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NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY/SCIENCE SOURCE/GETTY IMAGES

America’s Deadliest Disaster

The true story of the Great Galveston Hurricane of 1900

By Lauren Tarshis

Learning Objective: In this narrative nonfiction article about the deadly Galveston hurricane of 1900, the author’s use of descriptive details helps students visualize the impact of this natural disaster on the city and its residents.

Lexiles: 700L-800L, 600L-500L, 500L-400L, Beginner
Guided Reading Level: N
DRA Level: 28
Other Key Skills: Descriptive details, inference, author’s craft, cause and effect, character, main idea
Think and Read: Descriptive Details

In this article, the author includes many descriptive details to make the story come alive. Pay attention to them as you read.

COURTESY OF PETER FLAGG MASSON

Harry Maxson

Galveston, Texas, was drowning.

It was September 8, 1900. The city was being torn to pieces by a brutal hurricane. Thousands of people were dead.

Harry Maxson, 14, stood at the window of his house. Outside, the wild ocean was like a furious beast devouring his neighborhood. It was swallowing up trees. It was tearing houses apart. Harry’s ears hurt from the screaming wind.

Then Harry heard another sound.

“Help me!”

A woman was calling from somewhere outside.

Harry could barely swim. How could he help anyone?

“Please! Come and save us!” the woman cried.

Harry took a breath. He had to rescue that woman, even if it cost him his life.

Back in 1900, Galveston was the most important city in Texas. A lot of rich people lived there. There were many fancy homes. Galveston was filled with white sand beaches. The streets were made of crushed oyster shells. This made the streets sparkle like diamonds.

But that September, a hurricane hit.

Hurricanes form over oceans. They cause winds strong enough to destroy buildings. Trillions of gallons of rain can fall. These storms have killed more people in the U.S. than any other natural disaster.

During the Galveston hurricane, hundreds of houses were knocked down. Trees flew through the air. The city turned into a raging sea. People were drowning.

But Harry Maxson, age 14, was safe. And soon he would become a hero.

Galveston, Texas, was drowning.

It was September 8, 1900. The city was being torn to pieces by a hurricane. Thousands of people were dead.

Harry Maxson, 14, stood at the window of his house. Outside, the wild ocean was like a furious beast. It was swallowing up trees. It was tearing houses apart. The wind was so loud, it hurt Harry’s ears.

Then Harry heard another sound.

“Help me!”

A woman was calling from somewhere outside.

Harry wasn’t a good swimmer. How could he help anyone?

“Please! Come and save us!” the woman cried.

Harry took a breath. He had to rescue that woman, even if it cost him his life.

Galveston, Texas, was drowning.

It was September 8, 1900, and the city was being torn to pieces by a brutal hurricane. Thousands of people were dead.

And in the middle of the terror was 14-year-old Harry Maxson.

He stood at the window of his house. Outside, the wild, churning ocean was like a furious beast devouring his neighborhood. It was swallowing up trees and barns, tearing apart houses and carrying them away. Harry’s ears pounded with the sounds of the screaming wind and of flying bricks and chunks of shattered wood smashing against the walls of his family’s home.

Bam! Bam!

And then Harry heard another sound, a desperate cry rising up over the wind.

“Help me!”

It was a woman, calling from somewhere outside.

Harry wanted to turn away—he could barely swim. How could he possibly help anyone caught in that storm?

“Please! Come and save us!” the woman cried.

Her words seemed to grab hold of Harry’s heart.

Harry took a breath, gathering his courage.

He had to try to save that woman . . . even if it cost him his life.

JIM MCMAHON/MAPMAN®

Water All Around

Because Galveston is between the Gulf of Mexico and Galveston Bay, water from both sides could flood the city during bad storms.


“Help me!”

During the hurricane Harry was inside his home. It was the only one on his street still standing. Harry’s mother had invited anyone in who needed a place to stay. So his house was packed with people.

The wind was so loud, it hurt Harry’s ears. Then he heard a woman’s voice outside. She was screaming.

“Help me!”

Harry wasn’t a good swimmer. How could he help anyone?

“Please! Come and save us!” the woman cried.

Harry decided he had to save that woman, even if it put him in danger.



