by illustrations, that was partially de stroyed. Not a vestige was left on the street of Turner Hall or the Mansion House. Three squares of this street, from Clinton to Walnut, were densely populated, but its 70 saloons, its many Bhops, its neat little restanrants, and all the dwellings were swept away. Nothing was left of the Pub lic Library but a heap of jumbled bricks. All the books were destroyed, and the li brarian, Mrs. Hirst, was lost. The Western Union telegraph office hard by was obliter ated, and its heroine, Mrs. Ogle, went down with it. The iron bridge to the Pennsylva nia Eailroad and the wooden bridge behind the company store were both snapped asun der as though made of paper. From this place clear down to the Point all was a chaotic level of wreckage on the morning after the flood, AT THE FABE. Locust street presented an odd appearance on the Saturday morning succeeding the deluge. It parallels Washington street one square farther bactc. A large number of its. own buildings withstood the shock, but the thoroughfare was literally jammed with the wreckage from other streets, and this more than anything else damaged the houses along Locust. Yet in Harry Zimmerman's livery stable here 30 horses perished. Two or three wooden houses opposite were miss ing, and a large one leaned for many months at a dangerous angle. The group of brick residences in the rear of the Methodist church were badly knocked in and scraped. They nearly all lost bay windows orporches. Mr. Frohneizer s home across the street was demoralized in the front, and several more gaps and breaks in the line of dwellings bring the visitor to what was once the city park. Here stood 35 trees once, the trunks of which were as large around as a big man's body. Everyone was wrenched out by the roots. None were left, and the grassy plot was covered deep with wreck age. Not a building was left standing on the north side of the park, and from Frank lin street to Locust is only a remembrance so far cerned. as the original buildings are con- an Awful spectacle. Main street was an awful spectacle on Saturday morning, June 1. East of the park the business buildings on this thor oughfare remained standing, with the ex ception of here and there where a weaker structure had departed, leaving a gap to tell the story. But it seemed as though the street had become a vast and ghastly sewer. Wreckage lay along its whole length.packed in solidly from sidewalk to sidewalk, walled tightly against the buildings on either side, and rising in its ugly mass to the middle of the second-story windows, in some instances being level with the eaves of the smaller houses. In other words, when you walked over the surface of the debris on Main street, yon walked at such an elevation that DISPATCH to look in any of the, second-story windows of the remaining tiuildings beside you, it was necessary to stoop; while here and there, branching suddenly to the right or left, you could continue to promenade, upon the housetops. "Under this mountain of spars, timbers, iron rods and beams, broken furniture, pianos, stoves, freight cars, etc., there lay corpse upon corpse. Here pro truded from the ruin a human arm, there a foot, and early on that Saturday morning it required care to keep from crushing in the blackened head of some body with, your feet. Walking, jumping, climbing and hopping over this uneven flooring, 10, 12 and 15 feet above the buried pavement, it was possible on that sorrowing morning to see what Main street looked like. ACEES OF DEBRIS. Beginning at Adams street, 'where Main street starts, the view may extend westward. Feeder is the first cross street. Here and there a frame building is lying on its side or twisted completely around. Under your feet are sectional parts of houses, which drifted up into the street from the back water of last night- Eailroad street, as seen from the corner, is a mere shadow on one side and nothing on the other. A hiatus of many acres is literally stocked with debris. Henderson &Anderson'B fnrniture store, Cover's livery stable and a score of pretty homes and neat shops are in the ruin at this point. This street was in the direct path of the flood, and on all sides of Main street houses were literally hewn down. At the corner of Main and Bedford streetsstood Swank's brick block, four stories high. It was filled with agricultural implements and hardware. A two-story