HISTORY OF PASCO COUNTY
The 1921 Hurricane
This page was last revised on Oct. 11, 2018.
This page discusses the 1921 hurricane as it affected Pasco
County, Florida, and Tarpon Springs, Florida.
The hurricane, later estimated as category 3, made landfall
around Tarpon Springs on Oct. 25, 1921. Maximum winds recorded
at Tarpon Springs were 100 miles per hour.
Peter Joseph (“Joe”) Baillie later recalled that damage in New
Port Richey was extensive, boats that had been moored along the
river were floating in the streets and many homes were without
roofs.
The New Port Richey Press (unseen) reported, “A heavy
storm struck New Port Richey and vicinity on Nov. 1, causing
considerable damage, but no loss of life.”
The Tarpon Springs Leader reported on Oct. 28, 1921,
“Elfers and New Port Richey, where citrus culture is among the
principal industries, suffered heavily on account of the storm.”
In a 1972 newspaper interview, Leland Poole recalled, “I
remember it like yesterday. It happened Oct. 27, 1921. Elfers
was just about solid citrus then. It stripped the trees. No
oranges or grapefruit that year. It hit New Port Richey too.
They were just building the Community Congregational Church.
Blew the whole back out. Knocked down wires all over.”
In 1976 Maxine Gause recalled attending the Elfers school.
“Only perhaps 10 kids came that day to school, out of about 75
usually. But my mother was a substitute teacher that day, so we
attended. When our upstairs classroom door blew in, my mother
tried to tie it shut, but couldn't. So we had to take turns
standing against it, a few at a time, until the storm finally
eased up. We were frightened!”
In 1976 Pauline Stevenson Ash also recalled attending the
Elfers school. “During that hurricane, most of the windows blew
out, and we took turns sweeping out the water, for almost seven
hours!”
The Church of Our Lady, Queen of Peace in Port
Richey sustained significant damage from the hurricane. The bell tower
was blown off and not replaced. The church continued to be used
after repairs.
At Fort Dade, near Dade City, an old two-story building which
had earlier housed the Mount Zion Methodist Church and the
Masonic Lodge was destroyed by the hurricane. According to a
historic marker, the building was constructed in 1872.
On May 12, 1922, the Dade City Banner reported, “The
October hurricane blew several trees down on the Prospect
church, almost completely destroying it. The people of the
neighborhood have just completed the rebuilding of the edifice
and on Easter night had their first service. As no clergyman was
present, a lay service of prayer and song was held”
On May 19, 1922, the Dade City Banner reported, “The
October hurricane certainly had it in for the churches of Pasco
[the community of Pasco -jm]. The Baptist church was lifted off
its foundations and now stands with a zigzig look as if it had
just woke up ‘the moraine after the night before.’ It is still
in usable condition though and the regular services are being
held as usual. The Methodists’ place of worship was completely
destroyed. It was an unusually fine building for so small a
community and its loss is a distinct calamity. Plans are on foot
for re-building before the year is out.”
The Dade City Banner reported, “The turpentine business in the Darby
section, known as the Amelia Still, suffered severely in the tropical storm of October 25,
when the building was damaged and possibly a third of the timber blown down.”
More information can be found below the photos, in the
newspaper articles from the Dade City Banner and Tarpon
Springs Leader. Unfortunately, the New Port Richey Press
from this period apparently is lost.
Community Congregational Church in New Port Richey, under
construction, damaged by the hurricane.
Damage to the Church of Our Lady, Queen of Peace on
Washington Street in Port Richey.
Sunnybrook Tobacco Co. barn no. 3 in Dade City destroyed
by the hurricane.
A Burgert Brothers photograph taken on Nov. 2, 1921.
Dade City in Path of Tropical Storm (1921)
Sunny Brook Tobacco Company Loss $100,000.
Fifty Percent Fruit Lost
This article appeared in the Dade City Banner on Oct. 28,
1921.
Pasco county was struck by the terrific tornado that passed
over south and central Florida Tuesday. The loss is inestimable.
