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Female. Badge of Junior Mechanics 43 cents in change. Buried in lot 143, "Grand View.". Black stockings. No coat nor vest. Short full face. Pearl buttons. 18 April 2007 . Schotz.". Rubber eraser. How many victims were never identified in the Johnstown flood? Plain string and bag around her neck. Johnstown, Pa. Age twenty. Suppose to be James Haltzman. One old knife only. Blue shirt White undershirt. Heavy cotton socks. Male. Identified 12th August by her sons, Matthew and D. A. Matthews. Red hair. Gingham waist. Boy. Bunch keys Match safe. Brown and gray striped knee pants. Brown eyes. Supposed to be Mrs. Griffin. Age eight years. Dark, luxuriant hair. Medium height. Received valuables of 277. Age about sixty years. Sandy mustache and goatee. Button gaiters. Blue and white flowered sateen basque. 6. Wort near ear. Earrings plain gold. Age about fifty. Very long dark hair, plait in back. Injured July 4th, on P. R. R. and died from effects same day. Male. Dark clothes. Age thirty. Light muslin dress. Female. Black handle knife, two blades broken 11 cents in change. Identified as Robert Buchanan. Brought from Sheridan station. Empty purse Buried at Prospect, June 9th. Gauze undershirt. Height 3 feet 2 inches. Blue eyes. Woolen cloth waist barred gray and black. Blue and white striped ticking skirt. Furniture dealer. Age twenty. [20] William Shinn, a former partner of industrialist Andrew Carnegie, became the new president of ASCE in January 1890. Three pair hose, two pair black, one pair black and white stripe. Match safe. Female. Pair of new gum boots. Knee pants and brown and black striped, good. Blue calico dress with pearl buttons. Reddish brown hair. Brown hair. He gave the investigation report to outgoing Becker to decide when to release it to the public. "[23], Nonetheless, individual members of the South Fork Club, millionaires in their day, contributed to the recovery in Johnstown. Infant child of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Viering aged one year. Weight 90 to 100. Age about ten. Black quilted skirt. Medium weight. Male. 7. Brown hair. Deformed. Auburn hair. Plaid wool dress with metal buttons. Age about ten. Weight about 150. Black stockings. Red underwear. Bunch of keys. Age thirty-one Weight 140. Silver tobacco box, with name and date, Jan., 1888 Silver open-faced watch and gold chain. Blue shirt. Daughter of Mr. John Gardner. Age not known. Spring heeled shoes. Black hair mixed with gray. Weight about sixty-five. Dark clothes. Brown eyes. Gum boots. Hulbert house, Johnstown, Pa. Two plain gold rings, one marked "Sister" inside. . Dark wool shirt pleated in front. Very much decomposed. Johnstown Flood. Weight 140. Dress with brown woolen waist. Female. Height 5 feet 7 inches Weight 145. Calico dress, brown figure. Female. Age five years. Age about thirty. One body was even recovered 100 miles away in Steubenville, Ohio (Coleman 2019). Height 4 feet. Supposed to be the daughter of Patrick Fagan. Red moustache. Calico dress. Boy. Weight 100. Pearl buttons. Red and black striped shirt. Jersey jacket. Leather belt Piece tar rope around waist. No clothing. Calico dress. Male Weight 90. Age thirty Height 5 feet. $2.56 money. White. White muslin. Age fifteen. Two pocket-knives. 15 (11thed.). Height 5 feet Fine buttoned gaiters, Male Age twelve. Johnstown, PA had always been prone to flooding, but nothing could compare to the tumult that unfolded after a nearby decrepit dam gave out. 