The Richest City


The Richest City

A Changing World

Harry had a happy life in Galveston. He had a close-knit family and plenty of friends. He was an athletic kid. He lived in the biggest and best-built home in his neighborhood. Harry and his pals zipped through the city on streetcars.

In 1900, Galveston was the richest and most important city in Texas. It was filled with white sand beaches and fancy mansions. The streets were paved with crushed oyster shells. This made the streets sparkle like they’d been sprinkled with diamonds.

But the city floods easily. It sits between the Gulf of Mexico and Galveston Bay. During big storms, waves rose up from both bodies of water. It turned city streets into rushing streams. This is what was happening on the rainy and windy morning of September 8.

But no one was too worried. In fact, thousands of people went to the beach that day to cheer the crashing waves!

Nobody understood that the city would soon be slammed by a hurricane.


Harry had a happy life in Galveston. He was close with his family. He had a lot of friends. He was good at sports. He lived in the biggest home on his street. Harry and his pals zipped through the city on streetcars.

In 1900, Galveston was the most important city in Texas. Many rich people lived there. It was filled with white sand beaches and big, fancy homes. The streets were paved with crushed oyster shells. This made the streets sparkle like they’d been sprinkled with diamonds.

But the city floods easily. It’s between the Gulf of Mexico and Galveston Bay.

During big storms, waves rose up from both bodies of water. It turned city streets into rushing streams. This is what was happening on the rainy and windy morning of September 8.

But no one was too worried. In fact, thousands of people went to the beach that day. They were cheering the crashing waves!

Nobody understood that the city would soon be slammed by a hurricane.

As a kid living in Galveston, Harry had every reason to feel blessed. He had a happy family and plenty of friends. He was an athletic kid, big and fast. He even had a summer job at the railroad station, which paid 16 cents an hour—not bad for 1900.

And what a time it was in America! New inventions and fresh ideas were transforming lives all across the country, especially in cities like Galveston.

The rooms of Harry’s family’s elegant house were lit by modern electric lights. Harry and his pals zipped through the city on clanging streetcars. Harry could borrow books from Galveston’s public library, the first in Texas.

Cities all across America were booming. But few had grown as quickly as Galveston. Perched on an island off the southern coast of Texas, Galveston had been founded in the 1830s. By 1900, it was Texas’s richest and most important city. Every day, ships loaded up with American cotton and wheat steamed from Galveston to countries around the world. Arriving ships were crowded with immigrants—people coming to America to start new lives.

And imagine what those newcomers saw as they came ashore. There were the white sand beaches and elegant mansions built by Galveston’s millionaires. Gardens spilled over with sweet-smelling flowered plants called oleanders. The streets, paved with crushed oyster shells, sparkled like they’d been sprinkled with diamonds.

True, this glittering city was prone to flooding. It was sandwiched between the Gulf of Mexico and Galveston Bay. During big storms, water rose up from both the Gulf and the Bay, turning city streets into rushing streams. This is what was happening on the rainy and windy morning of September 8, when Harry was heading to work at the railroad station.

But Harry wasn’t worried, and neither were most people in the city. As the winds grew stronger, thousands of people gathered excitedly on the beach to cheer the wildly crashing waves.

What nobody understood was that this was not just a regular storm. The city was about to be slammed by one of the most powerful forces of nature on Earth: a hurricane.

Within just hours, most of Galveston would be gone.

The Biggest Killer


The Biggest Killer

No Escape

ROSENBERG LIBRARY, GALVESTON, TEXAS.

A Glittering City

Before the storm, Galveston was one of the liveliest and most beautiful cities in the country. It was famous for its fine restaurants, fancy concert halls, and picture-perfect beaches. Some people called it “the New York City of the Gulf.”

Hurricanes form over oceans. Their winds can shatter buildings and lift trains off tracks. Trillions of gallons of rain can fall. These giant, swirling storms have killed more people in America than any other natural disaster.

In the days before the Galveston hurricane, weather experts knew a bad storm was heading toward the U.S. But they didn’t know where it would hit. In those days, scientists didn’t have tools to help them track storms. So most of their predictions were wrong.