Probably fifty per cent of the citrus fruit was blown off the
trees and many fruit trees were blown over, houses and small
buildings were damaged and even destroyed, and fine shade trees
uprooted, broken off or spangled.
The storm began Sunday morning as a slow steady rain,
increasing in volume through the day and Monday. Monday night
the wind began to blow from the southwest and increased until it
reached destructive velocity. It was at its worst in Dade City
between 3:30 and 5:30 o’clock Tuesday afternoon.
Nine of the large barns and 110 acres of half shade of the
Sunny Brook Tobacco Company were destroyed at a loss estimated
at $100,000. The south end of the packing house of the Dade City
Packing Company was crushed in at a possible loss of $1,000. The
damage to racks and loss of veneer blown away at the Veneer mill
may amount to another thousand. The smoke stacks of the Dade
City Ice, Light and Power Company went over.
Great damage was done to electric current, telegraph and
telephone lines. The Light company were able to turn the current
on the down town circuit Wednesday night but it required two
days more to repair circuits in residence districts. All phones
of the Pasco Telephone Company but 18 were put out of service.
County Agent Merrin estimates that 40 to 50 per cent of the
citrus fruit was blown off the trees. Some estimates of single
groves run as high as 90 per cent. The packing houses are
working day and night to save all fruit possible.
Rain was blown through sided walls seemingly like a sieve and
most housewives were busy mopping up and trying to stop the
destruction in their homes. One lady said she would like to have
watched the storm but was too busy mopping to see any of it.
A loss it will take years to replace is that of many pines and
beautiful oak trees which has been one of the charms of Dade
City to visitors. The notable big oak on the corner of Church
and Lockridge street was completely crushed down early in the
day. Main street at the north end of Cherry street was
completely blocked by two large oaks that fell across it. Three
pines and several oaks in the school yard toppled over. The same
destruction extended all over the city.
A big oak tree fell on J. H. Green’s house, but came down so
slowly that no damage was done. Trees and big limbs also fell on
E. Muller’s, J. A. Hendley’s and Eustis Futch’s porches.
Everywhere the story was the same, trees and shrubbery down,
vines torn from houses, windows out and fences down.
The roof was blown off the G. B. Spencer home and much damage
done by the rain. This was the most serious damage reported done
to a private residence in the city.
The Standard Limited from St. Petersburg ... [illegible
paragraph]
The Banner force had a rough experience. The office occupies
the first floor of the Masonic building, a two story frame
building fully exposed to the gale. Several windows were blown
in and half the glass in the front window broken. The boys did
what they could to protect the stock and cover the linotype and
as the building became too tipsy to be comfortable they hiked
for safer quarters. A rusty linotype and cylinder press occupied
their attention Wednesday.
A tree fell on the barn of Ruben Jordan north of town and
crushed his Dort (?) car along with the building. A tree fell on
the garage of J. S. Woodward at Lake Pasadena and crushed his
Ford. H. A. Aughenbaugh had run the Scofield truck to his home
on the Ft. King road and left it in front of the bars (?). A
pine fell across it and sank it in the ground up to the hubs.
Then the barn caved in and took off the top of his Ford, and the
roof of his home sailed away.
The kitchen and dining room were torn off J. F. Revel’s house
and the contents destroyed. The homes of A. A. Austin, John
Burks and other residents of the San Antonio road were damaged.
E. H. Schuyler reports from a third to one fourth of the old
orange trees in his grove blown over.
In San Antonio several buildings were moved from their
foundations.
In Trilby damages similar as reported elsewhere but nothing
special.
In Zephyrhills the old city hall was moved four feet. The
Zephyrs hotel lost part of its roof and much window glass. The
Nicholson barn and an old land mark, the Tom Gill barn, were
destroyed.
San Antonio Old Timers Never Saw the Like
(1921)
Buildings Wrecked, Trees Uprooted and General
Devastation
This article appeared in the Dade City Banner on Oct. 28,
1921.
