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Premium member Presentation Transcript America’s Great Disasters: America’s Great Disasters Mr. Ryan Visit www.worldofteaching.com for more free powerpointsGreat Disasters: Great Disasters Many terrible things have happened to America and her citizens Floods, Hurricanes, Fires, Blizzards, Explosions, Diseases Causes death, injuries, loss of homes, money, jobs, communities, friendships But many good things arise too! Safety laws, sense of community & accomplishment, new inventions/technologySultana Explosion: Sultana Explosion Largest maritime disaster April 1865 on the Mississippi River near Memphis TN Civil War POW’s were crammed onto the 260 ft. steamboat Sultana to go to the North for their freedom at the end of the war Ship meant to hold 376 passengersSlide4: USS SultanaSultana: Sultana Govt. paid $5.00 per person, so Captain Mason put almost 3000 people plus animals and cargo on boat Boilers exploded killing many and setting the ship on fire Because of poor records, nobody knows how many died: estimate 2300-3000 Not famous because the Civil War just ended and President Lincoln was killed too! Captain MasonThe General Slocum Disaster: The General Slocum Disaster Steamboat out of NYC on June 15, 1904 for a church picnic on the East River Over 1300 on board, ship meant to hold less than ½ of that Teen saw the fire and told the captain, but was ignored 1031 people died, mostly childrenThe General Slocum: The General SlocumThe General Slocum: The General SlocumThe General Slocum: The General Slocum Because the life boats were wired together too tightly and the life vests were too heavy…many died. This created an uproar and many new laws were passed to make sure it doesn’t happen again.The Great Johnstown Flood: The Great Johnstown Flood May 30, 1889 Johnstown PA Johnstown, East Conemaugh, and Woodvale lived “downhill” of Lake Conemaugh, which had a dam built about 1850 The dam was 1000 feet long. The lake was 500 acres and held 25 million tons of water The lake wasn’t needed anymore to supply water to the canal because of the railroad built in 1854The Great Johnstown Flood: The Great Johnstown Flood On May 30, with over 8 inches of rain that day, the dam broke and the wall of water Raced downhill and destroyed 3 entire towns and killing over 2000. The Great Johnstown Flood: The Great Johnstown Flood Over 2000 people died in this Mill townThe Great Johnstown Flood: The Great Johnstown Flood Ironically, the railroad bridge was one of the few structures that with stood the disaster. Sorry to say, all the houses and trees that got stuck against the bridge caught on fire and killed all those standing on the bridge for safety. Because of this disaster, all dams must now be inspected by the government.The Great Drought: The Great Drought During the 1930’s (The Depression), there was little to no rain in the Mid-West With no rain, trees (wind breaks) and over farming, the topsoil “blew away” The Midwest was known as the Great Dustbowl It forced many farmers to lose their farms and move to find workThe Great Drought: The Great Drought The Dust Storms caused by the prairie wind and drought. The Great Drought: The Great Drought There was dust “everywhere” inside and outside, in your eyes, and in your mouth. Many died from Dust Pneumonia Farmers were then taught how to conserve water, plant wind breaks and how not to destroy the top soil by planting different kinds of plants that help put nutrients into the soilGalveston Hurricane: Galveston Hurricane September 8, 1900 Winds were up to 150 miles per hour Storm surge of over 16 feet Over 6,000 people killed on Galveston Island Another 6,000 were killed in Texas Worst Hurricane ever to hit the USAGalveston Hurricane: Galveston HurricaneGalveston Hurricane: Galveston Hurricane Galveston Hurricane: Galveston Hurricane Now the city has a sea wall, better building codes and is actually raised up the entire city by putting sand under buildings!Blizzard of 1888: Blizzard of 1888 March 11, 1888 New England states were pounded with freezing temperatures, 70 mph winds and massive amounts of snow Snow Drifts over 30 feet high Still snow in JULY!!! Destroyed telegraph, telephone, electric poles and stopped all trains (including food and coal trains) Blizzard of 1888: Blizzard of 1888Blizzard of 1888: Blizzard of 1888 Because of the Blizzard, NYC and many other cities put electric and telephone cables underground. They also built the subway underground too! You had to shovel out the Street!!Influenza Pandemic of 1918: Influenza Pandemic of 1918 This “flu” killed 23 million world wide…500,000 in the United States Avian flu (today) is similar to 1918, but it does pass human to