99 Years Since the 6.5: Dispatches from the Epicenter (2024)

Table of Contents
A PERSONAL ACCOUNT REPORTING THE STORY CONTROLLING THE STORY SANTA BARBARA RISING Related Posts Santa Barbara’s Grand Arlington Hotel The Flowers That Bloom in the Spring Deeply Rooted: Speaking for the Trees Highway 154 Remains Closed to Through Traffic Between Santa Barbara and Santa Ynez Valley for Foreseeable Future Carpinteria Flimflammer Gets 16 Years in Slammer And the Winner Is … #014634! Authorities Identify UC Santa Barbara Student Found Dead at Campus Dorm over Commencement Weekend Santa Barbara Sheriff’s Office Issues Warning About Hidden Cameras in Gardens Think Before You Drink Slack-Jawed and Agape After the Presidential Debate Review | Knight of White Satin Pop The Airport In Our Midst ‘New Muralism: Inclusive Visions of Self and Place’ Premier EventsThu, Jul 044:30 PMSanta BarbaraTue, Jul 095:30 PMSanta BarbaraTeach Me Tango!Mon, Jul 015:00 PMSanta BarbaraGive a Hoot! A Plant-Powered Benefit for Rooted SBWed, Jul 031:30 PMSanta BarbaraThu, Jul 049:00 AMSanta BarbaraSt Andrews 4th of July Pancake BreakfastThu, Jul 045:00 PMSanta Barbara4th of July Concert Presented by PCVFFri, Jul 058:30 PMSanta BarbaraJaws Sun, Surf and Cinema: FREE Summer FilmsSat, Jul 0610:00 AMSanta BarbaraAPPLEBOX FREE Family Films at SBIFF’s Riviera TheatreSat, Aug 0310:00 AMSanta BarbaraAPPLEBOX FREE Family Films at SBIFF’s Riviera TheatreSat, Aug 1710:00 AMSanta BarbaraAPPLEBOX FREE Family Films at SBIFF’s Riviera TheatreWed, Sep 115:30 PMSanta BarbaraSewing and Mending ClubSee Full Event Calendar References

Real Estate

Our Santa Barbara

Reporting Story of 1924 Santa Barbara Earthquake

99 Years Since the 6.5: Dispatches from the Epicenter (1)ByCheri Rae
Thu Jun 27, 2024 | 12:03am

99 Years Since the 6.5: Dispatches from the Epicenter (2)

Post-earthquake Mission, a high priority for rebuilding as soon as possible | Courtesy Eldon Smith Collection photos

June 29, 1925, was the day the earth shuddered in Santa Barbara and changed the place forever. The janitor at the Daily News, n, observed, “The twisting of the earth was like a violent storm at sea.”

What follows are a few news reports from anonymous Associated Press reporters that give a glimpse into the immediate response to the great earthquake that caused so much damage to the downtown buildings — and cleared the way for an architectural re-do as it rose from the rubble.

A PERSONAL ACCOUNT

99 Years Since the 6.5: Dispatches from the Epicenter (3)

The story of Los Angeles businessman W.H. Scott, who had been staying at the California Hotel: “He was awakened by the first shock, and saw the walls of his room shaking. He continued: ‘They swayed sickeningly back and forth with the same motion as is imparted to an accordion when it is played. I leaped out of bed and rushed downstairs, clad only in my pajamas. In the lobby I overtook a man struggling toward the door with a small child. Just as they reached it the building gave way. Debris and wreckage piled upon them, dived through a window into the street.

“‘When I looked back the hotel was a gaunt ruin, its outer wall had fallen to the street. And standing on a heap of wreckage on the third floor I saw a man, apparently crazed with fear, screaming at the top of his voice for a taxicab. Later I found most of the guests of the hotel huddled, in scanty attire, in a vacant lot nearby. They had fled the building as soon as the shocks began.’ Still pajama-clad, Scott met an automobilist bound for Hollywood. The man invited him to come along and together they fled the city without pausing to gather additional garments.”

REPORTING THE STORY

99 Years Since the 6.5: Dispatches from the Epicenter (4)

“Movies, Filming Fake Earthquake, Find Real Thing: A moving picture company which was making an earthquake film found the Santa Barbara disaster made directly to hand. During the afternoon the company was “on location” making earthquake thriller scenes from the genuine article. At the same time the movies played an important part in the rescue work, supplying electrical apparatus and searchlights to illuminate the ruins where the night rescue work was in progress.”

Challenges for Reporters: “The obstacle of lack of light, due to the collapse of the electric power-house, was surmounted by backing an automobile up to the door of The Associated Press bureau and stringing a wire with a tiny bulb attached from the machine’s battery to the operating table. Across the street the city firemen had established a lunch counter and between cups of steaming black coffee, the sweat-bathed begrimed staff men of The Associated Press pounded out the story of Santa Barbara’s disaster and her heroic plan for recuperation. Emergency headquarters manned by staff writers and telegraph operators, filed a steady stream of news on the seaside temblor through the day and into the night, checking and rechecking lists of dead and injured, estimating and re-estimating from the best available data the material loss to the community. From here the staff men ranged the stricken area from the Arlington Hotel to the waterfront in never-ending expeditions to get the facts to the outside world.”