San Antonio, October 27.—Tuesday’s storm swept through San
Antonio at a terrific gale, wrecking many buildings and
uprooting hundreds of trees. The citrus crop is more than half
on the ground, and growers have suffered a great loss. Some of
the oldest residents here, who have been in or near San Antonio
for forty years, do not remember having witnessed such a storm
before. The gale was terrific.
The home of Bernard Lyons, a little over a mile from town, was
so badly wrecked that Mr. Lyons will probably not attempt to
repair it, but instead will build an entirely new house. Mr.
Lyons had to take his family to the St. Charles hotel until
another home is provided. J. A. Barthle’s warehouse near the
station was damaged to such an extent that the contents were
practically destroyed. he had over a thousand dollars’ worth of
fertilizer stored there. Water tanks went down by the wind at
the homes of S. J. Murphy, Oswald Freible, J. A. Barthle, and at
the Holy Name Academy. The old garage on the Halsema property
was blown down; the front was blown out of the store building
near the railroad station, now occupied by John Tucker; Jesse
Dunne’s dwelling was shifted from its foundation, and the house
occupied by Adam Chiselbar is in the same shape, and many other
homes have been damaged to some extent.
Storm Loss in New Port Richey Heavy (1921)
The Greenhouses of Herms Floral Company a total
Loss. Buildings Damaged
This article appeared in the Dade City Banner on Oct. 28,
1921.
New Port Richey, (Special)—October 25—The worst storm in the
history of this town culminated today in a hurricane which
destroyed thousands of dollars worth of property, but so far as
known without injury to any person.
The Herms Floral Company are the greatest sufferers. All their
green houses together with hundreds of valuable trees and
thousands of plants and flowers being a total loss.
The tower of the Catholic church was blown off and the building
wrecked. The south wall of the new Congregational church was
blown out and one fourth of the roof torn off. Nearly all the
windows in the school house were broken and the plastering down.
Extensive repairs will have to be made before reopening the
school.
Industry park, the home of various industries, was leveled to
the ground with the exception of Bronk’s cabinet shop. The hotel
garage was destroyed, leaving several cars to the mercy of the
weather.
T. I. Lindsey’s house was blown from its foundation.
J. J. Burns’ residence was unroofed, two small houses at Port
Richey were wrecked, and several more or less damaged.
All the stores were damaged by water, some of them suffering
severely. The wooden awning over the dry goods store was blown
down, breaking the show window and doing considerable damage to
the stock.
Hardly a house in town escaped damages of some kind, mostly by
water and in some instances residents were driven from homes.
The fruit crop is a total loss. The Dignum Rothera grove with
an estimated crop of 800 boxes is entirely stripped of its fruit
and will not be marketed. The groves of Messrs. Stulting, Fluke,
Elder, and Northup are in a similar condition and very little if
any fruit will be shipped from this vicinity this season.
For the first time since the office was established, no mail
arrived today, nor was any sent out. No train has arrived this
week and none are expected for some days on account of washouts.
The electric light plant is out of commission but hopes to turn
on the juice Wednesday night.
Hurricane Sweeps South Florida (1921)
Considerable Damage to Property; Nobody Killed
or Injured in Tarpon Springs.
Wire Connections With Neighboring Towns Cut
off;
Rumored South End of County Suffered Severely, with Some Loss of
Life.
The following article appeared in the Tarpon Springs Leader on
Oct. 26, 1921.
The people of Tarpon Springs are congratulating themselves
today on their good fortune in having come through a severe
hurricane without the loss of a life or the physical injury to a
single person, so far as can be learned. Quite a number of
people suffered considerable damage to their property as a
result of the heavy rain which was accompanied by winds that
raged from 11:30 yesterday morning until nearly 3 o’clock in the
afternoon, attaining an estimated velocity of between eighty and
ninety miles an hour.
The principal damage in Tarpon Springs consisted in blowing off
of roofs, the breaking of windows, and the destruction of many
fine trees. Telephone and electric wires are down in many parts
of the city, but a partial service is being maintained by the
telephone office and it is expected that lights will be
available in certain parts of the city by late this evening. The
power plant was not damaged appreciably, and while the poles and
wires are considerably mussed up, it is thought normal service
can be restored within a few days.
