THE RUINS OF SAN FRANCISCO
Towards the close of the nineteenth
century the city of San Francisco was totally ingulfed
by an earthquake. Although the whole coast-line
must have been much shaken, the accident seems to have
been purely local, and even the city of Oakland escaped.
Schwappelfurt, the celebrated German geologist, has
endeavored to explain this singular fact by suggesting
that there are some things the earth cannot swallow, a
statement that should be received with some caution,
as exceeding the latitude of ordinary geological speculation.
Historians disagree in the exact date
of the calamity. Tulu Krish, the well-known New-Zealander,
whose admirable speculations on the ruins of St. Paul
as seen from London Bridge have won for him the attentive
consideration of the scientific world, fixes the occurrence
in A. D. 1880. This, supposing the city to have
been actually founded in 1850, as asserted, would
give but thirty years for it to have assumed the size
and proportions it had evidently attained at the time
of its destruction. It is not our purpose, however,
to question the conclusions of the justly famed Maorian
philosopher. Our present business lies with the
excavations that are now being prosecuted by order
of the Hawaiian government upon the site of the lost
city.
Every one is familiar with the story
of its discovery. For many years the bay of San
Francisco had been famed for the luscious quality of
its oysters. It is stated that a dredger one day
raked up a large bell, which proved to belong to the
City Hall, and led to the discovery of the cupola
of that building. The attention of the government
was at once directed to the spot. The bay of
San Francisco was speedily drained by a system of
patent siphons, and the city, deeply embedded in mud,
brought to light after a burial of many centuries.
The City Hall, Post-Office, Mint, and Custom-House
were readily recognized by the large full-fed barnacles
which adhered to their walls. Shortly afterwards
the first skeleton was discovered; that of a broker,
whose position in the upper strata of mud nearer the
surface was supposed to be owing to the exceeding
buoyancy or inflation of scrip which he had secured
about his person while endeavoring to escape.
Many skeletons, supposed to be those of females, encompassed
in that peculiar steel coop or cage which seems to
have been worn by the women of that period, were also
found in the upper stratum. Alexis von Puffer,
in his admirable work on San Francisco, accounts for
the position of these unfortunate creatures by asserting
that the steel cage was originally the frame of a
parachute-like garment which distended the skirt, and
in the submersion of the city prevented them from
sinking. “If anything,” says Von Puffer,
“could have been wanting to add intensity to
the horrible catastrophe which took place as the waters
first entered the city, it would have been furnished
in the forcible separation of the sexes at this trying
moment. Buoyed up by their peculiar garments,
the female population instantly ascended to the surface.
As the drowning husband turned his eyes above, what
must have been his agony as he saw his wife shooting
upward, and knew that he was debarred the privilege
of perishing with her? To the lasting honor of
the male inhabitants, be it said that but few seemed
to have availed themselves of their wives’ superior
levity. Only one skeleton was found still grasping
the ankles of another in their upward journey to the
surface.”
For many years California had been
subject to slight earthquakes, more or less generally
felt, but not of sufficient importance to awaken anxiety
or fear. Perhaps the absorbing nature of the San
Franciscans’ pursuits of gold-getting, which
metal seems to have been valuable in those days, and
actually used as a medium of currency, rendered the
inhabitants reckless of all other matters. Everything
tends to show that the calamity was totally unlooked
for. We quote the graphic language of Schwappelfurt:
“The morning of the tremendous
catastrophe probably dawned upon the usual restless
crowd of gold-getters intent upon their several avocations.
The streets were filled with the expanded figures of
gayly dressed women, acknowledging with coy glances
the respectful salutations of beaux as they gracefully
raised their remarkable cylindrical head-coverings,
a model of which is still preserved in the Honolulu
Museum. The brokers had gathered at their respective
temples. The shopmen were exhibiting their goods.
The idlers, or ’Bummers,’ a
term applied to designate an aristocratic, privileged
class who enjoyed immunities from labor, and from
whom a majority of the rulers are chosen, were
listlessly regarding the promenaders from the street-corners
or the doors of their bibulous temples. A slight
premonitory thrill runs through the city. The
busy life of this restless microcosm is arrested.
The shopkeeper pauses as he elevates the goods to
bring them into a favorable light, and the glib professional
recommendation sticks on his tongue. In the drinking-saloon
the glass is checked half-way to the lips; on the
streets the promenaders pause. Another thrill,
and the city begins to go down, a few of the more
persistent topers tossing off their liquor at the same
moment. Beyond a terrible sensation of nausea,
the crowds who now throng the streets do not realize
the extent of the catastrophe. The waters of the
bay recede at first from the centre of depression,
assuming a concave shape, the outer edge of the circle
towering many thousand feet above the city. Another
convulsion, and the water instantly resumes its level.
The city is smoothly ingulfed nine thousand feet below,
and the regular swell of the Pacific calmly rolls
over it. Terrible,” says Schwappelfurt,
in conclusion, “as the calamity must have been,
in direct relation to the individuals immediately
concerned therein, we cannot but admire its artistic
management; the division of the catastrophe into three
periods, the completeness of the cataclysms, and the
rare combination of sincerity of intention with felicity
of execution.”