brick was mortised in the north end, where the streets form an acute angle. A grocery occupied the ground floor and the Eerald was printed upstairs. Both of these substantial brick buildings were razed to the ground. STOBES ALL OtTTTED. The roof of the Swank block was splin tered all over the site of Daniel McLaugh lin's mansion. On the southwest corner of these two streets was a frame house which its taller brick neighbors crushed into a jelly, a family under it all. Louther & Green's block opposite had a corner knocked out from pavement to cor nice, the break enlarging the higher It got, laying bare the exhibits of McMullin's bil liard rooms and Burgraff 's photograph gal lery on the top stories. The Hager block, straight across Main street, was only fin ished and occupied the previous March, and the flood left one-third of it in ruins, This, falling, destroyed Geis & Schry's new store. Farther along the Merchants' Hotel is reached. Part of the rear was thrown down, tatting with it the porch and two guests. The entire building had to be torn down, so badly damaged was it. The next building'was also DAMAGED BEYOND BKDEMPTION, and Luckhardt's frame close by was almost completely demolished. The south side of the street had the largest stores in Johns town. The walls were left solid, but owing to the height of the driftwood all plate glass fronts were crushed in, and the water and wreckage freely floated in through store rooms and second-story apartments. Thus every store establishment was wrecked. If stocks were not swept entirely out of exist ence, they were too badly water-soaked to be of any value afterward. There was no HO"W THE such thing as salvage in Johnstown, as there often is in cases of big conflagrations or explosions. The destruction was com plete to a nicety. IN AN AVBT SHAPE. John Thomas' building at this point de fied the elements and its roof furnished a substantial perch for 100 people on the black Friday night. All around it, the wreckage piled to the depth of 25 feet. On the corner of Main and Franklin streets the Opera House rested in an awry position. It had floated there clear from Washington street. Back of this lot is the postoffico on Franklin street. The lront was knocked out of it. The Tribune office in the second story had a bit of sidewalk hustled out. type pied and presses damaged. John Dibert & Co.'s bank on the sonthwestern corner stood. The park beginn at the northwest corner of the street here, and Frazier's drug store, which faces it, lost a part of its walls. On tbat morning after the disaster a box car and an old frame house occupied the middle of the street. They had been driven there by the watery catapult from South Fork. A few doors lower down the First National Bank stood staunchly against the pressure. THE nEABT OF TOWN. Here is Alma Hall, four stories in height, a store and gas office below, law offices and the lodge rooms higher up. On the night of the flood over 300 refugees found shelter in this building, and the thrilling story of their awful suspense there, put in amidst utter darkness, has be come familiar to the whole world. It was perhaps1 the second strongest building in town, and was not damaged except by mud and water staining the walls and furniture. From Dr. Lohman's residence, at the park corner, to Market street, the north side of Main was left a blank. The doctor's hand some residence was only slightly disfigured, although at the time it looked bad enough. John Fulton's spacious residence on tbe next lot was entirely demolished. The pub lic building which contained Council cham bers, an office for the burgess, the head quarters of the Police Department and the lockup, was leveled to the ground, even the bricks never having been found. Twenty feet of watJer in the lockup strangled the only prisoner there, a man named John Mc Kee. Then came another extensive blank on either side of the street, where a large nnmber of substantial houses were swept away. BEAUTIFUL HOMES BUINED. The remaining squares along Main street comprised the finest brick house" which Johnstown, or even Western Pennsylvania, outside the large cities, could boast of. A rod of the back wall of the large Cambria Clubhouse wandered away. Jacob Freund'a mansion lost the rear end nnd a quarter sec tion of the upper side. At least 20 of these beautiful homes in the immediate vicinity passed down into the creat raft of wreckage