It would be useless to attempt to enumerate the houses that
were damaged to some extent by the storm, as there were many.
Most of them, however, suffered only slight damage, such as the
losing of window screens and small patches of roofing. The
business section of the town suffered more from water than from
wind. Rain began falling early Sunday morning and continued to
fall almost constantly until late Tuesday evening. By Tuesday
morning rain was falling in torrents, with increasing winds. The
hurricane broke about 11:30 and continued to grow in severity
until about 3 o’clock, when the wind began to subside. The
hurricane came from an easterly direction, but a strong wind
came up from the west shortly after 3 o’clock, bringing in an
unusually high tide. The waves broke over the seawalls along the
bayous and the water backed up through the storm sewers, filling
some of the lower streets near the water front.
CONSIDERABLE PROPERTY DAMAGE
The Tarpon Inn and the Hotel Stratford both suffered
considerable damage from water. The high school building was
pretty badly damaged, though the class rooms are all in
condition for use. The cupola and part of the roof were torn
away and the ceiling in the auditorium was broken through.
The roof of the big Hawkins house on Spring bayou was damaged
by the falling of the chimney tops. The Odd Fellows hall, at the
corner of Ring avenue and Lemon street, was blown off its
foundation and practically demolished. The boat houses of E. M.
Smith and E. Z. Griggs were wrecked and the handsome pleasure
yacht owned by Mr. Griggs was badly damaged and sunk. Most of
the buildings in the business district leaked badly and
mercantile stocks were more or less damaged by water.
Odessa Lumber Companies Lost Heavily in Storm
(1921)
Autos Go Through Water up to Running Board to
Reach Outside World
This article appeared in the Dade City Banner on Nov. 4,
1921.
Odessa, October 27th, 1921.
Warnings of a tropical hurricane coming were seat here Monday
afternoon. No one expected anything but a slight gale, therefore
very few preparations were made.
The Lyon Pine company’s mill received damages to the extent of
$15,000 in roofs blown away from the mill and dwellings,
machinery damaged, with locomotives and cars stalled in the
woods with tracks washed away and timber down everywhere. The
Dowling Company mill was damaged to the extent of $25,000 or
$30,000 in the same way with the exception of smoke stacks and
commissary as six of the immense stacks were blown down and
around, like pipe stems, leaving one standing. The commissary
roof was blown in with the entire front and all porches blown
off. One house on the Dowling side was demolished causing the
family to seek other shelter during the worst of the storm while
other houses lost roofs, porches, and blocks. No autos were lost
but many were left homeless. The houses on the other side were
treated the same.
All light wires and poles down, telephones out of commission
completely cutting off all communication outside till early
Thursday morning. A few autos crossed the Cootie river late
Wednesday afternoon on the way to and from Tarpon, but the water
was above the running boards and the doors of some. The bath
house and pool at Seven Springs, near here, were destroyed.
The school houses here are intact and only one day lost from
school. Mrs. Kirkman, the principal of school, has been very
much worried about her people as she hasn’t heard yet from a
sister whose home was on Palmetto Beach at Tampa. Not house is
left there. Mrs. Kirkman with a party, leaves for Tampa early
Saturday morning.
Storm Damage Less Than First Estimate (1921)
Hurricane Covered Wide Territory, But Took
Small Toll of Life;
Fruit Crop Suffers Great Damage.
The following article appeared in the Tarpon Springs Leader on
Oct. 28, 1921.
The work of cleaning up after the hurricane that swept Tarpon
Springs Tuesday in its course across the Florida peninsula is
progressing
rapidly and, aside from the leaves and branches that still
litter some of the streets, little remains to indicate that the
town has just undergone one of the severest storms in the
history of the lower west coast. An unofficial summing up of the
property damage here doesn’t show any great individual loss,
though the total probably will run up to several thousand
dollars. Everybody is working hard to repair what the storm has
torn down, and the prevailing sentiment is gratitude that not a
single resident of the town suffered any physical injury.
