Showing posts with label earthquake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label earthquake. Show all posts

1906 : A Novel Review

1906 : A Novel
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I am probably in a small minority of people who knew much of this story before I read it. I am 71 years old and my mother, her parents and many of their friends survived the horrible 1906 earthquake and fires. Growing up, I heard countless stories about what happened. Everyone who survived was angry that the death toll was so low, 500 people, when it was many times that number. My grandmother collected newspaper articles that disputed the death toll and many other lies that city officials told. My grandparents told of people being driven out of their homes at bayonet point when the fire was still a long way away and told they could take nothing of their possessions with them. Every survivor told tales of the military and national guard breaking into bars and liquor stores, then shooting anyone they thought might be looting. What surprised and delighted me about this book was not just the fact that the writer corrected the falsehoods, but that he took the time to tell us what life was like in one of the most beautiful and colorful cities America has ever seen. This was like a journey through my family history. He told how everyone, even the poorest, dressed well whenever they were in public. I could hear the cable cars clanging up and down the hills, the horses hooves clomping on the streets, see into the alleys of Chinatown where they were still selling poor little girls like cattle. I loved his descriptions of the mansions on Nob Hill and the dregs of the Barbary Coast, and my grandmother, were she still alive, would have relished the Caruso sections, as she had tickets to attend one of the perfromances, one that she saved up for for weeks but missed because the opera house was burned down. I think anyone would love this book, whether or not they have ever been to San Francisco. I have asked myself for many years why somone has not told this story. I am from the generation that was rasied on books, not television. This is one I am going to treasure. I heard the author speak and saw a documentary film he presented at a library last week. He is as passionate and knowledgeable about the subject in person. The images of the city and the disaster brought back a flood of emotions, as did the book. I just thought it was all wonderful.

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Earthquake Exodus, 1906 Review

Earthquake Exodus, 1906
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This is no dry recitation served up by Richard Schwartz. By his thorough research of first-hand local sources, he walks us right up to the 1906 San Francisco quake survivors, introduces us like they are his best friends, and then lets them tell us their stories. The result is an engaging account of these century old San Francisco area events, filled with poignant photos and news clips. A history, well done!

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Earthquake Exodus, 1906, Berkeley Responds to the San Francisco Refugees, by Richard Schwartz is a book that tells the story of the ten-week relief effort in the East Bay after the 1906 Earthquake and fire. Earthquake Exodus, 1906, celebrates a largely unknown chapter from the aftermath of the great San Francisco earthquake of 1906. Containing many breathtaking photos and illustrations never before published or unseen in nearly 100 years, this new visual history is breathtaking. Berkeley Voice columnist Martin Snapp writes, "even more compelling than the photos are the hundreds of stories of ordinary people doing extraordinary things." In the story of the relief effort, instigated within hours of the earthquake, the ordinary and extraordinary people of Berkeley began to organize a committee, knowing that terrified masses of stricken refugees would be pouring into their town within hours. As author Schwartz says, "They didn't wait for government. They didn't wait for money. They didn't wait for instructions." DID YOU KNOW • that many people fled to the Berkeley hills the first night of the quake and a number of women died there giving birth? • that Asian refugees were segregated in their own camps and sections of town and that even the embassy of China inspected their plight and did not complain?• smallpox erupted in Berkeley during the relief effort?• industrial West Berkeley, filled with a working class immigrant population, actually caught fire after the earthquake?"Schwartz explains how Berkeleyans generously responded by setting up temporary camps, dispensing food, listing jobs, and even taking in the homeless. He details the measures taken to ensure public order and health as city and university officials struggled to deal with thousands of disoriented, impoverished, and sometimes dangerous strangers, many separated from their loved ones— everyday details long forgotten but worth study by those who wish to better prepare for the next great shake." Dr. Gray Brechin, author of Imperial San Francisco: Urban Power, Earthly Ruin. (Dr. Brechin wrote the forward to Schwartz's book).

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A Mighty Fortress...the Stories Behind the 2nd San Francisco Mint Review

A Mighty Fortress...the Stories Behind the 2nd San Francisco Mint
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In what is truly an almanac of information about the San Francisco Mint, the husband and wife team of Rich Kelly and Nancy Oliver have packed a multitude of facts into their 142-page book, "A Mighty Fortress: The Stories Behind the 2nd San Francisco Mint." They begin with a brief synopsis of the history of the U.S. Mint system and dovetail it into an introduction of the establishment of the mint in San Francisco. Their focus is on the second facility of that branch, which opened in 1874 and which would become known to future generations as "The Granite Lady." Captured on the pages of this interesting treatise are stories about the laying of the cornerstone in 1870; the coins placed in the cornerstone, including famous rarities such as the 1870-S half dime and 1870-S three dollar gold piece; other significant rarities bearing the "S" mintmark, including the 1893-S Morgan silver dollar and the famed 1894-S Barber dime; crimes involving a tunnel-job into the mint's vaults and a former mint clerk's theft of $30,000 in gold coins; scandals involving mint superintendents; how the "Granite Lady" survived the San Francisco earthquake of 1906; and so much more.
This book is the only full-length treatment of the San Francisco Mint and will surely provide you with information that you were unaware of. I highly recommend it.

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The COPPER-HANDLES AFFAIR: The Great San Francisco Earthquake, Fire and Bank Heist Review

The COPPER-HANDLES AFFAIR: The Great San Francisco Earthquake, Fire and Bank Heist
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A great fast paced read. John's ability to mix historic facts with ficticious adventure makes this a book hard to put down. His characters are fully developed and believable. I liked Copper's narrative being written in the vernacular. It set a certain tone for his character. John's use of the literary style of switching back and forth from Copper's escape to Handles pursuit kept the adventure moving along at a good pace. Many of the "switches" ended in a cliffhanger that compelled the reader to move on. Besides being a good read, this book takes you on a geographical and historical tour of Northern California and the Pacific Northwest.

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THE COPPER-HANDLES AFFAIR: The Great San Francisco Earthquake, Fire and Bank Heist, begins with the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and a simple opportunistic bank robbery, plunging John Law Copper, accidental thief, and Frederick W. Handles, the pursuing policeman, into the greater game of big money power politics and civic corruption on the Ragtime U. S. Pacific Coast.The chase takes them through the vanished garden world of northern California to the dangerous shanghai town of Portland, Oregon.Resonates with common human values that time and evolution have not yet ground out of us.Includes 48 b&w line drawings and two maps.

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Earth Shook, the Sky Burned, the ; 100th Anniversary Edition: A Photographic Record of the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake and Fire Review

Earth Shook, the Sky Burned, the ; 100th Anniversary Edition: A Photographic Record of the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake and Fire
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I have read many books about the great earthquake and fire of 1906, and this is by far the best. A stirring and realistic account of the tragedy is illustrated with the best photos that I have seen, many taken in the places of most danger at the time. This is a must-have book for those who are interested in the 'quake of '06.

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"The Earth Shook, The Sky Burned" has mesmerized San Francisco tourists and residents for decades. Illustrated with more than four hundred on-the-scene photographs, this definitive volume tells the dramatic story of the four days of upheaval and destruction that swept the city when a violent earth tremor rocked the land, succeeded rapidly by a devastating fire that destroyed nearly thirty thousand buildings and left over a quarter million people homeless. Now, reissued with a powerful new cover, "The Earth Shook, The Sky Burned" is a San Francisco classic, revealing what really happened that April morning almost a century ago, when the face of the city was changed forever.

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The San Francisco Earthquake (The American Adventure Series #32) Review

The San Francisco Earthquake (The American Adventure Series #32)
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I've been reading several books about the 1906 earthquake. This one was great. The plot was interesting as the time came closer to the earthquake, and I was excited. The only thing con I could mention would be young Mark's attitude regarding the man his mother is marrying, though the events in the book alter his view by the story's end.
I loved being able to "see the sights" and tour San Francisco in 1906. Here is one family's earthquake story. Great for ages 8-12.

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The Earth Dragon Awakes: The San Francisco Earthquake of 1906 Review

The Earth Dragon Awakes: The San Francisco Earthquake of 1906
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This is an excellent young adult book. It is one of our Georgia Book Award Nominees for 2007-2008. It is a great way for kids to learn about what the earthquake was like from a young person's view point. The language of the book was very descriptive. You felt like you were there.

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Historic Walks in San Francisco: 18 Trails Through the City's Past Review

Historic Walks in San Francisco: 18 Trails Through the City's Past
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If Adah Bakalinsky's Stairway Walks in San Francisco (see my review) is like touring the city with your eccentric, but lovable aunt, Rand's book is like a walk with her history professor husband.
Rand's book is very well organized and presented. He provides maps and directions, like Adah, but adds in trip length and degree of difficulty, which are welcome information omitted from Adah's Stairway Walks.There is little of Adah's whimsy here: it is replaced with exhaustive research on the area for each walk and its architecture. This results in a very different walking experience.
The first major difference is that many of these Historic Walks are on flatter ground, meaning they both cover different ground from Stairway Walks and are more accessible to people who have trouble with all of the climbing inherent in Adah's routes.
The second major difference is that, given his focus on history and architecture, not sweeping views, Rand's walks are not as diminished by bad weather as Adah's are.
The last difference is the sheer amount of history. The walks in this book always take me much longer than I think they will because I spend so much time standing around reading. Sometimes this is good, e.g. the Castro walk's extensive information about how Harvey Milk helped shape the area, but sometimes, like when there is an extensive discussion of old maps and how hard it is to trace exactly when a particular nondescript house was converted from a nondescript barn, you just want him to get on with it.
I like this book as a contrast and follow on to Adah's Stairway Walks book but, unless you are a history buff, I'd do Adah's first.

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