This is why the people of Galveston had no idea that a powerful hurricane was heading toward their city—until it was too late.


Hurricanes form over oceans. Their winds can destroy buildings. They can lift trains off tracks. Trillions of gallons of rain can fall. These giant, swirling storms are deadly. They have killed more people in America than any other natural disaster.

Weather experts knew a bad storm was heading toward the U.S. But they didn’t know where it would hit. Back then, scientists didn’t have tools to help them track storms. So most of their predictions were wrong.

This is why no one in Galveston knew that a strong hurricane was heading toward their city—until it was too late.

For as long as humans have been living on Earth, they have faced extreme weather. And in no place is the weather more extreme than here in America. Frozen blizzards. Fiery heat waves. Wildfires. Tornadoes. And the most dangerous of all: hurricanes. These massive, swirling storms have killed more people in America than any other natural disaster.

Hurricanes form over oceans and can explode to shore with as much energy as 10,000 nuclear bombs. A powerful hurricane can pack winds of more than 180 miles per hour—strong enough to shatter buildings and lift trains off tracks. Trillions of gallons of rain can fall.

But the most devastating part of a hurricane is the “storm surge.” This is the flood of ocean water, pushed by hurricane winds, that can swallow entire cities.

Cities like Galveston.

In the days leading up to the Galveston hurricane, the U.S. weather bureau knew a bad storm was swirling in the Caribbean. The storm was heading north, toward the U.S. But there was no way of knowing where it would hit. Back in 1900, the science of weather—meteorology—was still young. Weather scientists lacked knowledge and tools that could enable them to track storms. Not surprisingly, most of their predictions were wrong. Just a few years before, one respected weather forecaster had written that the idea of a hurricane striking Galveston was “absurd.”

This is why the people of Galveston had no idea that a powerful hurricane was barreling toward their city—until it was too late.

The Raging Sea


The Raging Sea

A Raging Sea

As the hours passed, hundreds of houses and buildings were destroyed and sucked down to the beach. Harry’s house was crowded with scared neighbors. His mother had invited in anyone who needed help.

Around 7:30 p.m., the winds shifted. A 15-foot-high storm surge came rushing in from the Gulf. In minutes, the entire city turned into a raging sea. Houses, schools, and churches crumbled.

By midnight, Harry’s home was the only one in his neighborhood that hadn’t been washed away. “The house was so full, and there was so much worry,” Harry wrote. “There were people praying on their knees.”


The hours passed by. Hundreds of houses and buildings were destroyed. Harry’s house was filled with scared neighbors. His mother had invited in anyone who needed help.

Around 7:30 p.m., the winds changed. A 15-foot-high storm surge came rushing in from the Gulf. The entire city turned into a raging sea. Houses, schools, and churches fell to the ground.

By midnight, Harry’s home was the only one on his street still standing. “The house was so full, and there was so much worry,” Harry wrote. “There were people praying on their knees.”

Harry left work at 4 p.m. and ran home through the flooded streets. He dodged flying roof tiles and branches. He watched in horror as the wind tore the entire roof off a house and carried it through the air.

He came home to discover that his house, the biggest and best-built in the neighborhood, was crowded with terrified neighbors. His mother had opened their doors to anyone in need. His father finally arrived home from work wearing his new raincoat, which had been shredded by the wind.

As the hours passed, hundreds of houses and buildings were destroyed and sucked down to the beach. A 30-foot-high wall made of broken buildings and furniture and beds and carriages stretched across the beach for miles. For a time, this wall of wreckage actually helped protect the city from the furious ocean waves.

But then, around 7:30, the winds shifted. And the storm surge—a wall of water 15 feet high—came rushing in from the Gulf. In minutes, the entire city was transformed into a raging sea, filled with debris. Houses, schools, and churches crumbled. Telephone poles flew like spears. Parents turned mattresses into rafts and tried to save their children. 

By midnight, Harry’s was the only house in his neighborhood that hadn’t been washed away. “The house was so full, and there was so much worry and distress,” Harry wrote. “There were plenty of people praying on their knees, silently and out loud.”