The heaviest losses were sustained by the Southern Utilities
Company and the Peninsular Telephone company, both of which have
been at large expense repairing wires and poles. The telephone
service is still considerably impaired, but it is expected that
full service will be restored within a few days. Manager G. A.
Louden of the Southern Utilities company, Chief Electrician R.
R. Daniel, and a large crew of men began work immediately after
the storm subsided Tuesday afternoon, and at 4:15 Wednesday
afternoon the current was turned on in the business section of
the city and the greater part of the town had electric lights
Tuesday evening. It has been necessary to shut the power off
from time to time to make further repairs, but a fair service is
being maintained and the company is receiving many words of
commendation for the effort made.
Many residences and business houses were slightly damaged by
wind and rain, but only a few suffered damage of a serious
nature. The firms and individuals listed below sustained more or
less serious loss:
Tarpon Springs Furniture company—Warehouse partially wrecked
and large stock of furniture damaged by water.
Old Reliable drug store—Large front window smashed.
G. W. Fernald’s Son—Plate glass window broken.
Stratford Hotel—Part of roof torn away and interior damaged by
water.
Tarpon Inn—Number of broken windows and some water damage.
[This section of the article is illegible.]
as packing house facilities are crippled and it will be
impossible to pack and ship more than a small fraction of the
fruit that fell. Elfers
and New Port Richey, where citrus culture is among the principal
industries, suffered heavily on account of the storm.
Oldsmar Hit Hard.
According to reports from people who have passed through
Oldsmar since the storm, that little town suffered severely.
Most of the damage
there appears to have been done by high water. Parts of the town
are said to have been under six feet of water and a number of
houses are reported to be practically ruined. There was no loss
of human life, but a number of cattle were drowned. The damage
to crops has not been estimated, but is known to be heavy.
The roads between this city and Tampa are negotiated with
extreme difficulty, several torturous detours being necessary.
One enterprising citizen, living near one of these detours, is
said to be doing a thriving business pulling automobiles out of
the mud with his tractor.
D. K. Ballard, who has just returned from Fort Myers, reports
that the storm was not severe there or at Punta Gorda, but that
crops were practically ruined by high water. At Punta Gorda he
saw a man drive a motor launch into the postoffice. Mr. Ballard
reported that one fisherman was drowned at that place and that
ten others were missing Tuesday night.
Tampa and St. Petersburg suffered heavy damage, with a loss of
three lives at the former place and two at the latter. The early
rumors of heavy loss of life at Pass-a-Grille proved wholly
unfounded. The property damage on the island was heavy, but
everybody was accounted for.
Many Towns in Path of Storm
The following resume o storm damage throughout the state is
taken from the Tampa Tribune of Thursday:
The tropical storm which blew in early Tuesday morning from
down about the Yucatan channel blew out again early Wednesday
morning, leaving a trail of destruction over a considerable
portion of southwestern Florida. It was heading northeastward
when it left this section and is believed to have spent much of
its force before striking the Atlantic coast somewhere between
Jacksonville and Charleston. The east coast of Florida was
merely “sideswiped“ by gales which “fringed” the eastern edge of
the disturbance.
From Punta Rassa on the lower southwest tip of the coast, where
the hurricane first struck the state, on up along the Gulf coast
of Tampa, and for perhaps fifty miles to the northward, the gale
spent its greatest force, the winds at times reaching a velocity
of seventy-five miles an hour at Tampa.
The property loss in Tampa is estimated at between one and half
and two million dollars, with a total for the entire section of
southwestern Florida of perhaps five million dollars.
Much of the loss will fall on the citrus fruit growers,
estimates of fruit torn from the trees varying from 50 to 60 per
cent in the coastal region of Pinellas county, with 30 to 50 per
cent in Hillsborough, down to 5 to 10 per cent in Orange and
Polk counties. In some sections of orange and Polk the loss will
exceed 10 per cent, and in others fall below. As is the case
with all storms, there were areas swept by winds of greater
force than others.