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", Willis Fletcher Johnson wrote in 1889 a book called, Gertrude Quinn Slattery, who survived the flood as a six-year-old girl, published a memoir entitled. Male. Female. Valuables turned over to Mrs. Lee. Plain gold ring with initials, "K. L. R." Plain gold ring and earrings with stone setting. Hazel eyes. Double chain with square slide and square locket, charm black stone set on one side and blue stone set on the other. St. John's Cemetery. Male. 49, No. Glove on left hand. Gold spectacles. Scapular around her neck. Height 5 feet 6 inches Black and white striped skirt. Brown hair. Those who reached attics or roofs, or managed to stay afloat on pieces of floating debris, waited hours for help to arrive. Weight about 75. Silver watch. Male. Development included lowering the dam to make its top wide enough to hold a road and putting a fish screen in the spillway. Gray pants and coat. Supposed to be Mr. Evans, Machinist. One dollar gold ear-rings. Identified by D. M. Given. Supposed to be Mrs. Reese, wife of J.W. Age sixteen to eighteen. Gingham apron. Age about twelve. One plaited ring. Age about twenty. Debris at the Stone Bridge covered thirty acres,[18] and clean-up operations were to continue for years. Age about 55. Knee breeches. Jacob Nolen says that John Thomas (?) Black hose. Height 5 feet 5 inches. Height 5 feet 3 inches. Of Woodvale's 1,100 residents, 314 died in the flood. Auburn hair. Light drawers. Small earring, white setting. Female. Johnstown, Pa. Black cloth pants. 8 comments. Hair gray. Female. 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. Weighs about one hundred and eighty. Red hair. White undershirt. Two rings on left hand. Male. Height 5 feet 6 inches. Long gold breast-pin with stone setting. Male. Height 5 feet 9 inches Black hair. Height 5 feet 4 inches. Paper No. Dark brown hair. Blue and white striped skirt. Knee pants. Valuables given to Alex. Short nose. Bar pin with red settings. Buried at Prospect. Rhinestone ear-rings ruby set, two sets lost out. Gray woolen coat. Identified by A. Kerfline. 150 pounds. Female. Can't take it off. Two years old. Calico dress, striped blue and white. Age about fifty. Brown and white gingham apron Gray skirt with white stripes. Two rings with clover leaf pearl set. Male. Heavy brown hair. Female. Figured waist and white underclothing. Buried in St. John's Cemetery. Button shoes. Button shoes, size about 4 1/2. Blue eyes. Male. One bunch of keys. 35 Maple avenue, Woodvale. Black striped vest. Brass hair pin. Age about forty. Hatchet. Sandy hair Plain ring on third finger of left hand (with initials inside "C. R. 101 Centre street, Johnstown, Pa Weight 150. Height 5 feet 10 inches. Revisiting the timing and events leading to and causing the Johnstown Flood of 1889. Tall and large. Button gaiters. Gray hair. For more, visit the section about the 1889 flood in the Archives & Research section of this site. Age forty-five. Age about twelve. Gum garters. Plain gold ring on first finger of left hand. Light hair. Dark hair. Plaid dress, woolen goods, barred red, brown and green. Weight 125 pounds. Weight 135. Black hair. Working seven days and nights, workmen built a wooden trestle bridge to temporarily replace the Conemaugh Viaduct, which had been destroyed by the flood. Age five or six years. Small button shoes. Black lining with red polka dot. Weight 155 Height 5 feet 6 inches Black hair Woolen under skirt, red, brown and white barred cotton underskirt, striped white and red Black cashmere dress, with black glass buttons oval shape. Weight almost 130. Black and white barred flannel skirt. Age three. Supposed to be Paul Geddes. Penknife. Receipt from Charles S. Ruth to party named Schuner or Shuor. Female. Height 5 feet. Height 3 feet. Badly burned. Wife of J. W. Tross. Blue and white checkered bib. Vol. No valuables or other articles. Prospect, June 15th. Sandy hair. Male. Gray mixed undershirt Red flannel shirt. Thin silver ring on third finger of left hand. Wore blue calico dress. Dark pants. Jeff Lees said the body that was found on the 2nd flood of the garage in the 1500 block of Franklin Street around 5:00 p.m. Sunday was severely decomposed. 