From the Margins: Tornado vs Steamboat
By some estimates, over 3,000 steamboats sank on America’s waterways between 1820 and 1860. Even more were lost into the early 1900s after the heyday of steamboats had already started to fade. Most of those sinkings were due to the usual reasons such as snags, collisions, fire, and explosions. But there’s one cause you don’t hear about as often: the great and powerful tornado.
The most famous case of steamboats being hit by a tornado is the Natchez tornado of 1840. On May 7, 1840 a tornado descended on the river town of Natchez, Mississippi. Estimates say there were 140 flatboats on the river that day, along with a few steamboats. 116 of the flatboats were sunk. The steamboat Prairie was also sunk, and the Hinds destroyed so completely that it floated 90 miles downstream to Baton Rouge. When it was finally recovered, it still had 51 (deceased) people on board. All told the tornado killed at least 317 people and is still listed as the second most deadly tornado in US history.
The Montana was another example of nature vs steamboat. On July 2, 1879, the steamboat Montana was docked at Bismarck, Dakota. As one newspaper at the time described it, “a gust in wedge shape came up the Missouri and struck the steamer Montana”. Luckily no passengers were on board as half of the cabins were blown ashore and the other half completely destroyed. The Montana had to go back to St. Louis for repairs and lost an entire season, only to be sunk for good in 1884 near St. Charles, MO after colliding with a railroad bridge.
The third example is the one I find most interesting. The Miriam was leased by the Wright Exposition Company and was headed to Caruthersville, MO for a show. On Sunday April 26, 1908 the Miriam was in the river and underway near Helena, Arkansas when a tornado came upon it, picked it up, spun it around, and dropped it upside down back in the river. 75 people were on board, but luckily most survived. Only 12 people died.
Of course the company had to cancel their upcoming shows, but just a few days later the newspapers start to hint at a bit of a mystery. Apparently one of the victims was Anna Golden, a well liked and highly trusted member of the company. Her body was not immediately found and her mother said she had been carrying the cash and jewelry of many of her companions. It was her mothers opinion that she had been robbed and her body disposed of to cover the robbery. A young woman’s body was found a few days later and people suspected it was Anna, but the body was found without clothing and with none of the possessions that Anna was supposed to be carrying, so there was no way to positively identify her.
So friends, let me just say again… “History isn’t boring, you just didn’t read the fine print”
Sources:
https://www.weather.gov/bmx/event_04241908
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_deadliest_tornadoes_in_the_Americas
https://www.usdeadlyevents.com/1840-may-7-tornado-natchez-and-on-the-ms-river-e-g-hinds-la-plantations-318/
https://stcharlesparks.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/Slide-Sinking-of-the-Montana.pdf
https://www.ustornadoes.com/2017/05/07/natchez-ms-tornado-1840/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Montana_%28steamboat%29
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_deadliest_tornadoes_in_the_Americas
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1840_Natchez_tornado
The Daily Republican [https://www.newspapers.com/paper/the-daily-republican/31012/], Poplar Bluff, Missouri,Tue, Apr 28, 1908 · Page 1
St. Louis Globe-Democrat [https://www.newspapers.com/paper/st-louis-globe-democrat/18366/], St. Louis, Missouri,Tue, Apr 28, 1908 · Page 2
The Democrat-Argus [https://www.newspapers.com/paper/the-democrat-argus/6043/], Caruthersville, Missouri, Fri, May 1, 1908 · Page 1
The Democrat-Argus [https://www.newspapers.com/paper/the-democrat-argus/6043/], Caruthersville, Missouri, Fri, May 1, 1908 · Page 3
Centralia Fireside Guard [https://www.newspapers.com/paper/centralia-fireside-guard/18523/], Centralia, Missouri, Fri, May 1, 1908 · Page 1
The Democrat-Argus [https://www.newspapers.com/paper/the-democrat-argus/6043/], Caruthersville, Missouri, Fri, Apr 24, 1908 · Page 3
St. Louis Post-Dispatch [https://www.newspapers.com/paper/st-louis-post-dispatch/4064/], St. Louis, Missouri, Tue, Apr 28, 1908 · Page 19
The Commercial Appeal [https://www.newspapers.com/paper/the-commercial-appeal/5546/], Memphis, Tennessee, Fri, May 15, 1908 · Page 13
St. Louis Globe-Democrat [https://www.newspapers.com/paper/st-louis-globe-democrat/18366/], St. Louis, Missouri, Wed, Jul 2, 1879 · Page 3
The Times-Union [https://www.newspapers.com/paper/the-times-union/44582/], Rochester, New York, Wed, Jul 2, 1879 · Page 3
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