Heavy rainfalls which swelled creeks and flooded low areas
inland added to the losses. Along the coast the wind out of the
southeast, blowing with gale force, at times reaching sixty to
seventy-five miles an hour, backed up the waters in the bays and
produced near-tidal waves on the gulf which swept inland and
flooded vast low areas. At Tampa the Hillsborough river reached
unprecedented heights. The greater amount of the actual damage
at Tampa was caused by high water.
Loss of life has been small, only five actual deaths being
traceable to the storm, three at Tampa and in the vicinity of
this city, and two at St. Petersburg.
At St. Petersburg the property loss was greater than elsewhere
except at Tampa. Damage to property there is estimated at
between $500,000 and $1,000,000. Every pier along the water
front there, including the magnificent city-owned recreation
pier, was either wrecked or demolished and swept away. The
bridge from St. Petersburg to Pass-a-Grille is practically
destroyed. Part of the bridge from Clearwater to Clearwater
island was swept away. A portion of the Indian Rocks bridge was
destroyed.
The long wooden bridge across the head of Old Tampa bay near
Safety Harbor was swept away during the gale. It swung along
with the current and smashed up against the Tampa and Gulf Coast
Railroad bridge, carrying away a portion of that structure, and
it will be ten days before trains can be run over the T. &
G. to Clearwater and St. Petersburg. Oldsmar will be the last
station for that length of time.
Little news trickled through from outlying points Wednesday,
the first wire service secured being a single wire which the
Western Union got about 8 o’clock Wednesday evening. For the
greater part of the day there was a single W. U. wire out of
Plant City, and messages from Tampa were taken there by
automobile and relayed, and a few messages were received for
Tampa the same way. It was the only touch this city had with the
outside world, as all long distance telephone lines were down,
and still are down.
Punta Rassa seems to have been virtually wiped off the map. The
storm raged there from early Monday night until late Tuesday
night. The gale at that point at times reached a force of 100
miles an hour, sweeping away houses and bringing a veritable
tidal wave along with it.
Boca Grande suffered severely, but the extent of the damage is
not known.
Fort Myers and the outlying islands were in the path of the
storm. There was much damage there.
At Bradentown and vicinity the principal damage was to the
citrus fruit crop, but there was some damage to buildings. Anna
Maria key was swept by the storm and there was considerable
damage to the buildings and to the dock there.
Pass-a-Grille caught much of the storm’s force. Rumors that
lives were lost there proved untrue. The pass was cut off from
the mainland when the bridge failed, but yesterday motorboats
from St. Petersburg reached the island with provisions and
clothing for such as were in need. There was much property
damage there.
The Gulf and Southern steamship Truxillo is reported to have
left New Orleans Saturday with passengers and freight for Tampa,
and should have arrived here Monday or Tuesday. It has not yet
been heard from. The Truxillo carries no wireless equipment.
The Mallory Line steamship Lake Fillmore was due to arrive here
from New York with general cargo Tuesday, but has not yet
appeared.
Key West was not struck by the storm, contrary to the wild
rumors of great devastation there. The storm merely sideswiped
the Island City. A wireless received at the St. Petersburg
station from Key West Thursday stated that there was no storm
damage there.
Center Hill, in Sumter county, in the middle of the state,
reports about $200,000 damage, mostly to crops.
Daytona had a sixty-mile gale for a short time Tuesday morning,
but comparatively little damage was done there. St. Augustine
experienced high winds and some damage. There is a report that
four fishermen in a boat were lost, but this has not been
confirmed.
Bartow, Lakeland, Winter Haven, Arcadia and all other towns in
the South Florida section suffered more or less, but the inland
cities did not feel the force of the gale to the extent that the
coastal towns did.
Jacksonville experienced a sixty-mile gale for a time Tuesday,
and wires went down. Nearly five inches of rain fell there
between 8 o’clock Tuesday morning and the same hour twenty-four
hours later.
