On this day, 118 years ago, the ground beneath Northern California shook with a ferocity that would etch April 18, 1906, into the pages of history as one of the most devastating natural disasters the United States had ever witnessed. The Great San Francisco Earthquake reached far beyond that city and crumpled buildings in Humboldt and Mendocino counties as well.
About 5:12 a.m., the residents of Humboldt and Mendocino were jolted awake by a 7.8 quake which caused serious damage even though the epicenter was the Bay Area. In Humboldt County, from Shelter Cove to Eureka, buildings swayed violently, chimneys toppled, and storefronts crumbled.
The Humboldt Times reported,
At Shelter Cove, the people are panic stricken over the many shocks they have had at that place today. Aaron Boots of Briceland came from there late this afternoon and reported that the severe shock at 5 o’clock, with the help of the ocean waves, washed about twenty acres of land near the wharf into the sea, leaving a deep depression. The wharf road from the top of its bluff to the warehouse is completely destroyed by a huge slide, making it impossible to reach the wharf even on foot and what is the fate of the tons of freight stored at the warehouse will not be known for some time. The damage to the company at the Cove is estimated at over 1,000 to rebuild the road so it can be used to haul the freight out. Many shocks have been felt at the Cove during the morning hours and a chasm over a foot wide was made a few feet from the hotel. The roads are blocked with fallen trees everywhere out this way.
Mendocino County saw landslides and road blockages that isolated communities for days. The quake slammed Fort Bragg hard and caused a devastating fire.
According to the Fort Bragg Advocate,
The fire which wrought so much havoc was started at the time of the earthquake by the overturning of a coal oil stove belonging to Mrs. Bieber in the residence of E. C. Foushee on McPherson Street. Mrs. Bieber had been ill during the night and having lighted this stove to heat water and when the shock came the stove was upset. Mr. Fouchee rushed into the room and did his best to smother the fire but his efforts were futile and he only succeeded in scorching and burning his hands in a frightful manner, and came very near being caught and burned to death. From there the flames spread rapidly and soon the entire block was a seething mass of flames. The fire then leaped across the alley way between that and Franklin street and was encroaching on the property fronting Main St when the fire company succeeded in getting a hose to the National City steam schooner, lying at the wharf, and with the water and liberal use of powder the fire was conquered.
One of the most enduring impacts of the earthquake was on the infrastructure. In the years following the disaster, both counties undertook significant efforts to rebuild roads and buildings with more resilience in mind. These efforts not only helped in the immediate recovery but also paved the way for modern emergency preparedness programs that are in place today.
See also: Ellin Beltz’s webpage April 18, 1906 Earthquake – Ferndale, California