Sky Pilots: “From the time that the news reached San Francisco a stream of airplanes carrying newspaper correspondents and photographers flew over this city on their way to Santa Barbara, several returning north over the city in the afternoon. Reports from Santa Barbara yesterday said that automobiles were being stopped from entering the city unless they had business there, thus preventing an influx of the curious.”

CONTROLLING THE STORY

In a widely distributed press release regarding film footage of the earthquake and its aftermath, Fox Film Corporation official Howard Sheehan announced, “A careful survey of facts indicates that accounts of the earthquake are grossly exaggerated, and we have fixed a policy not to add propaganda to the already widespread exaggerated reports. We feel that the citizens and residents of California are entitled to this consideration.”

Reinforcing the embargo, movie theater magnate Sid Grauman issued a series of telegrams to mayors across the state to use their influence to prevent movie houses from showing footage of the quake. He feared the images would give a “black eye” not only to Santa Barbara, but to the Los Angeles area and all of California, causing a drop in tourism that would result in a statewide loss of revenue.

The Blue Lake Advocate in Eureka reported Mayor Lord’s reaction to the missive: “It was looked upon as an audacious piece of Southern California propaganda and noted as the most peculiar request ever made of a local official.”

99 Years Since the 6.5: Dispatches from the Epicenter (5)

But some footage remained local, as reported in the Morning Press: “The earthquake pictures were secured by airplane in order to be presented to Cabrillo Theatre patrons last night, and will be an added feature to the program to and Including Saturday. They not only show ruins of the quake but the cleaning up process as well, one view picturing [politician] William Gibbs McAdoo assisting at the Red Cross headquarters.”

“Turned Loose: The city and county jails were completely demolished. Prisoners in both institutions were given’ their liberty, Police explained there was nothing else to do with the jails destroyed.”

By a Whisker: “An open-air barber shop with four chairs opened in the public square this morning and did a rushing business. A line of twenty men sat on the curb awaiting their turn. Joking about the relative length of their beards. When a slight temblor hit the city at 10:03, the barbers continued their work and displayed their skill by not cutting anyone.”

“Slump in Marriages Result of Quake,” reported the Lompoc Review in August of 1925. “Quake conditions in Santa Barbara marked slump in the marriage license business at the county clerk’s office during July, which is usually a record month. The total of licenses issued for July is fifty. Under ordinary conditions the number would have been between two and three times that.”

SANTA BARBARA RISING

“There will be no more earthquakes in Santa Barbara for a hundred years,” declared Dr. Henry S. Pritchett, who had helped secure the Carnegie Foundation funding for so much improvement in Santa Barbara. The story was complete, the images controlled. Santa Barbara would rise from the destruction of the earthquake that simply provided the long-needed demolition of the “shabby buildings, dusty streets and lack of landscaping” that had left Pearl Chase embarrassed and ashamed just eighteen years earlier.

Cheri Rae is a longtime neighborhood advocate and the author of A String of Pearls: Pearl Chase of Santa Barbara. She is a board member of the Pearl Chase Society, and the longtime editor of the society’s newsletter “The Capital,” where this article first appeared. Email Cheri at pcs@pearchasesociety.org or visit pearlchasesociety.org.

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Premier Events

Thu, Jul 044:30 PM

Santa Barbara

Tue, Jul 095:30 PM

Santa Barbara

Teach Me Tango!

Mon, Jul 015:00 PM

Santa Barbara

Give a Hoot! A Plant-Powered Benefit for Rooted SB

Wed, Jul 031:30 PM

Santa Barbara

Thu, Jul 049:00 AM

Santa Barbara

St Andrews 4th of July Pancake Breakfast

Thu, Jul 045:00 PM

Santa Barbara

4th of July Concert Presented by PCVF

Fri, Jul 058:30 PM

Santa Barbara

Jaws Sun, Surf and Cinema: FREE Summer Films

Sat, Jul 0610:00 AM

Santa Barbara

APPLEBOX FREE Family Films at SBIFF’s Riviera Theatre

Sat, Aug 0310:00 AM

Santa Barbara

APPLEBOX FREE Family Films at SBIFF’s Riviera Theatre

Sat, Aug 1710:00 AM

Santa Barbara

APPLEBOX FREE Family Films at SBIFF’s Riviera Theatre

Wed, Sep 115:30 PM

Santa Barbara

Sewing and Mending Club

See Full Event Calendar

Mon Jul 01, 2024 | 08:30am

https://www.independent.com/2024/06/27/99-years-since-the-6-5-dispatches-from-the-epicenter/

99 Years Since the 6.5: Dispatches from the Epicenter (2024)

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