Weather With Enthusiasm ! - The Storm That Erased a City: Galveston, 1900"
"The Storm That Erased a City: Galveston, 1900" A Kol Simcha Productions Podcast: On the morning of September 8, 1900, the 38,000 residents of Galveston, Texas woke up to enormous, thrilling waves — and went to the beach to watch them. By nightfall, at least 8,000 of them were dead. The 1900 Galveston Hurricane remains the deadliest natural disaster in the history of the United States — more than five times deadlier than Hurricane Katrina. This is the full story: the arrogance that left a city defenseless, the physics of storm surge that swallowed an island whole, the eyewitness accounts of survival and loss, and the breathtaking engineering comeback that followed. In this episode, we cover: Why Galveston in 1900 was one of the most important cities in America — the "New York of the South" and the "Wall Street of the Southwest" How the island's maximum elevation of just 8.7 feet above sea level made it catastrophically vulnerable Isaac Cline, the Weather Bureau chief who called the idea of a damaging Galveston hurricane "a crazy idea" — nine years before one arrived How Cuban forecasters saw the storm coming and warned U.S. meteorologists — and how those warnings were suppressed by the bureau's director, Willis Moore A minute-by-minute account of September 8, 1900, including the 4-foot surge in 4 seconds at 7:30 p.m., documented by Isaac Cline in his own firsthand report How floating debris became battering rams, destroying city blocks in a chain reaction The engineering marvel that followed: a 17-foot seawall and raising an entire city on hand-turned jackscrews Why Galveston lost its crown to Houston — and never got it back What this storm teaches us about storm surge, dismissed warnings, and hurricane preparedness today Timestamps 0:00 — Cold Open: September 8, 1900 1:30 — Welcome to Weather With Enthusiasm 3:00 — Galveston: The New York of the South 6:00 — The Storm Builds: Science & Arrogance 9:30 — September 8 — Hour by Hour 14:00 — The Aftermath 17:00 — What Science Learned 19:30 — Outro & What's Next Key Facts From This Episode The 1900 Galveston Hurricane made landfall on September 8, 1900 as a Category 4 storm Storm surge: approximately 15.7 feet — on an island with a maximum elevation of 8.7 feet Estimated wind speeds: 120–140 mph (the anemometer blew off at 6:15 p.m. after recording 100 mph) Death toll: a minimum of 6,000; most estimates cite 8,000–10,000; some reach 12,000 Isaac Cline's 1891 Galveston Daily News article called a damaging hurricane "a crazy idea" The 4-foot-in-4-seconds surge at 7:30 p.m. is documented in Cline's own Monthly Weather Review report The Galveston Seawall: 17 feet high, 3.3 miles long at completion on July 29, 1904 More than 2,000 structures were raised on hand-turned jackscrews; the island grade was elevated up to 17 feet The seawall proved itself in the 1909 and 1915 hurricanes — the 1915 storm killed 8 people, versus thousands in 1900 Sources & Further Reading Isaac M. Cline's firsthand report — Monthly Weather Review, September 1900 (NOAA) (https://vlab.noaa.gov/web/nws-heritag...) 1900 Galveston Hurricane — Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1900_Ga...) Isaac Cline — Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isaac_C...) The Great Storm: History & Aftermath — Visit Galveston (https://www.visitgalveston.com/blog/1...) History of the Galveston Seawall — Galveston & Texas History Center (https://www.galvestonhistorycenter.or...) Storm FAQs — Galveston & Texas History Center (https://www.galvestonhistorycenter.or...) Galveston Hurricane of 1900 — National Park Service (https://www.nps.gov/articles/galvesto...) Galveston 1900: 125 Years After the Storm — Ohio State Origins (https://origins.osu.edu/read/galvesto...) Blown Away: Galveston Hurricane 1900 (Willis Moore/Cuba warnings) — HistoryNet (https://historynet.com/blown-away/) Milton Elford survivor letter — Exploros / EyeWitness to History (https://www.exploros.com/summary/The-...) About Weather With Enthusiasm Storms. History. Climate. Wonder. Weather With Enthusiasm is a podcast from Kol Simcha Productions that dives into the most extraordinary atmospheric events in human history — with the reverence, awe, and obsessive detail they deserve. We cover weather science, historical storms, climate, and the human stories at the intersection of all three. Subscribe on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and wherever you listen. If this episode moved you, share it — and leave a review. It genuinely helps other curious people find the show. Next episode: One of the most violent blizzards in American history — a storm that shut down an entire region and rewrote the rules on winter preparedness. #WeatherWithEnthusiasm #Galveston1900 #HurricaneHistory #StormSurge #NaturalDisasters #WeatherHistory #Meteorology #AmericanHistory... (video made with https://www.headliner.app)

AI Reconstruction of 1900 Galveston Storm | When Galveston Was Destroyed by a Massive Storm

The Tornado That Changed Science

Why American Soldiers Started Killing Their Own Officers in Vietnam

Sister Sasagawa's Chilling Prophecy Is Unfolding?

70s Americans Were Slim. Four Decisions Changed That

AI Reconstruction Of The Texas City Disaster | America's Deadliest Industrial Accident

I Investigated The Country Where it's Illegal To Be Fat

Trump Brags About His Brain, Crowd Size & Pool, CBS Fires Scott Pelley & Don Jr's Honeymoon Video

Exposing The Dark Side of America's AI Data Center Explosion | View From Above | Business Insider

Craziest Nature Videos of the Decade

German Pilots Laughed At Canada’s “Wooden” Mosquito, Until Its Four 20mm Opened Up On Them

The Craziest Nature Videos Ever

Israel Is About to Flood the Dead Sea

Germans Captured Him — He Laughed, Then Killed 21 of Them in 45 Seconds

Supervolcano – How an eruption changes the world (Full episode) I Quarks

What RAF Pilots Said When They First Flew The American P-51 Mustang

10 Abandoned Places in America You're FORBIDDEN to Enter

The Tragic 1964 Indianapolis 500 (Rare Film)

The Tragic Story of How Mar-a-Lago Destroyed America's Greatest Heiress

