The SS Eastland in service and loaded to the gills. |
It was a drizzling, cool morning in Chicago. A wispy
haze, not quite a fog, waited
for the July sun to burn it off and
reveal the blue, calm waters of Lake Michigan ahead. Yet there was an air of almost giddy festivity as thousands came down to the
slips along the Chicago River where
a procession of excursion steamers were
tied up and awaiting their arrival. They
came in their best summer clothes, whole families of them—Mothers in shirt waists,
long flowing skirts, gleaming new shoes buttoned
to a fare-thee-well over the ankles, and fine big hats almost as elegant as the grand dames who paraded down Michigan Avenue; hulking Fathers in too-tight suits and celluloid collars that bit into their thick necks, new straw skimmers clinging
to their heads; daughters in pinafores with shiny ribbons in their cascading ringlets,
fine you lads in their knickers already eyeing opportunities
for mischief. They gaily babbled in half a dozen languages—English, of course, but Czech, Polish, German, and Swedish,
too—as they filed up the gangplanks onto
the ships.
It was a big day in all of their
lives. They were off on a rare holiday, a single day out of a year of drabness and drudgery at the mammoth Western
Electric Hawthorne complex in Cicero,
just across the way from Chicago where most of the nation’s telephone and telegraph equipment was manufactured. They would sail over the cool waters of the
Lake that morning and dock at Michigan
City, Indiana for a picnic and a
day on the beaches with games and competitions, dances in pavilions, and plenty of cold beer for the grown-ups and ice cream for the kids for relief from the heat.
And that evening they would sail back, approaching Chicago in the gloaming as the city’s dazzling lights
out shown the emerging stars. They would
clamor off the ships, sunburned and exhausted, carrying their children.
They would climb on board street
cars or the L and make their way
back to their cold water flats and rooming houses. Or that was the plan.
The SS Eastland was the
largest and finest of the excursion ships lined up that day. Its enticing brochure called it the Speed
Queen of the Great Lakes. She had
been built in 1902 by the Jenks Ship
Building Company of Port Huron,
Michigan. The 1,961 ton ship was 265 feet long, 28 ft. wide at the beam, and 19 ft. 6 inches when
loaded. She had gone through four
owners, but had successfully plied the waters of Lake Michigan and Lake Erie
for 13 years.
But she was known to be top heavy at least three times she had listed with a full passenger load to
the point of beginning to take water, but each time the crew had managed to
right her. Officials did reduce her
passenger capacity as a precaution. The
current owner and operator, the St. Joseph-Chicago Steamship Company of St. Joseph, Michigan, was aware of the problem but believed that
the crew had been adequately trained to deal with listing by adjusting ballast.
That early morning of Saturday, July
24, 1915, exactly 100 years ago today, the Eastland was tied up in the river
between Clark and LaSalle Streets. More than 7000 tickets had been
purchased for the excursion and by about 7:10 am the ship had reached its
official capacity 2,752 passengers. Many
headed below to get out of the
drizzle. Many others excitedly jammed
the open upper decks, hoping to watch the cast
off and view the short trip down the river to the lake. A lot of those crowed the port side, away from the dock for a
better view of the river. Shortly, the
ship began to list and the crew began shifting ballast. Perhaps they were not fast enough, perhaps
the tipping point was reached before the bilge
pumps could do their work. Original
reports had it that there was a sudden rush of passengers to the port side
after 7:25. In fact what probably
happened was that the list had become so pronounced that the passengers slipped
toward the port rail. At 7:20 the ship lurched softly and then
began a slow roll until it was lying on its side and rapidly taking water
below. It quickly sank to the muddy bottom
of the river, a depth of only 20 feet.
Half the ship lay exposed above water on its side.
The Kenosha and small boats evacuate survivors from the Eastland's capsized hull in the Chicago River. |
There were many witnesses, including reporters
from the newspapers, several of
which had offices nearby. Jack Woodford, a reporter for the Hearst owned Chicago Examiner, recalled
in his autobiography:
…And then
movement caught my eye. I looked across the river. As I watched in disoriented
stupefaction a steamer large as an ocean liner slowly turned over on its side
as though it were a whale going to take a nap. I didn’t believe a huge steamer
had done this before my eyes, lashed to a dock, in perfectly calm water, in
excellent weather, with no explosion, no fire, nothing. I thought I had gone
crazy.
As rescue and recovery continue, the body of a woman was pulled from inside the hull. |
With
hundreds of witnesses and in the heart of a busy city, help was on hand almost
immediately. The nearby ship Kenosha immediately pulled alongside and began to take on scores of passengers
that scrambled from the decks to the side of the ship. Lines were thrown to victims in the water
from the ship and from shore.
Police and Firefighters
arrived on the scene in minutes and began frantic rescue efforts aided by
many civilian volunteers. They were supplemented by members of the Fire Insurance Patrol, coast guard, hard-hat divers, and heavy equipment operators. Hundreds were rescued. But before an hour was up official realized
that it was too late for most, although a very few were rescued from air pockets on board when holes were
cut in the hull.
Many of the dead were trapped below when the ship
rolled and rapidly took water. Some were
crushed as heavy furnishing,
appointments, and equipment tumbled on top of them. Few of those who were thrown in the water
could swim and women in particularly
were weighed down by their volumeous skirts and heavy shoes. Some were crushed between the ship and the
dock or even between the capsized ship and rescue boats bobbing in the
water.
Search for loved ones at the 2nd Regiment Armory. |
In the end the bodies of 844 passengers
and four crew members were taken near-by makeshift
morgues then later consolidated at the Illinois
National Guard 2nd Regiment Armory where they were laid out in neat rows
for identification. In gut wrenching scenes still wet survivors paced up and down the lines
searching for loved ones from whom they had become separated. Too often, they found them. After a day or so and the opportunity of
loved ones not on the ship to join in viewing the bodies, the vast majority
were identified, although a handful never would be. More than 280, most Czech immigrants, came
from the village of Cicero in the immediate neighborhood of the Hawthorne
plant.