at the stone bridee. A picture of Colonel J. P. Linton's ruined home is printed with this article to illustrate tbe character of the losses in this end of town. It was left stand ing utterly alone, houses by tbe score having been swept away lrom all its sides. Here the sweep of the flood was greatest. Look around you, and on Saturday morning you would have seen nothing but acres and acres of open territory. They were carpeted with a single layer of bricks, or else piled several feet deep with' the sand that came down with both Conemaugh river and Stony SQ0P iWfci Jkm$rr creek, which here at the Point form a con fluence. A PICTURE OF CHAOS. Not a building or landmark remained to show where thousands lived the prrvioos day. From the Point at tbe stone bridge east for many squares the scene was squalid in the extreme. Fires usually leave charred walls to mark the spot, and even earth quakes left the tall chimneys of Lisbon standing. But here on the lower end of Johnstown nothing was left. The vast void made one ache. Whole blocks of buildings had been swept away. Then the sand filled JReporUn' Tenit a Tear Ago. ud the streets, and even paved roadways could not be found for months afterward. Elsewhere in this Johnstown anniversary article is reproduced a photograph of a bird's eye view of this lower section of the city as it stands to-day, rebuilt and rebuild ing with a large number of frame dwellings. To get a more forcible realization of the resurrection there, remember, while you are looking at the picture, that on the morning after the flood the whole territory included in the picture was as level as your tennis conrt or croquet ground, except a ragged fringing of shanties and frame structures along the bank of Stony creek, which in some manner bad been spared, while solid brick palaces melted down to doom. CLINTON STREET SCABS. Clinton street was built up principally of stores from Washington to Main. The upper floors of most of these were occupied by families. In their midst was the princi pal hotel of Johnstown, the Hnlbert House. It was an imposing brick structure, but it was picked up by the seething torrent and dashed so completely to atoms that nothing but a piece of the roof remained lying across the cellar to notify visitors where the hos telry formerly stood. Fifty-one guests and attaches perished in the house, it will be re membered. The falling and floating ruins of this immense building sweeping against others in the neighborhood is known to have demolished half a dozen more structures. One of these was McAteer's Hotel. The loss of these buildings created a big gap on Clinton street, on one side of which other buildings, not so strong, remained standing. Thus did some very strange things happen in the Johnstown flood. Yet, all these fi LAND LAYS. standing houses had their fronts knocked in and goods destroyed. BLIGHTED KERNVTLLE. Go to the other side of Main street and travel toward Kernville. There, hundreds of houses left their moorings and floated away. The destruction was great here because the community is built along the bank of Stony creek, and the houses are mostly frames. The wreckage covered acres there that morning. The "Unique Eink was carried three-quarters of a mile away from its foundations. Disleveled trees, fragments of railroad cars, sections of bouses, and a vast amount of drift of every description lay scattered among the tombs of Sandyvale Cemetery up here. Monuments were broken down, headstones, landed in the fojiage of treetops and the built mounds over each and every grave leveled in com' mon dust. The architectural beauty of a town and city layB as much in its churches as in other public buildings or business blocks. Twenty or more congregations had edifices of their own in Johnstown. Many of them were TfTier The DUpaich JVittcs Fas Wired From. beautiful, several imposing in design and symmetry. The First M.E.Church, being a lofty strncture entirely ot stone, stood like a bulwark against the water, and saved the parsonage, just adjoining, with ten or 15 persons enclosed, including the pastor and his family. CHURCHES LITTERALLY ANNIHILATED. The German Lutheran Church, worth $30, 000, was totally annihilated. Not even a shingle of it was left within a mile of its foundations, Eev. J. P. Lichtenburg and his family of four went down with their home, and it was months before their bodies were found. They