2 Smacks Are Lost; Probably 15 Dead (1921)
Three Greek Boats, with Twenty Men, Not Heard
From;
Masts Found Beyond Lighthouse.
The following article appeared in the Tarpon Springs Leader on
Oct. 28, 1921.
The crew of the Spanish smack Manuel, arriving in port last
night, report that the two smacks, Severiter and Espania, were
wrecked in the hurricane of last Tuesday, and the battered and
deserted hulls of these vessels were found drifting with the
tide at a point near the big buoy, five miles west of Anclote
light, yesterday. The masts were gone and there was no sign of
life on either vessel. While no bodies have been found, it is
the opinion of the Manuel crew that the fifteen men who are
known to have been on the wrecked vessels were swept away and
lost. Only by a miracle could they have been saved. The Manuel
lost her masts and was battered severely by the gale, but came
through to safety without the loss of a single member of her
crew of eight.
Greek Boats Missing
There is much uneasiness here regarding the fate of the Greek
schooner Aegina and the diving boats Constantinople and
Cornelia, which were at sea Tuesday and have not been heard
from.
The schooner Aegina, in charge of Capt. Athanasias Stamatis and
with a crew of four men, was known to be a few miles west of the
lighthouse at the beginning of the storm. Floating masts,
believed to be those of the Aegina, have been found in that
vicinity and it is feared that the vessel and her crew are lost.
The Constantinople, in charge of Capt. James Melissas, and with
a crew of seven men, left Tarpon Springs several days before the
hurricane. There is hope that she may have made port somewhere
up the coast, although, in that event, the crew should have been
heard from before now.
The Cornelia, in charge of Capt. Lambris Skiriotis, and with a
crew of four men, was last seen about five miles west of Anclote
light and no trace of the vessel or the crew has been found
since the storm.
Searching expeditions have gone out from here and are scouring
the seas in this vicinity in the hope of finding the missing
boats and rescuing the men, if still alive.
[A later newspaper article reported that the schooner Aegina
and the diving boats Constantinople and Cornelia were
accounted for and no Greek lives were lost.]
How Leader Was Issued Wednesday (1921)
The following article appeared in the Tarpon Springs Leader on
Oct. 28, 1921.
With the Southern Utilities Company electric power shut off
until evening on Wednesday last, owing to the demoralized
condition of wires throughout the city, those responsible for
the issuance of The Tarpon Springs Leader were up against a
problem. The office being up-to-date depends upon the electric
current not only as power to run its presses and folding machine
and linotype, but the linotype itself is equipped with an
electric pot. Also,
by reason of using a linotype to set up all the ordinary reading
matter in the paper, the office is not equipped with type of
suitable size nor of sufficient
quantity to hand set enough matter for a newspaper.
Such was the condition which confronted The Leader staff on
Wednesday morning. Inquiries were made of the Southern Utilities
Company
and it was found that it would be impossible to secure power
from them until late in the afternoon. But Wednesday was
publication day and The Leader had a service to render to its
readers. It could not wait.
Therefore, all hands got busy. For a time it looked very much
like the old days when every news office set its type by hand.
Job type was
used, and when one size ran out, another was used. The staff was
determined to give its readers the news, even if in very brief
form.
When the miniature paper had been set up and the forms all made
up, the staff was confronted with the problem of running the big
cylinder press. This problem was solved by taking the belt off
the motor, and then by one taking hold of the belt and pulling
on t with all his weight, while another pulled on the fly wheel
with his hands, the big press was put into motion—slow, to be
sure—but motion just the same. And so, in this manner the paper
was printed. The folding machine being out of question, the
paper was cut and folded by hand, and the papers finally placed
in the mail.
That this was strenuous work, anyone who ever has tried turning
one of the big cylinder presses by hand can vouch. Even the
Leader staff finally played out, and the services of two colored
men was secured to help out. But The Leader did not miss
publication, and it was turned out in its entirety in The Leader
office.
Because many persons have asked how the paper was issued when
the electric power was off, this explanation is given.
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