Eastland Memorial Society

WESTERN ELECTRIC NEWS - AUGUST 1915
KEYWORD(S)

WESTERN ELEC NEWS
PAGE 1
PAGE 2
PAGE 3
PAGE 4
PAGE 5
PAGE 6
PAGE 7
PAGE 8
PAGE 9
PAGE 10
PAGE 11
PAGE 12
PAGE 13
PAGE 14

IN PRINT
AMERICAN BOY
AMERIKAN KALENDAR
ARIZONA REPUBLICAN
ARLINGTON HGTS POST
BEACON NEWS
BELLEVUE LEADER
BERWYN LIFE
BLACK MIRROR
CHICAGO SUN TIMES
CHICAGO TRIBUNE
CORONET MAGAZINE
DAILY HERALD
DAILY NORTHWESTERN
DUBUQUE TH
ELMWOOD PARK
HEARTLAND INSTITUTE
INSIDE ONLINE
POPULAR MECHANICS
PROFESSN'L MARINER
SCHAUMBURG REVIEW
SPRINGFIELD JOURNAL
WESTERN ELEC NEWS

HOME
THE EASTLAND
PHOTO GALLERY
PASSENGERS
BIOGRAPHY
EASTLAND IN PRINT
RELATED ARTICLES
IROQUOIS THEATRE
TEACHER RESOURCES
ONLINE STORE
LEGAL NOTICE
SIGN GUESTBOOK
VIEW GUESTBOOK
GLOSSARY
SUGGESTION BOX
CONTACT US

THE EXPERIENCES OF A HAWTHORNE NURSE
As Told by Miss Repa, Hawthorne Hospital.

The picnic committee had arranged for the maintenance of a hospital tent at Michigan City, for the treatment of the minor accidents that might occur during the day. Miss Repa was one of three nurses from the Hawthorne hospital who had been detailed to be in attendance at the tent. All three had agreed to go out on the "Theodore Roosevelt," the second boat out, and Miss Repa was on her way to the dock when the catastrophe occurred. The following is the story of her experience as she told it for the News on July 28th.

I was on a trolley car, at Lake Street, when I heard what I thought must be screams; I could hear them even above the noise of the car and the noises on the street. Just then a mounted policeman galloped up and stopped all the traffic, shouting: "Excursion boat upset - look out for the ambulance!"

I knew at once that it must be one of our boats, and ran to the front of the car, to get off. The motorman tried to stop me, but I slipped past him and jumped off just as one of the ambulances came up. It had to slow up on account of the congestion, and I managed to jump on the back step. I had my uniform on, and so was allowed to stay on until we got to the dock.

I don't know how I got on the dock, or on the Eastland. Indeed, there are a good many things that happened that day that I am still hazy about. All I remember is climbing up the slippery side of the boat, losing my footing, and being shoved up by somebody from behind. I finally got to where I could stand up on the side of the boat, which was lying out of water.

I shall never be able to forget what I saw. People were struggling in the water, clustered so thickly that they literally covered the surface of the river. A few were swimming; the rest were floundering about, some clinging to a life raft that had floated free, others clutching at anything they could reach - at bits of wood, at each other, grabbing each other, pulling each other down, and screaming! The screaming was the most horrible of all.

They were already pulling them out from below when I got there, out of the water and out through the portholes. People were being dragged out, wet, bleeding, and hysterical, by the scores. Most of those from the decks and the inside of the boat were cut more or less severely, because the chairs and benches had slid down on top of them when the boat went over.

Those who had no injuries beyond the wetting and the shock were sent to the various hotels. I started working, first on the boat itself and then on the dock, helping to try and resuscitate those who were unconscious. The pulmotors had not yet arrived, and we had to try what "first aid" measures we could.

The injured were taken over to the Iroquois Memorial Hospital. Remembering that this is only an emergency hospital, and is not equipped to handle a large number of cases at once, I asked a policeman how many nurses were on duty there. He said that there were only two. Knowing that I would be more needed there than at the dock, for the present, I hurried over. I went back and forth between the hospital and the dock several times during the day, and had no trouble in making the journey quickly. I simply jumped on a patrol wagon or an ambulance, and being, as I have said, in uniform, was able to make the trip without being questioned. The one place I did have trouble, and a great deal of it, was at the dock. The police had evidently received orders to keep everybody back, and so zealously did they perform their work that I was held up several times until I could be identified. I finally remembered the arm bands that we nurses had received to wear at the picnic. These were of red, white and blue cloth, with a red cross on them. After I had put mine on I had no further trouble.

When I got to the Iroquois I found the two nurses distracted. More and more people were arriving every minute, wet and shivering, and there were no blankets left. Something had to be done quickly, so I had one of the nurses telephone to Marshall Field & Company for 500 blankets, with orders to charge them to the Western Electric Company. In the meantime I telephoned to some of the nearby restaurants and had them send over hot soup and coffee to the hospital.

By this time the hospital was so full of people that we had no place to put the less seriously injured while they were drying off. Luckily, just at this time, word came from men working in the boiler room of a large building nearby that they would care for as many people as we cared to send over.

