From ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu Sun Aug 18 02:10:52 1996 Return-Path: Received: by massis.lcs.mit.edu (8.7.4/NSCS-1.0S) id CAA17446; Sun, 18 Aug 1996 02:10:52 -0400 (EDT) Date: Sun, 18 Aug 1996 02:10:52 -0400 (EDT) From: ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu (TELECOM Digest Editor) Message-Id: <199608180610.CAA17446@massis.lcs.mit.edu> To: ptownson Subject: Bell System History: The Eastland Disaster The employees of the Bell System's manufacturing facility known as Western Electric in Chicago had been planning it for months. It was to be the annual company picnic and employee recognition ceremony. Each year, Western Electric provided an all-expense paid outing for employees, and gave special monetary rewards to the employees recognized by the company as outstanding in their performance. Typically it would be a pot-luck picnic with lots of food and beverages for everyone. A band would entertain with music and then during the afternoon the managers would open sealed envelopes to reveal the winners of the prizes. There would be prizes for everyone but the honored employees would receive special gifts. Saturday, July 24, 1915 was a beautiful day, weather-wise. Not too hot, and not too humid. It would indeed be a great day for a ride on the boat that Western Electric had chartered for the occassion. It was a huge steam-operated vessel called the Eastland; it had been in service for many years and had been the scene of many happy and joyous occassions as newly married couples celebrated their marriage ceremony with parties; as companies like Western Electric held annual social events for employees, etc. Docked at the pier under the Dearborn Street bridge on the Chicago River, the boat would cruise several miles out into Lake Michigan and return later in the evening. That Saturday morning the employees of Western Electric began arriving quite early to secure the best seats on the boat. Soon the parking lot nearby was full and dozens of employees were walking down the street in groups of three or four or more to the stairs leading down to the dock where the boat and many of their co-workers were already waiting. In all, over two thousand people were present including the spouses and other family members who were all part of the larger corporate family known as Western Electric and Bell. Promptly at 7:30 A.M. the Eastland began pulling away from the dock just as promised, with the passengers waving and calling to passers by who saw them leaving. It was only a few feet out in the water and a few yards away from the dock when it happened: To this day, the various versions of the story are disputed; some say the boat was defective, but many others claim the problem was with the crowd of people on board. What is known is that a large number of passengers all went to one side of the boat at one time to look at something which had been called to their attention. In the process, the Eastland tipped over from the unbalanced weight, and as it tipped over and began to sink everyone on board fell in the water; either immediatly or after attempting to hang on to the side for a few seconds. A call for help went out immediatly, and within a matter of minutes a number of the men of the Chicago Fire Department and Chicago Police Department were on hand attempting to rescue the hundreds of people in the water. A good many swam to shore on their own, and many were rescued by the police and firemen, in a rescue effort which went on for ** several hours ** with hundreds of the passengers trapped inside cabins on the boat which was now totally upside down in the water and mostly submerged. There have also been many versions of the rescue operation; some say that the captain of the Eastland at first refused to allow the rescue workers to cut away portions of the side of the vessel to get to the people trapped inside. Others say that by that time it was too late anyway, since everyone trapped would have been dead. There has been criticism made of the rescue workers saying that instead of making an orderly evacuation of the passengers in the boat as it was sinking they allowed panic to overcome common-sense, and that it was panic which caused most of the deaths. In all 812 people died that Saturday afternoon, and even into the early hours of Sunday morning bodies were being brought to the dock at the Dearborn Street bridge where physicians who had been called to assist would pronounce each person dead before the bodies were taken away or released to anxious family members or co-workers who lingered nearby throughout the evening and into the overnight hours. In its Sunday edition of July 25, 1915, the {Chicago Tribune} devoted several pages to the horrible event of the day before, and again on Monday, July 26 the paper devoted its attention to the deadly weekend just past, listing the names and addresses of the people who had died in the disaster. The list of names took an entire page in the {Tribune} that day. An investigation and formal inquiry by the Chicago Common Council (what is now called the City Council) began early in August and went on for almost a month. Monday, July 26, 1915 was a very somber day at 'Hawthorne Works', as the Western Electric plant was known. Workers gathered in small groups around the plant to discuss the nightmare they had all witnessed two days before. The plant was closed the next day and the day following for funeral services which were held throughout the city, and in addition, the Bell System called for a day of mourning later that week with all but essential employees excused from work to attend memorial services in cities across the United States with the top executives of the company attending such a service as a group in Chicago. The shock took a long time to wear off at Hawthorne Works. Finally in late August, nearly a month after the incident, Western Electric began hiring persons to replace those who had died in the Eastland disaster. One day in early August, two quite unexpected visitors showed up at Hawthorne Works to meet with the survivors: Alex Bell and his wife Mabel spent most of the day walking about the plant pausing at each work station and desk to shake hands and spend a minute chatting. Although Alex Bell had been out of the 'phone business' for a number of years, he and Mabel each held considerable amounts of the company stock in both AT&T and Western Electric. As they would stop to chat, Mabel had a notebook and would make careful note of the names of the persons who had died, along with the names of their family members, etc. Each employee would tell her something new she had not heard before. By that point in time, Alex had become quite hearing-impaired -- virtually deaf -- and from time to time Mabel would look at him and talk in a loud voice into the speaking tube like device with a horn on the end which he held up to his ear. Later over the next several weeks, the families of the persons who died that Saturday afternoon in July each received personal notes of condolence from Alex and Mabel, along with gifts which were deemed appropriate in each case. Litigation against Western Electric (as the organization which chartered the Eastland) and the proprietors of the Eastland went on for three years afterward, with the last of the suits being settled in 1918, about three years later. The last of the survivors of the Eastland disaster continued her employment with Western Electric for another 35-40 years. She had been just a young woman when she started with the company where she stayed her entire working career until she retired in the early 1950's. On the fiftieth anniversary of the Eastland disaster in 1965 she was interviewed by the {Chicago Tribune} and she gave her reminisences of that day. Then everyone forgot about it again, and by the middle 1980's most people in Chicago never even had heard of it, let alone know anything about it. There was no marker, no commemorative of any kind at the location. But a group of high school students did not forget about it. A few years ago several teenagers looked at the dusty old reels of {Tribune} microfilm from the summer of 1915 and thought others should know about this event in the city's history, so they went to the Chicago City Council as a group and convinced the council to allow them to raise the money to install a permanent marker at the point on (what is now called Wacker Drive but was then South Water Street) between Clark and Dearborn Streets as a commemorative. It was installed by those kids and anyone today walking down the sidewalk on the north side of Wacker Drive at that point can read about what took place there now 81 years ago. I am surprised at the large number of people in this industry -- even telco employees -- who have never heard of the Eastland disaster and the tragedy which took the lives of 812 of the early pioneers of the industry. Perhaps you had never heard of it either, or knew very little about it. Perhaps this note will serve to inform you also. PAT