“Several persons passing Lexington...”

Authors

    Date

    3-16-1812

    Newspaper

    Wilson’s Knoxville Gazette

    Page and Column

    Page 3, Column 2

    Newspaper Location

    Knoxville, Tennessee

    Serial Number

    450

    Abstract

    Account of the New Madrid earthquake of February 7, 1812 from a Mr. Vertner. Originally in the Lexington (Ky.) Reporter.

    Transcript

    EARTH-QUAKE. Several persons passed through Lexington on the 27th, who were near New Madrid on the 7th ult. One of the gentlemen, Mr. Vertner, states that the Earthquake, which occurred during the night of the 7th, occasioned his barge with 600 barrels of flour, besides other articles to sink, and the whole was lost; another gentleman whose name is not recollected, stated, that during the convulsion, the motion of the boat was so violent as to stave many barrels of flour in it. The quaking continued three days when this gentleman thinking it prudent not to go further, left his property and returned. Both the gentlemen state that some obstruction had presented itself in the river something like a rapids or falls which greatly endanger the navigation-Also that the buildings in New Madrid are greatly damaged; much of the land [unreadable] about was under water, and the few remaining inhabitants were encamped. That the land in innumerable places is opened in large fissures; and the inhabitants entertain the opinion that the ground on which the town stood had sunk about fifteen feet; a few moments after the first violent shock; it rose about ten feet. They heard of many boats being lost, and that the land where the little Prairie stands is sixteen feet under water. In addition to the above we have been favored with the perusal of several letters from near New Madrid, of the date of Feb. 21 which confirm the whole of [unreadable] above particulars. Those letters can be depended on; they state the number of boats lost, of which accounts are already recieved, to amount to 50: together with a number of lives. There is a certainty that a bar composed of stone coal, burnt substance &c. has been thrown up, directly under the bed of the river. Island, No. 8, from the junction of the Ohio to the Mississippi is entirely sunk; indeed the effects already ascertained are terrible; the innundations are progressing through the low lands, and it would appear that there had not been any volcanic eruption sufficient to draw off the cause; the shocks are now running up the river, and through what is called the American bottom, &c.

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