The
disaster, which is recognized as the greatest maritime loss of life on the Great Lakes despite having occurred in
the River, dominated headlines for months with recriminations and charges flying. A Federal
investigation made one important, if ironic discovery. Newly
enacted legislation adopted in response to the sinking of the SS
Titanic in 1912, required that the Eastland
carry a full complement of life boats, which were dutifully hung
around the upper decks. But the heavy wooden boats further destabilized the already top-heavy ship
and probably contributed to the roll.
None of the lifeboats could be launched to save passengers in the water
because they were either caught below the hull or left high and dry on the
exposed side.
At
least 22 whole families perished and
some of the unidentified bodies may have belonged to family units.
A
Cook County Grand Jury indicted three
officers of the steamship company, the captain
and executive officer. All of the men refused to be voluntarily
extradited from their homes in Michigan.
Clarence Darrow represented
the men in extradition hearings. He must
have done a hell of a good job because the judge found that there was “barely a scintilla of proof”
to
establish probable cause to find the men guilty.
No
civil action was ever successfully
brought against any party by survivors
or heirs meaning that they never
received any damage payments for
their losses. A few families had life insurance—basically
burial policies from ethnic
benevolent societies—but most did not.
Although they sponsored the outing, Western Electric assumed not
responsibility to its employees. Newspapers, churches, and fraternal
orders raised money for burial services and some medical bills of
survivors.
Reincarnated as the Navy Gun Boat USS Wilmette. |
As
for the Eastland, the ship was re-floated
and repaired. It association with
the disaster, however, was too great for her ever to be returned to passenger
service. She was sold to the Navy which converted her to a gunboat and Training ship for Naval
Reserve sailors based out of Great
Lakes Naval Station. She was
re-christened the USS Wilmette. During World War II she was used to train Navy
armed guards that were to be
stationed on Merchant Marine vessels
during convoy operations. She also took President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Admiral William D. Leahy, James
F. Byrnes, and Harry Hopkins on
a 10-day cruise to McGregor and Whitefish Bay to plan war strategies.
In
1947 the Wilmette was decommissioned for the final time. The next year she was sold and cut up for scrap.
Today
on the 100th Anniversary of the
tragedy, a number of commemorations are
scheduled including, without apparent irony, a Lake cruise. Wreaths
will be cast in the river where the ship keeled over and laid at the
cemetery where many victims were interred.
Carl Sandburg as a young reporter in Chicago. |
Among
the many reporters who covered the disaster was a young Carl
Sandburg who was deeply moved by the event
and the circus like coverage it
received. In the pages of his employer’s
paper, Sandburg had to be restrained.
But the militant Socialist and
former Party organizer in Milwaukee found room to vent in the
pages of the International Socialist Review.
He saw the Eastland disaster not as an accident
or aberration but part and
parcel with the day to day privation, injury, and death faced by the working class. He held no punches in this powerful poem.
The Eastland
Let’s be honest now
For a couple of minutes
Even though we’re in Chicago.
Since you ask me about it,
I let you have it straight;
My guts ain’t ticklish about the Eastland.
It was a hell of a job, of course
To dump 2,500 people in their clean picnic clothes
All ready for a whole lot of real fun
Down into the dirty Chicago river without any warning.
Women and kids, wet hair and scared faces,
The coroner hauling truckloads of the dripping dead
To the Second Regiment armory where doctors waited
With useless pulmotors and the eight hundred motionless
stiff
Lay ready for their relatives to pick them out on the floor
And take them home and call up the undertaker. . .
Well I was saying
My guts ain’t ticklish about it.
I got imagination: I see a pile of three thousand dead
people
Killed by the con, tuberculosis, too much work
and not enough fresh air and green groceries . . .
A lot of cheap roughnecks and the women and children of
wops,
and hardly any bankers and corporation lawyers or their
kids,
die from the con three thousand a year in Chicago
and a hundred and fifty thousand a year in the United States
all from the con and not enough fresh air and green
groceries...
If you want to see excitement, more noise and crying than
you ever heard
in one of these big disasters the newsboys clean up on,
Go and stack in a high pile all the babies that die in
Christian Philadelphia,
New York, Boston, and Chicago in one year
before aforesaid babies haven’t had enough good milk;
On top the pile put all the little early babies pulled from
mothers
willing to be torn with abortions
rather than bring more children into the world—
Jesus, that would make a front page picture for the Sunday
papers
And you could write under it:
Morning glories
Born from the soil of love,
Yet now perished.
Have you ever stood and watched the kids going to work of a
morning?
White faces, skinny legs and arms, slouching along
rubbing the sleep out of their eyes on the go to hold their
jobs?
Can you imagine a procession of all the whores of a big
town,
marching and marching with painted faces and mocking struts,
all the women who sleep in faded hotels and furnished rooms
with any man coming along with a dollar or five dollars?
Or all the structural iron workers, railroad men and factory
hands
in mass formation with stubs of arms and stumps of legs,
bodies broken and hacked while bosses yelled,
“Speed-no slack-go to it!”?
Or two by two all the girls and women
who go to the hind doors of restaurants
and through the alleys and on the market street
digging into the garbage barrels
to get scraps of stuff to eat?
By the living Christ, these would make disaster pictures to
paste on
the front pages of the newspapers.
Yes, the Eastland was
a dirty bloody job—bah!
I see a dozen Eastlands
Every morning on my way to work
And a dozen more going home at night.
--Carl Sandburg
1915
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