human like it did in 1918 Influenza Pandemic of 1918: Influenza Pandemic of 1918 Emergency Tent Hospital This disaster led to the creation of the Center for Disease Control (CDC). They hire scientists to cure diseases.The San Francisco Earthquake: The San Francisco Earthquake April 18th 1906 San Francisco CA Earthquake lasted only one minute Fires broke out afterwards because of broken gas pipes and down electric wires City burned for 3 days because of no water because all the water mains were broken 2/3 of San Francisco was destroyed…it was home to over 400,000 peopleThe San Francisco Earthquake: The San Francisco EarthquakeThe San Francisco Earthquake: The San Francisco EarthquakeThe San Francisco Earthquake: The San Francisco Earthquake Now, California has some of the strongest building codes in the United States.The Wisconsin Forest Fire: The Wisconsin Forest Fire October 8, 1871 Peshtigo, Wisconsin Lumber Mill Town Cause: Piles of debris and tree roots were on fire Destroyed entire town and killed over 800 peopleThe Wisconsin Forest Fire: The Wisconsin Forest FireThe Wisconsin Forest Fire: The Wisconsin Forest FireOctober 8th 1871Another disaster is smoldering…: October 8th 1871 Another disaster is smoldering… Not many people knew about the Wisconsin Forest Fire because of another event that night “stole” the headlines…The Great Chicago Fire of 1871: The Great Chicago Fire of 1871 In the middle of difficulty lies opportunity. Author: Albert EinsteinThe Great Chicago Fire of 1871: The Great Chicago Fire of 1871 We are going to read The Great Fire by Jim Murphy. This was a great disaster, but it also showed the heroism and determination Americans had to survive and rebuild. Every disaster always made our country safer by creating new safety laws…notice how many of the disasters were almost 100 years ago! “A City Ready to Burn”: “A City Ready to Burn” What do you think it means? Does the title really mean fire? What would make a city “ready” to burn? Practice inferring and predicting You do not have the permission to view this presentation. In order to view it, please contact the author of the presentation.
Disasters Aric85 Download Post to : URL : Related Presentations : Share Add to Flag Embed Email Send to Blogs and Networks Add to Channel Uploaded from authorPOINTLite Insert YouTube videos in PowerPont slides with aS Desktop Copy embed code: (To copy code, click on the text box) Embed: URL: Thumbnail: WordPress Embed Customize Embed The presentation is successfully added In Your Favorites. Views: 658 Category: Entertainment License: All Rights Reserved Like it (0) Dislike it (0) Added: October 30, 2007 This Presentation is Public Favorites: 0 Presentation Description No description available. Comments Posting comment... Premium member Presentation Transcript America’s Great Disasters: America’s Great Disasters Mr. Ryan Visit www.worldofteaching.com for more free powerpointsGreat Disasters: Great Disasters Many terrible things have happened to America and her citizens Floods, Hurricanes, Fires, Blizzards, Explosions, Diseases Causes death, injuries, loss of homes, money, jobs, communities, friendships But many good things arise too! Safety laws, sense of community & accomplishment, new inventions/technologySultana Explosion: Sultana Explosion Largest maritime disaster April 1865 on the Mississippi River near Memphis TN Civil War POW’s were crammed onto the 260 ft. steamboat Sultana to go to the North for their freedom at the end of the war Ship meant to hold 376 passengersSlide4: USS SultanaSultana: Sultana Govt. paid $5.00 per person, so Captain Mason put almost 3000 people plus animals and cargo on boat Boilers exploded killing many and setting the ship on fire Because of poor records, nobody knows how many died: estimate 2300-3000 Not famous because the Civil War just ended and President Lincoln was killed too! Captain MasonThe General Slocum Disaster: The General Slocum Disaster Steamboat out of NYC on June 15, 1904 for a church picnic on the East River Over 1300 on board, ship meant to hold less than ½ of that Teen saw the fire and told the captain, but was ignored 1031 people died, mostly childrenThe General Slocum: The General SlocumThe General Slocum: The General SlocumThe General Slocum: The General Slocum Because the life boats were wired together too tightly and the life vests were too heavy…many died. This created an uproar and many new laws were passed to make sure it doesn’t happen again.The Great Johnstown Flood: The Great Johnstown Flood May 30, 1889 Johnstown PA Johnstown, East Conemaugh, and Woodvale lived “downhill” of Lake Conemaugh, which had a dam built about 1850 The dam was 1000 feet long. The lake was 500 acres and held 25 