Read For Sale —American Paradise Online
Authors: Willie Drye
198. And it may have been worse at Guayama:
Monthly Weather Review
, September 1928, p. 351
198. In Coamo, only about eighteen miles northwest of where the storm came ashore, Felicia Cartegena: “The Hurricane's Tragic Toll,” no byline,
The Literary Digest
, October 6, 1928, p. 14
199. And there was one more unusual death:
Palm Beach Post
, September 14, 1928
199. Red Cross officials later estimated that the hurricane had left: American Red Cross news release, September 16, 1928; Box 750, Folder 284, West Indies Hurricane 9-13-28, Donated Records Collection (Formerly Records Group 200), Records of the American National Red Cross 1917â1934, National Archives and Records Administration, College Park, Maryland
199. The
Palm Beach Post
of Friday, September 14:
Palm Beach Post
, September 14, 1928
199. By mid-
month, Lake Okeechobee was frighteningly high:
Monthly Weather Review
, August 1928, p. 77;
Monthly Weather Review
, September 1928, p. 89; Will, Lawrence E.,
Okeechobee Hurricane: Killer Storms in the Everglades
(Belle Glade, Florida, The Glades Historical Society, 1990) p. 49
199. “Florida May Feel Storm's Wrath”:
Palm Beach Post
, September 15, 1928
199. Around three p.m. Saturday, the eye of the storm passed over the German steamer
August Leonhardt
:
Monthly Weather Review
, September 1928, p. 347
200. At eleven p.m. Saturday night, the U.S. Weather Bureau in Washington, DC, issued statement:
Miami Daily News
, September 16, 1928
200. Brisbane was detached and flippant about the powerful storm:
Palm Beach Post
, September 16, 1928
200. That same morning, American Red Cross vice chairman James Fieser: American Red Cross news release, September 16, 1928; Box 750, Folder 284, West Indies Hurricane 9-13-28, Donated Records Collection (Formerly Records Group 200), Records of the American National Red Cross 1917â1934, National Archives and Records Administration, College Park, Maryland
200. On his small farm near Belle Glade, Jack Zuber:
Miami Daily News
, September 24, 1928
201. “This hurricane is of wide extent and great severity”:
Monthly Weather Review
, September 1928, p. 348
201. Attorney Everett Muskoff Jr. and his wife:
The Evening Independent
, September 18, 1928
201. Around the same time, Frances Ball left the Hotel Pennsylvania: Frances Ball, letter to parents, September 17, 1928, from the collection of Palm Beach County Public Library, Belle Glade, Florida
201. About forty miles inland from West Palm Beach: “The Night 2,000 Died,” produced by Glades-area students in the Gifted and Talented Program, 1988; from the collection of the Palm Beach County Public Library, Belle Glade, Florida
202. Around 2:30 p.m., downtown West Palm Beach was being drenched:
Lowell Sun
, September 25, 1928
202. At the Harvey Building, Frances Ball and her friend: Frances Ball, letter to parents, September 17, 1928, from the collection of Palm Beach County Public Library, Belle Glade, Florida
202. By five p.m., Margaret and Amos Best and their children:
Lowell Sun
, September 25, 1928
203. Nineteen people had gathered at the home of Pat Burke: “The Night 2,000 Died,” produced by Glades-area students in the Gifted and Talented Program, 1988; from the collection of the Palm Beach County Public Library, Belle Glade, Florida
203. Jack Zuber noticed that the water in a nearby canal:
Miami Daily News
, September 24, 1928
204. “A little after seven the lull came”: Frances Ball, letter to parents, September 17, 1928, from the collection of Palm Beach County Public Library, Belle Glade, Florida
204. The
Miami Daily News
later reported that the destruction:
Miami Daily News
, September 17, 1928
204. “So it was just a little bit before dark that the water began”: “The Night 2,000 Died,” produced by Glades-area students in the Gifted and Talented Program, 1988; from the collection of the Palm Beach County Public Library, Belle Glade, Florida
205. Zora Neale Hurston eloquently described: Hurston, Zora Neale
, Their Eyes Were Watching God
(New York, Harper Perennial Modern Classics, 2006) p. 158
205. San Felipe, in effect, was still over water as it roared inland: Interview with Michael Laca, producer of
TropMet.Com
, in Miami, October 8, 2014
205. In Belle Glade, Jabo Tryon was digging into his pie: “The Night 2,000 Died,” produced by Glades-area students in the Gifted and Talented Program, 1988; from the collection of the Palm Beach County Public Library, Belle Glade, Florida
205. A few minutes before eight p.m., the barometric pressure reading in nearby Canal Point was 28.54:
Monthly Weather Review
, September 1928, p. 349
206. Jack Zuber walked into the kitchen of his house:
Miami Daily News
, September 24, 1928
206. At nine p.m., the barometer at Canal Point was reading 27.97:
Monthly Weather Review
, September 1928, p. 349
206. “Water was lapping up over the porch”:
Miami Daily News
, September 24, 1928
206. In the Tedder Hotel in Belle Glade: “The Night 2,000 Died,” produced by Glades-area students in the Gifted and Talented Program, 1988; from the collection of the Palm Beach County Public Library, Belle Glade, Florida
206. At Jack Zuber's farm, the water had risen:
Miami Daily News
, September 24, 1928
207. San Felipe's winds had driven more and more water against the dikes: Hurston, Zora Neale,
Their Eyes Were Watching God
(New York, Harper Perennial Modern Classics, 2006) p. 158
207. Water began filling the house where nineteen people, including Helen McCormick: “The Night 2,000 Died,” produced by Glades-area students in the Gifted and Talented Program, 1988; from the collection of the Palm Beach County Public Library, Belle Glade, Florida;
