EARTHQUAKE___03157.gif

Kingston, Jamaica,
- January 14, 1907

1. Earthquake 1907

6. The eye-witnesses

(11. Insurance)

2. Kingston Burning

7. Media reports

12. Rebuilding

3. Injuries and deaths

8. Balloon view

(13. Scientific views)

4. Shattered lives

5. Shattered buildings

9. Governor Swettenham

10. The Memorial

 
   

notes

I am still working on this site and I will
probably add material to most pages as I
find more information. The brackets indicate
pages on which I have not yet done any work.

Joy Lumsden

Do a search of all my web sites!

 

home

 

 
The Earthquake Monument 1909

Kingston

Monday January 14, 1907.



I was seated at a little table, every window and door of the room was wide open, the heat was oppressive.



Picture a cloudless sky, a temperature of 92 or 95 degrees fahrenheit in the shade, relieved about mid-day by a cooling breeze that increased in power until about three o'clock, when it had attained the violence almost of a gale.



Doors were repeatedly banging, blinds on every window were for ever waving in the wind; at each violent gust they would snap like the crack of a whip. Lace curtains breaking loose from their lower fastenings were streaming continuously on the breeze; on the windward side they were often level with the ceiling itself.



The strong breeze began to lose force until, at about 3.30, it had faded into nothingness. For two minutes there was not a breath of wind, no doors banged, no blinds moved, curtains fell back to their places, not a sigh lifted a leaf on any bough. Nature had seemingly withdrawn for her afternoon siesta.



* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *



And then without murmur or warning, from the Blue Mountains beyond, or the still bluer heavens above, or the ground beneath our feet, there steals down upon us some intangible, impalpable monster, before whom the very earth reels and groans in violent agony and despair.



The heightening roar is of eternal memory - it was as though some vast herd of tigers, with warm blood already on their tongues, had been robbed of their prey.

 

 
 











* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
 
In Kingston before the earthquake.

Welcoming the Port Kingston
on January 11, 1907
Kingston Parish Church
KingstonParishChedited.jpg.w300h212_picnik.jpg
on South Parade, at the top of King Street
Market scene
 

 

Today is

--------------------------------------------------------

I hope to have this site virtually complete in early January 2007, in time for the 100th anniversary of the Earthquake.

--------------------------------------------------------
 
January 11 2007: Unfortunately it looks as if I will not have this site as nearly complete as I had hoped. However I shall keep working on it, and I hope you will find it informative and interesting, now, and as it progresses.
Joy Lumsden

 
 
 

Inside a house in Kingston in 1907

before . . .

A giant had seemingly seized upon the foundation of the structure in which I sat, and was shaking it with brutal pertinacity.

At the first movement of the earth the ceiling began to fall about my ears, covering me with small particles of mortar and dust - though not until long afterwards did I notice either.

Circular movement was there under my feet, but the upward movement was not less marked. We seemed to rise and fall as though embarked on the surging sea. Heavy walls swayed like an insecure stage setting, and at the same moment the earth rose and fell, bringing down masses of debris at every plunge and breaking floors like so much match-boarding.

. . . after!

TOP

In Kingston after the Earthquake!

 

Much of the text on this site comes from eye-witness accounts of the earthquake by the English author Ralph Hall Caine, who arrived in Kingston on the RMS 'Port Kingston' on January 11 1907.
 

This is a strictly non-profit, educational site. No copyright infringement is intended. If there are any questions or concerns, please contact Joy Lumsden at

Email:

TOP

 

     
 

If you found the site interesting tell someone else who might be interested too!

 
 

. . . then check out some of my other sites:

 

 

LINKS TO CURRENT PAGES AND SITES DEALING WITH THE 1907 KINGSTON EARTHQUAKE:

 
     
 

Earthquake Exhibition at the Institute of Jamaica, January 14 - February 28, 2007

 
     
 

Earthquake! - article by Martin Henry, January 11, 2007

 
     
 

Manchester prepares for Earthquake Awareness Week

 
     
 

Gleaner: Pieces of the Past: Disaster - The Earthquake of 1907

 
     
 

go-local jamaica article

 
     
 

Page of useful links

 
     

page hits: