Page 37 - RedWhiteFleet_interiors_Sep10
P. 37

THE GREAT EARTHQUAKE OF 1906






 he year 1906 started out with the incorporation of the   city, living up to their motto: “Anything, Anywhere, Anytime on   PREVIOUS PAGES: A panoramic
 company under a new name, the Crowley Launch and   Water.” And while the company’s official passenger service did   photograph of San Francisco captures
 TTugboat Company, a change that took into account   not begin until 1915, during the Panama-Pacific International   the destruction of the city in the wake
 the gas-powered boats Crowley had begun to purchase with   Exposition, the 1906 Earthquake showed that Crowley was   of the 1906 earthquake and fire.
 reinvested profits. With his expanded fleet and crew, Crowley   ready to take on the responsibility of transporting passengers.  LEFT: The destruction of the
 had become an indomitable presence on the wharf. Although   Speaking years later in an oral history for the University of   earthquake and fire led to widespread
 a big year for the company, 1906 proved to be an even bigger   California’s Bancroft Library, Crowley detailed his company’s   flooding down by the waterfront.
 year for the city when the Great Earthquake struck San   efforts immediately following the quake: “We had everything   Crowley boats sprang into action
 Francisco on April 18 at 5:12 a.m. With an estimated magnitude   to do with all upon the Bay.” While other ferry companies   during the crisis, ferrying passengers
 and belongings out of the city to ports
 of 7.9, the quake caused devastating destruction as far north as   stopped service, Crowley and his crew sprang into action,   all around the Bay, foreshadowing the
 Eureka and led to three days of fire and chaos in the city.   transporting stranded San Franciscans across the Bay to   Red and White Fleet’s rise to action
 Crowley and his crew did not stand idly by. Using his   Oakland as fires engulfed the city behind them. “The business   during the 1989 earthquake eight
 new fleet of ships, he began ferrying residents out of the city   rush got so big that we had to bring in those big barges   decades later.
 toward safer ports in Oakland and Sausalito. While other local   instead of depending on the launches,” Crowley added. “But
 maritime companies halted operations, Crowley and his crew   we took a great many over in the launches and we took a great   OPPOSITE: The sky above San
 Francisco turns into a wall of smoke
 transported countless souls, belongings, and valuables out of the   many back, too.” The barges Crowley referred to were three-  on April 18, 1906.
 hundred-foot-long grain barges, which were large enough
 to allow passengers to bring some of their furniture and
 belongings on board, enabling them to set up temporary
 lodgings across the Bay in Oakland if their home had been
 damaged or destroyed by the quake.
 While most boats transported stranded citizens back and
 forth to Oakland, a few simply moored in the Bay until it
 was safe to return to land. “Let me tell you, there were a lot of
 passenger steamers out in the Bay, and we were the only ones
 operating,” Crowley said. “I remember many fellows coming





 36 • Red and White Fleet
   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42