I must say that the people of Chicago showed a wonderful spirit. Everyone did all he could to help. As soon as my patients were sufficiently recovered, I would send them home, thinking it better to have them with their families as soon as possible. In order to do this, I would simply go out into the street, stop the first automobile that came along, load it up with people, and tell the owner or driver where to take them. And not one driver said "no," or seemed anything but anxious to help out! When the women would be brought off the boat dripping wet, the men standing by simply took off their coats and put them around them.

About nine or half-past I started back to the dock. When I got to Clark Street the crowd was so dense that I simply couldn't walk a step further. So I got on a hook and ladder truck that was going down.

When I got to the dock they had begun to bring the bodies up from the hold, and it was pouring rain. The bodies came out faster than we could handle them. By this time a number of outside nurses and doctors were at work on the victims. Most of them were dead, but a few still showed signs of life. I saw that if any of these were to be saved we must get them away from the dock. The crowding and confusion were terrible. The bodies were laid out on the dock, on the bridges, some on the Roosevelt, others on the sidewalk. A crowd of willing but ignorant volunteers kept getting in the way, and made our attempts at resuscitation almost useless.

I asked one of the policemen: "Isn't there some building where we can take these people? Some of them have a fighting chance if we can get them in out of the rain and away from this crowd."

He promised to see what could be done, and went away. A little later he returned, saying that we could take the bodies over to Reid & Murdoch's warehouse. We took the bodies we had, and all the others that came out, over there; but it was too late. Out of hundreds that we took to the warehouse, only four were revived.

By this time I had on my arm band, and so was able to go from the dock to the warehouse and back without being stopped. What made the confusion at the dock still worse was the fact that many of the people who had been pulled out of the water uninjured were still so dazed that they were wandering up and down without knowing where they were or what they were doing. I found one man up a little alley nearby. He was wandering up and down, with a ghastly, expressionless face, repeating over and over again, "I lost them all, I lost them all." His wife and three children were somewhere in the hold of the Eastland.

About twelve o'clock they reached the bodies in the inner cabins; and after that time all the bodies that came up seemed to be women and children. It had begun to drizzle just before the boat was to start, and the mothers had taken their children inside to be out of the wet.

In the meantime my sister was looking for me in the morgues and at Reid & Murdoch's. Someone had telephoned to my home that I had been seen climbing over the side of the boat and had fallen off. I was working over a man down at the warehouse when I heard someone scream, "My God, it's Helen!" It was my sister. She fainted when she saw me.

When I started out in the morning I had had on a white uniform and white shoes. By noon, what with dressing wounds and kneeling on the dock, I was covered with bloodstains and caked with mud from head to foot. I had lost my coat. A fireman threw a woman's skirt over my shoulders, and I kept the rain out with that.

At four o'clock I went home. There was nothing left to do. I had been on my feet since seven-thirty that morning, and I felt that if I ever sat down I would never get up again. I came home in the street car, with the skirt wrapped around my shoulders and my brother's raincoat over that.

TO THE PUBLIC
Some of the Employees of the Western Electric Company owe their lives and some owe the lives of members of their families or of friends or of fellow workers to the help so freely and generously given last Saturday and in these succeeding days. On all of them lies a debt of gratitude.

Offices were thrown open for the reception of the dead and dying.

Business houses, great and small, and the Public Utilities Companies suspended their usual operations to devote their facilities to the work of rescue.

Passers-by stopped to become life-savers.

Of this unhesitating and ungrudging response to the call of humanity, our employees and their families and their friends, are the beneficiaries, and in their behalf we make this public acknowledgment of heartfelt gratitude.

WESTERN ELECTRIC COMPANY.
This Card of Thanks Appeared in All Chicago Newspapers on July 29th.

 

Would that we might in some measure assuage the anguish of those who, though spared by the fate that overtook their nearest and dearest on earth, now stand disconsolate before a thousand new-made graves along the waters that man's hand has sought and thought to conquer, but with achievement all-puny, insufficient.

Would that this were within our power, that we might convey to these our friends - for friends they are - at least a modicum of the testimony of sympathy we bear them; that into their trembling palms we might steal a hand of solace and support, when life to them seems darkest, the future all-forlorn.

Virtually of our blood and sinew were they - comrades in life's work; and we stand with heads uncovered, bowed in grief and pity.

The above is an extract from an editorial in the Telephone News of Philadelphia for August 1st. similar editorials and comments appear in the current issues of the following magazines:

Telegraph & Telephone Age; Electrical Review & Western Electrician; Electrical World; Journal of Electricity, Power and Gas; Telephony; Telephone Engineer; Telephone Review; The Transmitter; Bell Telephone News, and others.

Previous PageNext Page

 

Site Map

BACK TO TOP | HOME | LEGAL NOTICE
CONTACT US | PROBLEM? TELL THE WEBMASTER
© COPYRIGHT 1998-2007, EASTLAND MEMORIAL SOCIETY. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.