1 / 36

Unit 10 (Ch. 20, Sect. 1)

Unit 10 (Ch. 20, Sect. 1). Galveston, Texas: Basic Facts. Galveston is located on Galveston Island , 50 SE of Houston Galveston has been the home to Native Americans ( Karankawas ) Pirates (Jean Laffite) Revolutionary Governments (Ad interim) Began in April of 1838.

kkennedy
Download Presentation

Unit 10 (Ch. 20, Sect. 1)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Unit 10 (Ch. 20, Sect. 1)

  2. Galveston, Texas: Basic Facts • Galveston is located on Galveston Island, 50 SE of Houston • Galveston has been the home to • Native Americans (Karankawas) • Pirates(Jean Laffite) • Revolutionary Governments (Ad interim) • Began in April of 1838

  3. Galveston, Texas: Basic Facts • Mexico used Galveston as a port due to its naturally deep harbor. • In 1800s Galveston was a center for cottonshipping for Texas and the U S. • Largest city in Texas from 1870-80 • 22,248 people

  4. Loading Cotton in Galveston

  5. “Wall Street of the Southwest” • During the late 1800s Galveston was Texas’ most refined city. • Beautiful architecture • Galveston enjoyed its role as the financial center of Texas, a true white-collar city. • First Texas city to have: • electric lights • telephone • baseball team

  6. Ashton Villa Built 1859; one of first brick structures in Texas; survived 1900 storm

  7. The Bishops Palace Built 1893; Hundreds of survivors stayed here during 1900 storm

  8. The Grand 1894 Opera House Still in operation today with noted theater plays, musicals, concerts, etc.; Survived 1900 storm

  9. September 1900 • By early September 1900, citizens of Galveston hear about a storm in the Gulf of Mexico • Did not know how powerful it was • Most citizens disregarded the warnings given by Dr. Isaac Cline

  10. Dr. Isaac ClineThe city’s representative of the U.S. Weather Bureau

  11. September 7, 1900 • Dr. Cline notices unusual swells in the gulf as he makes his rounds, but nothing signaling what’s to come. • Dr. Cline received messages from the Weather bureau as Galveston had been put under a storm warning as early as Sept 4. • Galveston’s 38,000 residents go to sleep that night unaware of the fate that awaits them

  12. 1900 Storm Path

  13. September 8, 1900: Early Morning • Early in the day, water begins to flood homes blocks from the beach • Galveston’s highest point above sea level was only 8.7 feet and people begin to move to higher ground and into tall buildings • As flood waters rise the bridge to mainland is destroyed by a boat that escapes its moorings

  14. September 8, 1900: Early Evening • By the early evening, the winds began to blow the deadly storm surge onto the island • A storm surge of 15.7 feet swept over the island and completely submerged it. • People fled to the second and third stories of high buildings • Winds estimated at near 130 mph gusts

  15. September 8, 1900: Late Evening • As people fled the storm, many were killed by flying debris from houses that had been destroyed by wind and water • People clung to anything to keep afloat. • By night time the city was in utter darkness as the gasworks for city lighting was destroyed.

  16. September 8, 1900: Midnight to Early Morning Next Day • By 11:00 pm, the winds turned from the south and the storm began to weaken • By the next morning the storm was gone and devastation was left in its wake: • 6,000-8,000 people dead on the island • 3,600 buildings destroyed • $20 million in damage done to the island = to $700 million today

  17. Causeway before the storm Causeway after the storm

  18. Aftermath • Galveston had to recover • Bodies were collected to be identified and then a plan was made to dispose of them • Bodies were staked on barges and weighted down to be sunk in the gulf. • A few days later the bodies washed back onto the island.

  19. Aftermath • The city officials decided to burn all the bodies. • Many African-American citizens were put in charge of burning the bodies. • Galveston asked for assistance from the governor to prevent riots in the city • 125 people were shot for looting from houses and from the dead bodies.

  20. Changes After the Storm • Galveston changed its City Government to a commission system to speed up the process of recovering • A seawall was proposed to block the island from deadly storm surges • The city planned to raise it’s elevation by bringing in sand from the gulf

  21. The Seawall • Galveston built a 17 foot sea wall that extends for over three miles of the islands coastline. • They increased the elevation of the town by 16 feet • These projects were completed by 1904, causing Galveston to miss out on the oil boom.

  22. Galveston Rebuilds • Galveston resumed its role as a port of entry for Texas immigrants after the Hurricane • However, Houston overtook Galveston as the most important port city in Texas when the Houston Ship Channel was built.

  23. Galveston Today • Galveston’s economy today is based largely on tourism. • It is also the home of the two Universities: • Texas A&M University @ Galveston • University of Texas Medical Branch

  24. Galveston Tourism

  25. Dickens on the Strand • With a nod to the ghost of Charles Dickens (author of A Christmas Carol) past and an eye towards the future, Galveston’s world famous Victorian holiday festival returns to Galveston Island December 4-6. The annual holiday street festival, based on 19th-century Victorian London, features parades, non-stop entertainment on six stages, strolling carolers, roving musicians, bagpipers, jugglers and a host of other entertainers. Costumed vendors peddle their wares from street stalls and rolling carts laden with holiday food and drink, Victorian-inspired crafts, clothing, jewelry, holiday decorations and gift items.

  26. VIEW OF GALVESTON TEXAS LOOKING TOWARDS THE GULF

More Related