View Johnstown Flood National Memorial in a larger map
Visit our Tour Destination:
South Fork, PA
Website: Johnstown Flood National Memorial
The Treasure: Located
on the shore of a giant reservoir called Lake Conemaugh ,
the South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club was witness to unimaginable tragedy on
May 31, 1889, when the dam broke unleashing a catastrophic flood.
Accessibility: The
park grounds of the Johnstown Flood National Memorial are open daily from
sunrise to sunset, and the Visitor
Center is open from 9 to
5. During current restabilization work, the interior of the South Fork Fishing
and Hunting Club will only be accessible on special tours.
A scene of the flood's aftermath. From the Robert N. Dennis Collection of Stereoscopic Views at the New York Public Library. Source: Wikimedia Commons |
Background: As
with modern instances of catastrophic tragedy, like the September 11 terrorist
attacks, the large story of the Johnstown Flood encompasses thousands of smaller
stories, each grounded in individual lives that were instantly and irrevocably
changed. When the dam collapsed, it unleashed 20 million tons of water that burst
through a series of small towns before smashing into the City of Johnstown . In just under
an hour, the water swept down a narrow 14-mile path, picking up trees, remnants
of buildings, debris of all sorts, animals, and people, sometimes rising to a
height of 60 feet. In the words of one witness, it looked like “a huge hill
rolling over and over.”
The death toll exceeded 2,200. Photographs taken
later, during the rescue operations, depict the small villages of South Fork, Mineral
Point, East Conemaugh, and Woodvale and the city of Johnstown smashed to pieces.
Stereoscopic view showing the desolation in front of Johnstown's Stone Bridge. From the Robert N. Dennis Collection of Stereoscopic Views at the New York Public Library. Source: Wikimedia Commons. |
Debris on Main Street in Johnstown. From the Robert N. Dennis Collection of Stereoscopic Views at the New York Public Library. Source: Wikimedia Commons |
The South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club played a
controversial role in the flood. Unlike the working class environment of Johnstown , the South Fork Club was a rustic
getaway location for some of the country’s wealthiest industrialists. Andrew
Mellon, Henry Frick, and Andrew Carnegie were among the members who enjoyed waterfront
access to the giant reservoir called Lake Conemaugh, up in a mountain summer resort 450
feet above Johnstown .
The Club owned the dam and, notoriously, did little to maintain it.
To their credit, leaders at the South Fork Fishing and
Hunting Club saw potential disaster unfolding in the torrential rain that
preceded the dam collapse. In the hours before the dam gave way, Club president
Elias Unger and resident engineer John Parke strove to save the dam and warn
people in danger’s way. But it was too little too late. Parke saw the water
break through: “(T)he fearful rushing waters opened the gap with such
increasing rapidity that soon after the entire lake leaped out… It took but
forty minutes to drain that three miles of water.”
Stereoscopic view of the nearly-emptied reservoir following the flood. From the Robert N. Dennis Collection of Stereoscopic Views at the New York Public Library. Source: Wikimedia Commons. |
Other Recommended Sites: Another
site connected with profound national trauma is located less than an hour’s
drive from the Johnstown Flood National Memorial. Flight 93 National Memorial
is located 37 miles south of the park. The site commemorates the heroic actions
of the passengers and crew that brought down United Airlines Flight 93,
crashing it into an empty field two miles north of Shanksville, Pennsylvania,
in order to foil the plans of terrorists on board.
Stabilization work in progress at the South Fork Hunting and Fishing Club. Photo courtesy of the Friends of the Johnstown Flood National Memorial. |
Tour America's History Itinerary
Wednesday: Fort Mifflin
© 2013 Lee Price
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