Daring Rescue

The Rescue

Daring Rescue

Daring Rescue

EVERETT HISTORICAL/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM

Torn to Pieces

The day after the storm, survivors crawled out to find a scene they could barely believe. Their city’s grand homes and buildings had been knocked over, ripped to shreds, or completely wiped away.

When Harry went into his kitchen, he heard the woman outside calling for help. “I decided to get some good swimmers and go out and rescue her,” Harry wrote.

They followed the sound of the woman’s screaming voice. They finally found her standing on the roof of a house. Inside were 36 people, including 13 children and babies.

The house was floating in the water. The wind was ripping it to pieces. But over the next hour, Harry and his neighbors managed to lead everyone through the raging waters and back to Harry’s house. They made two trips back and forth until everyone was safe.

His mother welcomed all of them with hot coffee and fresh biscuits.

By 1:30 a.m., there were 140 people at Harry’s house. There were dogs, cats, and birds too. People sat together crying, praying, and waiting for the storm to end.

Harry and some neighbors followed the sound of the woman’s screaming voice. They finally found her. She was standing on the roof of a house. Inside were 36 people, including 13 children.

The house was floating in the water. The wind was ripping it to pieces. But Harry and his neighbors got everyone through the water and back to Harry’s house. His mother welcomed all of them with hot coffee and fresh biscuits.

By 1:30 a.m., there were 140 people at Harry’s house. There were dogs, cats, and birds too. People sat together crying, praying, and waiting for the storm to end.

When Harry went into his kitchen, he heard the woman outside calling for help. “I decided to get some good swimmers and go out and rescue her,” Harry wrote.

They followed the sound of the woman’s screaming voice. They finally found her. She was standing on the roof of a house. Inside the house were 36 people, including 13 children and babies.

The house was floating in the water. The wind was ripping it to pieces. But Harry and his neighbors helped everyone through the raging waters back to Harry’s house. They had to make two trips to get them all there safely.

His mother welcomed everyone with hot coffee and fresh biscuits. By 1:30 a.m., there were 140 people at Harry’s house. There were dogs, cats, and birds too.

People sat together crying, praying, and waiting for the storm to end.

Harry’s father told Harry to go into the kitchen, open the window a crack, and listen for voices of people needing help.

That’s when Harry heard the woman calling.

“Something had to be done,” Harry wrote. “I decided to get some good swimmers and go out and rescue her.”

He told his father his plan but not his mother—he didn’t want to worry her. And then he and a neighbor set out into the churning water. They floated on a downed telephone pole and rode the wild waves, following the sound of the woman’s screaming voice.

They finally found her standing on top of the roof of a house. Inside the house were 36 people, including 13 children and babies.

The house was floating in the water. The wind was ripping it to pieces. Soon it would be torn apart and carried away.

Over the next hour, Harry and his neighbor managed to lead these terrified survivors through the raging waters and back to Harry’s house. They made two trips, back and forth until everyone was safe.

His mother welcomed all of them with hot coffee and fresh biscuits.

By 1:30 a.m., there were 140 people at Harry’s house, plus dogs, cats, and birds. People huddled together, crying, praying, waiting for their city to be freed from the hurricane’s devouring jaws.

Lucky to Survive

Lucky to Survive

Lucky to Survive

Lucky to Survive

JUPITERIMAGES/STOCKBYTE/GETTY IMAGES

Galveston Today

The city is now a peaceful vacation spot. It’s much different from the busy city it used to be.

“By Sunday morning, the sun was shining,” Harry wrote. “But the water was still three feet deep in the streets. What a wreck it left.” There was nothing but ruin. At least 8,000 people had been killed. The Great Galveston Hurricane is the deadliest natural disaster that has happened in the U.S.

It took more than a year for the storm wreckage to be cleared. Bit by bit, the city was rebuilt. It’s famous for its beaches. A huge wall protects it from storms. But it is no longer the richest and most important city in Texas.

Harry knew how lucky he and his family had been to survive. He grew up to become a business leader and had his own family. He lived to be 82. Harry’s grandson Peter says his grandfather was happy but never forgot the 1900 hurricane. “He told his story every Thanksgiving,” Peter says.

By Sunday morning, the sun was shining. But at least 8,000 people had been killed. The Great Galveston Hurricane is the deadliest natural disaster in the U.S.

