“Earthquakes”
Date
1-26-1812
Newspaper
The Palladium
Page and Column
Page 1, Column 3
Newspaper Location
Frankfort, Kentucky
Serial Number
247
Abstract
Long article from the American Statesman detailing the effect of the New Madrid earthquakes.
Transcript
EARTHQUAKES. Between the hours of 3 and 4 on the morning of Friday last, a shock of the earthquake was felt in this place, much more violent and alarming than any which have hitherto been experienced. It was also of greater duration, and accompanied with a rumbling noise and flashes of light from the N. West. The bricks on the houses were, in some places, removed from their positions. The buildings were violently agitated, and the walls, are known in some instances, to have been cracked. At Louisville the gable ends of houses have tumbled down, and at Frankfort, we hear that the penitentiary has partially suffered. Except the last, all the other shocks which have occurred, seem to have been very generally and sensibly felt through out North America. Orleans has entirely escaped, and a few other places have been visited with but slight shocks & experienced very little alarm or injury. From New Madrid, we learn, that several men deserted their families during the late shocks, and have never been heard of since-that several persons were wounded in their houses-that about Little Prairie, where the earth burst open, mud, sand, water, and stone coal were thrown up to a considerable distance; and that large trees were split open 15 or 20 feet up. At Massac on the Ohio, the earth on both banks of the river, has been rent by a fissure 16 or 18 inches wide. A Natchez paper states, that several gentlemen had arrived at that place from the Chickasaw Bluffs, on the Mississippi, who inform, that the damage sustained at that place from the earthquake was [unreadable]. Previous to their leaving it, seven Indians came in, who had been out as far as the Rocky mountains in the Northwest, in the pursuit of game. Those Indians who are known and can be relied on, are said to have stated that when they left their camps, the mountains appeared to be tumbling to pieces-large trees were snapped off at their roots, and dashed together in the greatest disorder-rocks as large as houses were thrown into the vallies from the tops of mountains-in many places the earth seemed to be much heated, and in every direction were to be seen evident signs of volcanic eruptions. The Indians rode day and night, believing from the convulsive shocks they felt, that a general destruction was about to ensue, and determining to perish with their relatives amidst the material wreck. Accounts from Ashville, Buncombe county, N. Carolina, state the earthquake on the 15th and 16th December, to have filled the inhabitants with unusual horror. The later appearance of the Comet-the brilliant illuminations of the Aurora borealis for several nights previous, together with the blood-like colour of the sun for some days, greatly alarmed the timid and superstitious. The inhabitants of the place were raised by a dreadful rumbling noise, which was represented as louder than the sound of an hundred wagons driven precipitately down the adjacent mountain. Several shocks succeeded each other during the day, when the undulations of the earth are said to have resembled those of the waves of the sea. The women and children shrieked with alarm, several persons were thrown off their feet-as also were cows, indicating their fears by painful bellowings. It was more violent in vallies than on the mountains. In a valley near Ashville, the vat in a tan-yard were displaced,--their edges in some cases, raised three feet above their former level, and in others turned partly round and left in a zigzag condition. So many fervent prayers have never been put up in that place before. The manners of the people have so much changed as to resemble very much a revival in religion. Intelligence from the Warm Springs, in North Carolina, states the effects of the earthquake to have been still more terrific.-The most tremendous noise was heard from the morning of the 16th a large stream of water, heated as high as 142 deg. by Farh. was observed to issue from the fissure of a rock in the side of a mountain which had been opened the preceding night. During the last shock, the tops of the trees were greatly agitated-the earth shook with violence, and the water of the warm springs, (which was at that time overflowed by the French Broad River) was thrown up several times, the height of thirty or forty feet. Masses of stone were loosened and precipitated from the tops and sides of the mountains. The Painted Rock, well known to travelers, was torn from its base, fell across the road leading from the Springs to Knoxville, and completely shut it up against the passage of wagons. Those who are moving to the westward are unable to proceed until a new road is made round the rock.
Recommended Citation
"“Earthquakes”" (1812). New Madrid Compendium Far-Field Database. 240.
https://digitalcommons.memphis.edu/cas-ceri-new-madrid-compendium/240