Survivors of 1906 San Francisco quake share memories
April 18, 1998
Web posted at: 1:08 p.m. EDT (1708 GMT)
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- They watched as the city crumbled and
burned around them -- confused, frightened, too young to
understand what was happening.
On April 18, 1906, an earthquake measuring magnitude 7.8
devastated San Francisco, touching off fires that roared
through the city. Hundreds were killed and it took months to
rebuild.
Six-year-old Emma Grapengeter sat on a hill and watched
flames consume her city. Her parents lost their home in fires
that mesmerized her.
"To me, as a child, I thought it was beautiful," Grapengeter,
now 98, said Friday. "I never wanted to go to sleep. To my
parents, it was not beautiful at all."
They and others found beacons of hope amid the devastation.
Lotta's Fountain became a rallying point in the hours after
the disaster as survivors searched for their loved ones.
Once more, the fountain is drawing survivors. The dwindling
group of those who lived through the quake planned to meet
there before daybreak to commemorate the 92nd anniversary of
the tragedy.
The quake struck at 5:12 a.m. and lasted for less than a
minute, but touched off fires that burned for three days,
roaring across nearly 500 city blocks. The official death
toll was 478, but historians now say the number may have been
as high as 3,000.
Grapengeter's family lost everything but their lives and
survived in the streets in the following days, waiting in
long lines for food. Dinner usually consisted of bread and
corned beef from cans.
"We had flour sacks and pillow cases. They would just throw
things in there and you never knew what you were going to
get," she said.
'Shake and Bake'
Ena Soldavini also saw her family home crumble. But her
parents rebuilt it in less than five years.
"It was quite an experience for my family, I think, and the
way they came out of it. By 1910, they were on their feet in
the same spot," she said.
They were among quake survivors who gathered for lunch Friday
at John's Grill, temporarily renamed the 'Shake and Bake' for
the event.
Among the group were several "earthquake babies" conceived in
the difficult days following the disaster.
"They lost everything in the earthquake. They stayed in a
tent in Golden Gate Park. And I'm the result," said Norma
Norwood, 91.
Josephine Burke was 5 days old when the ground shook that
early morning in 1906. She was at home with her mother in San
Rafael, 14 miles north of San Francisco. Disaster struck hard
there, too.
"Our chimney fell down on me. In those days they had to build
a whole new city, and these people built it," Burke said,
looking around the room. "And they put it together with their
hands and their souls."
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