It took more than a year to clean up the city. Today a huge wall protects it from storms. It is famous for its beaches. But it’s not Texas’s most important city.

Harry knew how lucky he and his family had been to survive. He grew up to have his own family. He lived to be 82. Harry’s grandson Peter says Harry was happy, but never forgot the 1900 hurricane. “He told his story every Thanksgiving,” Peter says.

“By Sunday morning, the sun was shining,” Harry wrote. “But the water was still three feet deep in the streets. What a wreck it left.” 

There was nothing but ruin. At least 8,000 people had been killed. The Great Galveston Hurricane is the deadliest natural disaster that has happened in the U.S.

It took more than a year for the storm wreckage to be cleared. Bit by bit, the city was rebuilt. A huge wall protects it from storms. It’s famous for its beaches.

But it is no longer the richest and most important city in Texas.

Harry knew how lucky he and his family had been to survive. He grew up to become a business leader. He had his own family. He lived to be 82.

Harry’s grandson Peter says his grandfather was happy. But he never forgot the 1900 hurricane.

“He told his story every Thanksgiving,” Peter says.

“By Sunday morning the sun was shining,” Harry wrote. “But the water was still three feet deep in the streets. What a wreck it left.”

Galveston had mostly disappeared. For miles around, there was nothing but ruin. Silence hung over the city as dazed survivors searched for their families and friends. Bodies were everywhere. At least 8,000 people were killed—out of a population of just 40,000.

Harry knew how lucky he and his family had been to survive.

It took more than a year for the storm wreckage to be cleared. Bit by bit, the city was rebuilt, and a huge wall was put up to protect it from future storms. Galveston slowly recovered. Today, it is a charming resort city, famous for its beaches. But it would never reclaim its place as the richest and most important city in Texas. The Great Galveston Hurricane, to this day, is the deadliest natural disaster in American history.

As for Harry, he grew up to become a business leader with a family of his own. He died in 1967, at the age of 82.

Harry’s grandson Peter says his grandfather led a happy and successful life. “He was very involved in the community and was a great believer in family,” Peter remembers. But Harry never forgot the 1900 hurricane. “He told his story every Thanksgiving,” Peter says.

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Answer Key (1)

Imagine you are Harry. Write a journal entry about what you did during the hurricane. Use descriptive details! 

Prize

Five winners will each get a copy of Hurricane Heroes in Texas by Mary Pope Osborne. 


Can't-Miss Teaching Extras
Galveston Today

Your students will be fascinated to see what Galveston looks like today! This fantastic site takes you through the town’s historic landmarks.

To help your students better envision the power of this storm, explain that the hurricane created a 30-foot-high wall made of broken buildings and furniture. It stretched out along the beach for miles and, for a short time, protected the city from the furious ocean waves. Survivors described the winds of the hurricane as “a thousand little devils shrieking and whistling.”

Write To Win!

Don’t forget to have your students enter our writing contest! They could win a copy of The Magic Tree House: Hurricane Heroes in Texas, all about the Galveston hurricane. It could make a perfect read-aloud for your class, too. Here’s more about the book.

More About the Article

Content-Area Connections

Social studies: U.S. history, geography 

Science: meteorology 

Social-emotional learning: responsible decision making (solving problems, ethical responsibility); relationship skills (teamwork)

Key Skills

Descriptive details, inference, author’s craft, cause and effect, character, main idea

Step-by-Step Lesson Plan

1. PREPARING TO READ

Watch a Video/Preview Text Features (25 minutes)

  • This story is accompanied by a Video Read-Aloud narrated by author Lauren Tarshis. Riveting photos and footage help students imagine what it was like to experience the Great Galveston Hurricane of 1900. The video can be used as a “first read.”
  • Look at pages 4-5 with the class. Direct students to the title, subtitle, and photo. Ask: What do you think the story will be about? What key words in the subtitle tell you where and when the story events take place? Point to the photo caption. Ask: How did the hurricane affect Galveston?
  • Point to the map and caption on page 6. Have students identify Galveston, the Gulf of Mexico, and Galveston Bay. Ask: Why did Galveston flood during very bad storms?