lived in Johnstown only a month. The briok house of David Cover was driven against the St. John's Catholic Church on Locust street. Mrs. M. Woolf, who occupied half of the dwelling, was baking bread at her stove at the time. The house took fire, and the church was ignited. There with the water surging half way up to the roof the two buildings were actually consumed bv fire. The parochial residence which adjoined was also destroyed by the conflagration which lasted until midnight Some days later the charred walls of the church had to be blown up with dynamite to keep the building from falling on people. The church was elegantly furnished, and a loss of $150,000 was the result. The con vent at tbe corner of Clifton and Locust streets, which was an adjunct to this church, was almost whollv demolished. The escape of the Slaters of Charity from this structure Continued on Twtfth Page, PAGES9T0I2. THOSE WHO PERISHED List of the Dead "Who Have Been Identified Up to Date. UNKNOWN COUNTED BY HUNDREDS The Estimate oftneioss of Life Will Hot Fall Bhori of 3,000. H0WH0EGUE EEC0KDS AEB C0HTIHUED Eednctta la tls Wortinj Pores of tat Cambria Irsa WorbSererelyFelt. Even a year after the flood, it is impossible to state exactly how many people perished. The official records do not tell the tale, for in the first few days of the intense excite ment many persons recovered bodies of their relatives, buried them themselves and then moved to distant places without reporting the facts. In other instances whole families of foreigners were lost, and being comparatively unknown in a large manufacturing community like Johnstown, nobody has since inquired how many were in the family or how many of their bodies are yet undiscovered. The fact that bodies are still being dug out of the sand and debris every week shows that there are very many bones yet unearthed. Many people believe that scores and hundreds of corpses still lay buried by the five and seven feet or mud which has filled in the bed of Conemaugh river and Stony creek. ITEABLY 3,000 DROWNED. Eev. D. J. Beale, D. D., one of the his torians of Johnstown's calamity, says in his book that nearly 4,000 persons were drowned. J. J. McLaunn, of Hamsburg, the author of a magnificent vol ume describing Jobnstown's woe, puts the total about 3,200. He adds: "The official report of the 8 morgues show 2,253 bodies were handled. Another basis of comparison is the membership of the churches, The pas tor of one church with 600 communicants counted the loss at 200, another with a mem bership of 300 gave 100 as lost. This is not counteracted by the estimate of several of tbe Cambria Iron Company's foremen that 1,000 of the 5,000 employes on the rolls were drowned. They were mostly strong men, and a loss of one in five in such a class might mean a much greater loss in the general population. There were only 3,000 ot the 5,000 former employes of the Cambria Iron Company remaining. Some of the host pre sumed to have gone away immediately after the calamity to other places may, like Ten nyson's mute-steered dead, have gone 'up ward with the flood.' " The new directory of Johnstown, pub lished in September, by C. B. Clark, of Al toona, is not far off this estimate. At the timeof the flood the whole edition, which was in a book bindery, was lost. From the proof sheets the names were obtained and printed as they were before the flood, with a special record ot those lost. The number of drowned is put at 3,500. Messrs. Gibbs and Akers, of the Johns town Tribune, believe the number of dead will be under 3.000. State Commissioner J. B. Scott says only 2,200 perished. THE UNKNOWN DEAD. The number of unknown dead Is still large. Last November the work of raising the corpses from temporary graveyards all along the Conemaugh "Valley was completed and the bodies reinterred in Grandview "Cemetery at Johnstown. Up to this time about 800 unknown dead are buried in this cemetery. In June the last morgue was closed. Since then "Undertaker John Hen derson has continued the record of bodies recovered. As each body comes to him he enters a full description on the public record, numbers the description in numeri cal order, then buries the body, and on the grave plants a stake bearing a number tally ing with the book number. In this way a complete description has been preserved of most bodies, and with each grave numbered it is possible to still reclaim