million tons of water The lake wasn’t needed anymore to supply water to the canal because of the railroad built in 1854The Great Johnstown Flood: The Great Johnstown Flood On May 30, with over 8 inches of rain that day, the dam broke and the wall of water Raced downhill and destroyed 3 entire towns and killing over 2000. The Great Johnstown Flood: The Great Johnstown Flood Over 2000 people died in this Mill townThe Great Johnstown Flood: The Great Johnstown Flood Ironically, the railroad bridge was one of the few structures that with stood the disaster. Sorry to say, all the houses and trees that got stuck against the bridge caught on fire and killed all those standing on the bridge for safety. Because of this disaster, all dams must now be inspected by the government.The Great Drought: The Great Drought During the 1930’s (The Depression), there was little to no rain in the Mid-West With no rain, trees (wind breaks) and over farming, the topsoil “blew away” The Midwest was known as the Great Dustbowl It forced many farmers to lose their farms and move to find workThe Great Drought: The Great Drought The Dust Storms caused by the prairie wind and drought. The Great Drought: The Great Drought There was dust “everywhere” inside and outside, in your eyes, and in your mouth. Many died from Dust Pneumonia Farmers were then taught how to conserve water, plant wind breaks and how not to destroy the top soil by planting different kinds of plants that help put nutrients into the soilGalveston Hurricane: Galveston Hurricane September 8, 1900 Winds were up to 150 miles per hour Storm surge of over 16 feet Over 6,000 people killed on Galveston Island Another 6,000 were killed in Texas Worst Hurricane ever to hit the USAGalveston Hurricane: Galveston HurricaneGalveston Hurricane: Galveston Hurricane Galveston Hurricane: Galveston Hurricane Now the city has a sea wall, better building codes and is actually raised up the entire city by putting sand under buildings!Blizzard of 1888: Blizzard of 1888 March 11, 1888 New England states were pounded with freezing temperatures, 70 mph winds and massive amounts of snow Snow Drifts over 30 feet high Still snow in JULY!!! Destroyed telegraph, telephone, electric poles and stopped all trains (including food and coal trains) Blizzard of 1888: Blizzard of 1888Blizzard of 1888: Blizzard of 1888 Because of the Blizzard, NYC and many other cities put electric and telephone cables underground. They also built the subway underground too! You had to shovel out the Street!!Influenza Pandemic of 1918: Influenza Pandemic of 1918 This “flu” killed 23 million world wide…500,000 in the United States Avian flu (today) is similar to 1918, but it does pass human to human like it did in 1918 Influenza Pandemic of 1918: Influenza Pandemic of 1918 Emergency Tent Hospital This disaster led to the creation of the Center for Disease Control (CDC). They hire scientists to cure diseases.The San Francisco Earthquake: The San Francisco Earthquake April 18th 1906 San Francisco CA Earthquake lasted only one minute Fires broke out afterwards because of broken gas pipes and down electric wires City burned for 3 days because of no water because all the water mains were broken 2/3 of San Francisco was destroyed…it was home to over 400,000 peopleThe San Francisco Earthquake: The San Francisco EarthquakeThe San Francisco Earthquake: The San Francisco EarthquakeThe San Francisco Earthquake: The San Francisco Earthquake Now, California has some of the strongest building codes in the United States.The Wisconsin Forest Fire: The Wisconsin Forest Fire October 8, 1871 Peshtigo, Wisconsin Lumber Mill Town Cause: Piles of debris and tree roots were on fire Destroyed entire town and killed over 800 peopleThe Wisconsin Forest Fire: The Wisconsin Forest FireThe Wisconsin Forest Fire: The Wisconsin Forest FireOctober 8th 1871Another disaster is smoldering…: October 8th 1871 Another disaster is smoldering… Not many people knew about the Wisconsin Forest Fire because of another event that night “stole” the headlines…The Great Chicago Fire of 1871: The Great Chicago Fire of 1871 In the middle of difficulty lies opportunity. Author: Albert EinsteinThe Great Chicago Fire of 1871: The Great Chicago Fire of 1871 We are going to read The Great Fire by Jim Murphy. This was a great disaster, but it also showed the heroism and determination Americans had to survive and rebuild. Every disaster always made our country safer by creating new safety laws…notice how many of the disasters were almost 100 years ago! “A City Ready to Burn”: “A City Ready to Burn” What do you think it means? Does the title really mean fire? What would make a city “ready” to burn? Practice inferring and predicting