41, No. Black hair. Along with about half of the club members, co-founder Henry Clay Frick donated thousands of dollars to the relief effort. Height 5 feet 8 inches. Age thirty-five to forty. The small town of Mineral Point, one mile (1.6km) below the viaduct, was the first populated place to be hit with this renewed force. Male Age thirty-nine. Mouth-organ. Age sixty-five. [3] The first town to be hit by the flood was 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. Flash floods are the most dangerous kind of floods, because they combine the destructive power of a flood with incredible speed. Small heart on right arm. Blood set. Oroide watch. Age sixty. Shoes number 5 or 6. Ring with the words, "Gott, Schutz, Dick." White cotton underskirts. Professor of music. Age twenty-two. Buttoned shoes. Light hair. Age about six. Weight 180. Age about twenty. Dark hair. Pearl buttons. 2 1/2. White. Black hair. Two gold rings, one pair ear-drops. Body removed by his brother, Harry W. McKee. At 3:10 P. HISTORY OF THE JOHNSTOWN FLOOD by WILLIS FLETCHER JOHNSON. Height 2 feet 6 inches. Button shoes, spring heels. Male. Blue calico dress. White shirt. On May 30, 1889 the South Fork Dam, which maintained a pleasure lake for wealthy Pittsburgh industrialists and their families, failed due to very heavy rains and poor maintenance by the dam's owners. Age four. Conemaugh Borough. Weight 125. 0:00. Brown hair. Identified by watch and bunch of keys with name on them. Brown mustache. Valuables recovered by brother, T. P. Keedy. B. Bickenton, June 28th, and taken to Philadelphia for internment. Supposed to be Mr. Farrell, of Woodvale. Male. Large key. Weight 150. Weight 80. About thirty-five years of age. Padlock, key and 15 cts. Very black hair. Brown dress. Weight about 150. Female. One stud Taken by friends. Light brown hair. Height 4 feet 9 inches. Weight 160. Male. On May 28, 1889, a low-pressure area formed over Nebraska and Kansas. Age about eight. Age fifty-five. $170 in paper and $75 in gold. Ear-drops. Female. Survivors of the flood were unable to recover damages in court because of the South Fork Club's ample resources. Blue and white barred gingham bib Small chased gold ring. Female. Age about sixteen. Red flannel underskirt striped up and down Left lower jaw deformed. Last summer, Beale's yellowing journals were found in an old Philadelphia carriage-house, shedding new light on a catastrophe that killed 2,209. Full face. Son of Phillip Rapp, of Hornerstown. Bodies filled morgues in Johnstown and river towns downstream until relatives came to identify them. Purse with $5.61. Weight 150. Hosts of martyred little ones, Therefore, the official death toll should be 2,208. Age about nine months. Age fifty five. No valuables. White cotton undershirt. Height 5 feet 6 inches. Breast plate with name of Mrs. W. H. Wilson, Monongahela City. Large pocket-book with papers. Dark hair. Weight 60. Buttoned shoes. Age about twenty-one. The waters carried some bodies as far as Cincinnati 300 miles away. One large set ring. Two rings on right hand. Main street, Johnstown, Pa. Gold watch and chain with charm. Age twenty-four. So did the grim work of recovering the bodies of the dead. Large; about forty years old. Age twenty to twenty-five. Receipt to Robert Bossett, from Geo. Supposed to be Mrs. John C. Clark. Band ring on third finger of left hand. Text. Sandy Vale, by friends, June 15th. Height 5 feet 6 inches. Female. Girl Age about eight years old. Gold watch Breast-pin. Height 4 feet 10 inches White and black striped waist. One rhinestone ear-ring. Brown hair. Brown hair. Body shipped by B.