Alaska Science
Seward devastated during 1964
earthquake
By NED ROZELL
April 10, 2009
Friday
Tammy Wisdom of Baker City, Oregon, wrote and asked if any Alaska
Science Forum readers knew of her grandfather, Alva "Al"
Wisdom. Al Wisdom died in Seward in 1964 as a result of a wave
generated by the Good Friday Earthquake. This request inspired
some readers to share their own stories of Seward during and
following the earthquake.
Scenes of Seward, following
the 1964 earthquake that generated waves that destroyed much
of the town's waterfront, and its economic base as a shipping
port.
All photos courtesy of Mark Wisdom.
Scenes of Seward, following
the 1964 earthquake that generated waves that destroyed much
of the town's waterfront, and its economic base as a shipping
port.
All photos courtesy of Mark Wisdom.
Scenes of Seward, following
the 1964 earthquake that generated waves that destroyed much
of the town's waterfront, and its economic base as a shipping
port.
All photos courtesy of Mark Wisdom.
Scenes of Seward, following
the 1964 earthquake that generated waves that destroyed much
of the town's waterfront, and its economic base as a shipping
port.
All photos courtesy of Mark Wisdom.
|
Larry Werner of Anchorage, 61, was a junior in high school when
the earthquake struck Alaska on March 27, 1964. He remembers
trying to flee Seward with his mother in her car because "everything
was on fire."
Werner and his mother drove
down Third Avenue, then the only way out of town, to find that
a wave had deposited railroad cars, parts of houses, and other
debris on the road. Werner said he saw Al Wisdom on a bulldozer,
trying to clear the road.
"I ran over and talked to Al on the Cat," Werner said.
"He said, 'Check back in a little while, it's going to take
a while to clear through this mess.'"
Werner and his mother then drove to their home, on higher ground,
and that move probably saved their lives. Perhaps 20 minutes
later, a tsunami created by the earthquake swept over Seward
again.
Waves from a variety of sources-the underwater landslide beneath
Seward's waterfront, the sloshing effects in Resurrection Bay,
and from the displacement of water from the earthquake fracture
on the floor of Prince William Sound-devastated Seward, wrote
Richard Lemke, who visited the town right after the earthquake
and wrote a report for the U.S. Geological Survey. Lemke wrote
that people saw the first of the waves right after the earthquake,
at 5:36 p.m., and the waves "continued to arrive fairly
regularly . . . until at least 11:30 p.m."
Monty and Florita Richardson moved to Seward in 1957. They were
there on March 27, 1964, and still live there today. Like most
Seward residents, they were trying to escape the fires caused
when the first waves hit.
"To get away from the fires, we got down on the beach,"
Monty, 91, said. "None of us were really thinking of tsunamis-the
whole lower end of town was blazing."
Burning oil covered most of the water surface and parts of houses
and docks the early waves destroyed. It could have been worse,
Lemke wrote.
"Had not a gentle wind been blowing eastward across the
bay, the entire town probably would have burned."
Preoccupied with the fires, Richardson also noticed something
else.
"We saw that the water went way out beyond what any of us
could remember having seen it before. That should have told us
something."
Richardson recalled looking out at the water and seeing what
looked like "snowslide coming down the mountain, but it
was a (tsunami) coming down the bay. We saw it and heard it coming
and got away from it."
Wyman Owens was 29-years-old and working as a longshoreman in
Seward on March 27, 1964. Owens was living in a hotel in Seward
when he felt the ground shake.
"The minute it hit, there wasn't any messing around,"
said Owens, now 74 and living in Anchorage. "It was just,
'bang!' I watched the TV set in the lobby come off its stand.
People were screaming outside and it was shaking so hard I thought
the mountains were going to come down."
Owens looked down the street and saw several giant fuel tanks
collapse and burst into flames. He jumped into a truck with a
co-worker and remembers looking out toward the bay and seeing
a large wave.
"There was a big, black, immense wall of water coming in,"
he said.
His co-worker dropped him off at his house so Owens could drive
his coworker's car to higher ground. Owens remembers his hands
shaking so much that he had to use both of them to fit the key
in the ignition.
Owens then remembers driving to high ground and seeing a "really,
really, horrendously big" wave engulf Seward.
Next week: More on Tammy Wisdom's grandfather.
This column is provided
as a public service by the Geophysical
Institute,
University of Alaska Fairbanks, in cooperation with the UAF
research
community. Ned Rozell [nrozell@gi.alaska.edu]
is a science writer at the institute.
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