Ocala Star-Banner
, October 30, 1981
208. The stalks closed around them, weaving a lattice-like trap:
South Florida Developer
, September 28, 1928
208. As the storm started rising, Vernon Boots and his family decided: “The Night 2,000 Died,” produced by Glades-area students in the Gifted and Talented Program, 1988; from the collection of the Palm Beach County Public Library, Belle Glade, Florida
208. In Indiantown, a blast of wind lifted a small building:
South Florida Developer
, September 20, 1928
208. Frances Ball and her companions picked their way: Frances Ball, letter to parents, September 17, 1928, from the collection of Palm Beach County Public Library, Belle Glade, Florida
209. At about the same time Frances Ball went to bed, Margaret Best finished:
Lowell Sun
, September 25, 1928
209. Frances Ball, still picking bits of plaster: Frances Ball, letter to parents, September 17, 1928, from the collection of Palm Beach County Public Library, Belle Glade, Florida
209. Vernon Boots and his brothers began slogging: “The Night 2,000 Died,” produced by Glades-area students in the Gifted and Talented Program, 1988; from the collection of the Palm Beach County Public Library, Belle Glade, Florida
210. “Water, knee-
deep, covered all the land”: Will, Lawrence E.,
Okeechobee Hurricane: Killer Storms in the Everglades
(Belle Glade, Florida, The Glades Historical Society, 1990) pp. 131â132
210. Jack Zuber, still unconscious on the raft that had been a side of his house:
Miami Daily News
, September 24, 1928
210. But the Red Cross was getting alarming reports: Telegram, J. Denham Bird to American Red Cross Headquarters, Washington, D.C., September 17, 1928; Box 750, Folder 284, West Indies Hurricane 9-13-28, Donated Records Collection (Formerly Records Group 200), Records of the American National Red Cross 1917â1934, National Archives and Records Administration, College Park, Maryland
210. In Jacksonville, Red Cross officials received a message from an amateur radio operator: American Red Cross News Release, September 17, 1928; Box 750, Folder 284,
West Indies Hurricane 9-13-28, Donated Records Collection (Formerly Records Group 200), Records of the American National Red Cross 1917â1934, National Archives and Records Administration, College Park, Maryland
211. “If necessary, of course, I will act on the request.”: Kleinberg, Eliot,
Black Cloud: The Great Florida Hurricane of 1928
(New York, Carroll & Graf, Publishers, 2003) p. 130
211. Without waiting for details of the Lake Okeechobee horror to emerge:
Tampa Morning Tribune
, September 19, 1928
211. As the storm spun northward, an announcer on WDBO radio:
Tampa Morning Tribune
, September 21, 1928
211â12. The
Palm Beach Post
said the Red Cross was estimating that fifty people had been killed:
Palm Beach Post
, September 18, 1928
212. The
St. Petersburg Times
reported that thirty bodies, most of them African Americans:
St. Petersburg Times
, September 18, 1928
212. “If you have made any winter plans about Florida, don't let any news reports”:
Tampa Morning Tribune
, September 19, 1928
212. In Tallahassee, Governor John Martin also was following:
Stuart Daily News
, September 21, 1928
212. Around 1:45 a.m. on Tuesday, September 19, Red Cross vice chairman James Fieser: Transcript of radio messages to American National Red Cross, September 19, 1928; Box 750, Folder 284, West Indies Hurricane 9-13-28, Donated Records Collection (Formerly Records Group 200), Records of the American National Red Cross 1917â1934, National Archives and Records Administration, College Park, Maryland
213. But the editorial page in that day's edition of the
Tampa Morning Tribune
:
Tampa Morning Tribune
, September 19, 1928
213. “Cyclone or hurricane damage is essentially surface damage”:
Wall Street Journal
, September 19, 1928
213.
Miami Daily News
readers got a jarring look at San Felipe's work:
Miami Daily News
, September 20, 1928
214. Cecelia Copeland, a reporter for the
St. Petersburg Times
:
St. Petersburg Times
, September 21, 1928
214. Howard Selby, the Red Cross chairman for Palm Beach County, sent a telegram to Peter Knight:
Palm Beach Post
, September 21, 1928
214. The two high-
ranking state officials stopped there:
Stuart Daily News
, September 21, 1928
215. In Tampa, Peter Knight tried to deflect harsh criticism:
St. Petersburg Times
, September 21, 1928
215. “Conditions Lake Okeechobee region simply terrible”: “Bulletin/The West Indies-Florida Hurricane,” September 21, 1928; Box 750, Folder 284, West Indies Hurricane 9-13-28, Donated Records Collection (Formerly Records Group 200), Records of the
American National Red Cross 1917â1934, National Archives and Records Administration, College Park, Maryland
216. “It boils down to this”: “Report of Paul Hoxie, Commander of the Legion Post St. Petersburg,” September 24, 1928; Box 750, Folder 284, West Indies Hurricane 9-13-28, Donated Records Collection (Formerly Records Group 200), Records of the American National Red Cross 1917â1934, National Archives and Records Administration, College Park, Maryland
216. Around midnight, a weary and stunned Martin invited reporters:
Palm Beach Post
, September 22, 1928
216. The editorial followed the same formula as earlier ones:
Wall Street Journal
, September 22, 1928
217. “Just a few hours ago I saw the bodies of thirty-two colored men”:
South Florida Developer
, September 28, 1928
217. “There is a political reason for the apparently senseless”:
Wall Street Journal
, September 24, 1928
218. An editorial in the
Grand Rapids Herald
:
Grand Rapids Herald
, September 28, 1928