lost ones. Many bodies, however, were too far decayed to give any description, and plenty of grave3 will never be aught else than "unknown." But now, after a year's time, it is not likely tbat many ol tne ouu unknown ones will ne identified. NAMES OF THE KNOWN DEAD. A list of the known dead, corrected np to this week with additions from Mr. John Henderson's official list, is as follows: ANDERSON, JOHN; Adams, Henry Clay; Alexander, John G.: Alexander, Mrs. John U.: Andrews, John, Sr.; Abler, August; Abler, Miss Louisia; Abler, George: Alberter. Annie; Alt, George;Alt.Mrs. George; Allison, Florence; Alexander, Aurailar;; Akers, Alrar; Arthur, Mrs. William; Albetter, Miss; Atkinson. John; Auburey, Thomas; Abler. Louis; Abler, Lain; Abler. Lena; Anderson, Samuel; Aubler. Kato; Alberter, Mrs. Teresa: Amps. Mr.; Amps, Mis.; Amps. Mary; Aaron, Mrs. H-B.; Aaron, son of MM.H.B. BRINKET, ELMER: Burns, John; Baldwin, George; Barbor, Harry 8.; Brown. Peter. Brown, Sadie; Brown, Emma; Butler, Sarah A.: Bouus. William; Bending. Jessie; Bending; Elizabeth; Barrett, James; Benford, Mrs. E. E.. . Brennan, ; Brennan. ; Brennan, ; I Bowman. Nellie; Brady, John; Bantly. William;-' Bryan. William; Barnes. Lizzie; Brinker. Miss? Bricker. Henry; Bickley, D. E,; Bnnkey, Dr. G; C; Benshoff, Arthur; Benson, son of Reuben. Boyle, Thomas-Bishop, Julius; Bagley, Will; lam: Bradley, Thomas; Baumer, Little; Ben shoff, Adam; Bantly. Mrs. William; Bantly: child of William; Bowman. Charles; Brindle. Mollle: Byrne. Ella; Brawler, Maggie. Benford, son of Mrs. E. ,; Benford, Jennie or Jessie; Brown, Mrs. (colored); Bruhm, Clans.; Bryan. Elizabeth M.: Burkhart. Ma Mollle: Boyer, Solomon; Blongh, Emanuel; Buchanan, John R.; Bnchanan, R. L.; Beam, Cbarles; Beam. Dr. L. T.; Bi-hof, Cbarles; Barley. Viola; Bowman. .; Baker, Mrs. Notion; Brennan. Mrs. Edward; Brennan, Mary: Brennan, ; Benshoff, J. Q. A; Blair, Mrs.: Refiuke, Cbarles: Beam. Dr. W. C; Beam. Mrs; W. C: Batter. Charles F.; Benrord. Maria; Benford, May: Bates, Mrs. Annie; Beck. Mrs. William; Bracken, Kate; Bracken, Minnie; Bopp, Mamie; Bitner, A. B.; Bowers, George; Balr, Rosa; Bridgss, Emma; Bovle. Charles. Brawley, John; Brawley, George; Brawley, Jacob; Buchanan, Kate J.; Bending. Mrs.; Byers, Catberine; Bnr ket, Frank;Brown, Peter: Barley, Mrs.:Bradly, Mrs. Eliza; Beam, Roscoe: Bopp. Jacob;BIocn, Louisa; Benicb, John C: Bairg. Charles; Boeh ler, Annie: Barker, Mrs. Ed; Brady, Mrs. J.; Bopp, Monacia; Bunting, Mrs.; Blough, 3. T. CONSTABLE, PHILLIP; Clark, Mrs. J. B.; Cronin, Daniel: Cox, James G.; Carlm, Jonathan; Carroll, Thomas: Campbell, Peter; Cbrlstman, Mrs. A. Cj Christie, A. C; Conmors, Mrs. Mary; Craig. J. J.: Craig, Mrs. J. J.; Cooper. Otbo; Cunz, Robbie; Cunzl Lydla; Coad, John; Coad, Mrs. John; Coad. Willie; Carroll, Rosie: Called, Annie; Clark, Thomas: Corniel son, Maggie; Constable, JIrs.;CIark.Mrs. Owen; Craig, Mrs. Catharine; Corr. Mrs. Sarah P.; Creed. David; Cope, Mrs. Marcaret: Coleman. Jessie; Craig. Christopher; Lraig. Annie: Cnl llton, Mrs. Frank; Cooper, Mrs. (colored):Cush, Mrs. P.; Cusb, P.. Sr.; Coutbamer, Mr.; Cosb. Josepb: Cusb, J. Daniel; .Curry, Robert B.; Coby, Mrs. Eliza; Chinaman; Chinaman: Casey, William; Coster, W. II.: Clark. J. H.; Creed, Eliza; Caduean. Mrs. William; Cadngan, Annie; Cole, John; Conrad, Mrs. M. DEVLIN, LIZZIE; Degnan, Mrs. John; Davjs, Thomas: Driscoll, Jessie; Delancy, Mrs.; Dougherty. Mary: Davis, Mrs. Aaron; Davis, Mrs. Pblllio: Dobbins, Mrs. J. B: Davis, M. L.: Davis, MaryiDimond. Frank; DeFranee, Mrs. H. T.; Dunn, Mary; Diebl, Carrie: Dillon James; Dibert, John: Dibert. Blanche; Downey, Mrs. Mary: Davis, Frank: Drew, Mr. Mary, Downs, Teresa: Dixon, Mrs. R.; Dyer, Mrs.; Davis, Mrs. Walter: Davis. Miss Delia; Dernla, August; Davis, William L.; Davis. Clara; De Wald, Charles; Dimond, Mrs. Ann; Diller, Rev. A. P.; Diller, Isaac; Diller, Mrs. Marlon; DW nant, Lola; Daley, F. J.; Davis, Frederick; Dowling. Mrs. M.: Dowlins; Catherine: Diller. Jnlia: Duncan. Mrs. Dr.; Downs. Thomas, Downs. Catberine: Dailey. Mrs. Ann; Dolau. Micbael: Doyle, Maggie; Downs, Kate: Downs, Teresa; Dorns, Ausust; Dnsrk. John; Dow, W, F.: Day, John R.; Day, daughter of John B-, Dorsey, John D.; Dougherty. Maggie; Dough, erty, Mary; Davis, Mrs. Thomas; Davis. Beese- h'uAJMoun, .-, .cans, mra. noan;,o- xvr: !! vlfah Tnhn.W(ri Annio.lTlHi.. ft K .m. T. Aiay.n1.,w,t-.fMiH,MiinAnM( 4 . 1ISSSBU& . -i