&O. Weight about 120. Weight 75. Knee pants. Female. Age thirty-eight. Rather small face Striped black and white skirt, pleated front and pearl buttons. Female. Age about twenty-two. White muslin skirt. Buttoned shoes. Between twenty and thirty houses were destroyed or washed away, and four people were killed. Black stockings. Male. Red and white barred calico dress. Plain ring on right hand. Daught of James J. Froenheiser. Calico dress. Light hair. Supposed to be a child of John Thomas. Money returned to committee on valuables. High button shoes, spring heel. Buttoned cloth shoes, with patent leather tips. Weight 170. Cut in upper lip. Ring on forefinger of left hand. Blue shirt with large bars on it. Bodies turned up 600 miles away in Cincinnati, and as late as 1911. . Weight 70. In all, 67 deaths were reported in Pittsburgh and 22 in Johnstown. Age about twenty Brown hair. Hazel eyes. Weight 160. White. One old style carved ring. Female. Weight 185. Female. Sent to Prospect. White. Earrings. Female. Black cloth wrapper, buttoned in front to knees. Leaf pattern. Buried at "Prospect," June 9. Died after flood. Brown hair plaited and tied in knot in back. . Male child. Child's gold breast-pin. Blue calico dress with small yellow stripes. Weight 60. Light complexion. Brown and black stripe gray flannel shirt with collar. Body sent to Greensburgh. Weight 130. Female Age ten years. Male. Short sack coat. Weight 40. Small gold ring. Heavy build. Large gold button, oval shape, engraved. Female. Rubber coat and boots. Female. Full face. Porous plaster on breast. Pocket-book $7 35. Black set pin. Height about 5 ft. 5 in. Black pants. $1.10 in silver. Age forty to forty-five. A medal monogram, "J. H. G.". Age twenty. Necktie. Spring heeled shoes. 2:05. Female. Son of Henry Viering. 1 on person. Two dollar bill and one dollar in silver. Height about five feet eight inches. James Reese. Hair sprinkled with gray. Age about eight. The flood caused 17 million dollars in damages. Blue and white barred calico dress. Record of Bodies. Blue and white striped waist. Two bunches of keys Penknife. White. Valuables taken by T.J. Espey. Female. Weight about 128. Short black pants. Male. Female. Morticians traveled by railroad. Black pants. Black woolen socks. Child. Height about 5 feet 6 inches. Wore scapulars. Miles of barbed wire became entangled in the debris in the flood waters. David McCullough has twice received the . Age ten. Bodies filled morgues in Johnstown and river towns downstream until relatives came to identify them. Gold chain with charm, marked "God with us." Full form. Aged. Aged about five years. Black overcoat with rubber buttons. Two rings on finger of left hand. Age thirty-five. Donations for the relief effort came from all over the U.S. and overseas. Police and Johnstown firefighters were dispatched at 1:40 p.m. Saturday as the result of a welfare check call made by family members of the . Gingham apron. Dark blue woolen cloth dress. Boy. By dark, the entire city was a lake anywhere from 10 to 30 feet deep, the destruction so nearly complete that all many could do was pray. Female. A lady about twenty-five years of age. Weight 160. Very dark brown hair. Dark brown hair Weight 65. Removed to Catholic Cemetery. Boy. in coin. Female. White underwear trimmed with embroidery. White shirt. Passenger on the day express Given to R. B. Bates, Racine, Mich. Two breast-pins. Fine laced shoes. Dam-Breach hydrology of the Johnstown flood of 1889 challenging the findings of the 1891 investigation report, Heliyon. Age ten years. Female. Catholic. Ring on left hand. Weight 150. The biggest flood of the first half of the 20th century was the St. Patrick's Day flood of March 1936. Washington street, Johnstown, Pa. Gold watch and chain. Male. Package of Japanese headache cure. Black coat. Height 5 feet 6 inches. Female. Congress gaiters. Light brown hair. Age about twenty-five. Watch chain. Had shoes on. Dark hair. Grand View, June 15th. Brown cloth shirt, plaited in front, small plaits. Long black hair. Low cut shoes. Gray woolen dress with red and white mixed stripes and brass buttons. Female. Male. Valuables taken by her sister, Mrs. Ella Mulhern. Green corded petticoat. Gingham apron. White and black or blue striped collar. Weight 50. Female. Overall, I'd rather have a flood hit a brewery and be filled with barrels than barbed wire. 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. $2.10. Dark hair. Baby. Age six years. White dress with spots. Ten years. Killed on P. R. R. July 14, 1889.