Introduce Domain-Specific Vocabulary (15 minutes, activity sheet online)

  • We have highlighted in bold seven words that may be challenging and defined them on the page. Preview these words by projecting or distributing our vocabulary activity and completing it as a class. You may also play our Vocabulary Slideshow, where images and audio help students with comprehension and fluency.
  • Highlighted words: devouring, streetcar, mansions, trillions, predictions, storm surge, wreckage

Set a Purpose for Reading (5 minutes)

  • Call on volunteers to read aloud the Think and Read and Think and Write boxes on pages 5 and 9. These support the story’s featured skill, descriptive details. As they read, ask students to look for descriptive details that help them imagine what it was like to live in Galveston during the hurricane.

2. CLOSE READING

Reading and Unpacking the Text

  • First read: Read the story as a class. Use the Pause and Think questions at the end of each section to check comprehension.
  • Second read: Distribute Close-Reading and Critical-Thinking Questions to the class. Preview them together. Ask students to read the article again and answer the questions as a class or in small groups.

Close-Reading Questions (30 minutes, activity sheet online)

  • Read the first section. What descriptive details help you imagine what the ocean looked like to Harry? (descriptive details) The author describes the ocean as a furious beast that was devouring Harry’s neighborhood, swallowing trees, and tearing houses apart. What descriptive detail helps you imagine what the wind sounded like to Harry? The text says that his ears “hurt from the screaming wind.” “Screaming” helps readers imagine how loud the wind was.
  • Read “The Richest City.” Why do you think that many people went to the beach on September 8 to “cheer the crashing waves”? (inference) The big waves were probably exciting to watch. People didn’t realize how serious the storm would be.
  • Read the last sentence in “The Richest City.” Why does the author say the city would be “slammed by a hurricane” instead of “hit by a hurricane”? (author’s craft) The word slammed is more descriptive. It helps readers imagine how powerful the storm was.
  • In “The Biggest Killer,” what details help you understand the power of hurricanes? (descriptive details) Hurricane winds can shatter buildings and lift trains off their tracks. Trillions of gallons of rain can fall over several days.
  • Read “The Raging Sea.” Why was Harry’s house crowded with frightened neighbors? (cause and effect) Their homes had been destroyed, and his mother had invited anyone over who needed help. Think about what his mother did. What kind of person was she? (character) Harry’s mother was a kind person who understood that her neighbors needed help. She probably also appreciated that her house was one of the few that wasn’t destroyed.
  • Why did the author title the next part of the story “Daring Rescue”? (main idea) This section describes how Harry and his neighbors rescued 36 people inside a house floating on the water.

Critical-Thinking Question (10 minutes, activity sheet online)

  • What are some examples of descriptive details that help you picture Galveston and the hurricane? (descriptive details) Answers will vary but may include details such as: The ocean is like a furious beast that is devouring Harry’s neighborhood by swallowing trees and tearing houses apart. The crushed oyster shells that paved Galveston streets sparkle like diamonds. During big storms, the streets of Galveston turned into rushing streams.

3. SKILL BUILDING

  • Distribute our Descriptive Details Activity. Have students work with a partner to complete it.
  • Discuss the writing assignment in the Think and Write box on page 9. Remind students to use the first person pronoun “I” in their journal entries. Looking at the photos in the article will help them imagine Harry’s experience during the hurricane. Students can complete their journal entries in class or as homework.

Differentiate and Customize
For Guided Reading

Read the article together. Ask students to look for details that describe Harry’s life before, during, and after the hurricane. How do students think Harry felt at each stage of his experience? Ask students to give reasons for their answers.

For Struggling Readers

Read the lower-Lexile article as students follow along. Ask them to underline details that describe Galveston before the hurricane, after the hurricane, and today. Have students share their details with the group.

For Student Partners

Ask students to look for descriptive details as they read silently. Then have them role-play interviews on the day after the storm between a newspaper reporter and one of the Galveston citizens.

For Advanced Readers

Have students write a newspaper article from 1900 about the Great Galveston Hurricane. The article should include details and made-up quotes from eyewitnesses. Remind them to include a catchy headline. Students can read their articles in small groups.

Text-to-Speech