The Red Cross and the Johnstown Flood 

A family story of survival 

By Liz Aslakson, American Red Cross volunteer

I’ve recently discovered a connection between my family and the Red Cross going back to the Johnstown Flood of May 31,1889 when Clara Barton’s Red Cross became a national life-saving organization whose efforts helped my great grandpa’s survival.  

Clara Barton, Library of Congress

I thought my ties with the Red Cross began when I became a lifeguard at 15. My service continued as a young spouse volunteering at an Army clinic on an infantry base in Vilseck, Germany before becoming a part of the Northern Ohio Chapter when my husband retired.  

However, the personal link goes back further and has a more profound impact than I realized. Now that we’ve moved back to my childhood hometown, I’ve had more opportunities to research my family’s roots, especially after inheriting ancestral documents, including a memoir 

The family account written by my Great Uncle Andrew described life in Johnstown Pennsylvania at the turn of the 20th century and focused quite a bit on his dad, my Great Grandpa Stefan Furst. 

Though I heard family stories as a kid, I had vague notions of the immigrant experience during the turn of the 20th century when relatives from all sides of my family left Czechoslovakia.  

Like many migrants from Eastern Europe at the time, they first settled in the Appalachian Mountains outside of Pittsburg in Fayette and Cambria Counties. They worked in the coal mines before moving to Cleveland for better pay and working conditions in factories.  

My dad also told us kids his grandpa survived the Johnstown Flood and that his mother, Margaret, grew up under the constant threat of a disaster, as there were more floods after 1889.  

The Furst Family Johnstown, PA Stephen and Elizabeth sitting middle, Maragret and Andrew standing left

In my continued research online, I found out that my great grandpa arrived from Slovakia in 1884, at age seven. However, I couldn’t find records of parents or siblings that might have come with him. So, this summer I went to Appalachia using the paper trail left to me to uncover more information about where my family first lived in America. 

My first stop took me to Uniontown’s history room in Fayette County where a researcher pointed out a chair that Clara Barton had used when helping displaced people after the Johnstown Flood in neighboring Cambria County. Historic rains and the breaking of the poorly maintained South Fork Fishing Dam destroyed the city of 30,000, taking more than 2,200 lives. 

The “Angel of the Battlefield” from 25 years earlier during the Civil War was in her D.C. office when she learned of the horrific tragedy. At 67 years old, Clara Barton quickly gathered a team of 50 nurses and doctors, and with a load of supplies, arrived in Johnstown five days later. 

The Red Cross remained in Johnstown for six months, providing supplies, temporary shelter, medical care, reuniting families, and finding homes for orphans.  

My great grandpa was twelve at the time of the flood. If any other family members were with him, there are no indications of survival –just the account of his dad written by Andrew. 

In addition, not only were records destroyed, but in the wake of devastation, “journalists” falsely accused immigrants of looting which resulted in vigilante violence and lynchings. From resources I read like David McCullagh’s book, The Johnstown Flooddetailing the immigrant experience in the flood’s aftermath, I imagine my own remaining relative laid low.  

Nevertheless, my great grandpa did make it out alive due to the Red Cross and other relief efforts assisting anyone in need, regardless of their ethnic derivation.  

As I stood in the Uniontown library this summer, looking at the chair, it dawned on me that my great grandpa likely stood in front of Clara Barton as she sat on that simple wooden seat, providing him food and shelter as she did for 1000’s of other destitute people after that flood. 

In the following years, my great grandpa lived in a neighboring town. But once he turned 18, he moved back to Johnstown when he met his wife, Elizabeth, and they went on to have six kids. 

Additionally, though he worked in the coal mines for a few years, the citizens of Cambria County elected my great grandpa constable, often times a lifetime position. He then worked for his community until his sudden death in 1916 at the age of 38.  

A couple of years later, my Great Grandma Elizabeth remarried a widower and soon after they moved to Cleveland’s Slavic Village with their children. My Grandma Margaret and Great Uncle Andrew also went on to have their own families, with Andrew living to 100 years old. 

Although my great grandpa had a short life, he lived through tremendous change and survived devastation with help from people like Clara Barton. 

In sum, though my writing involves historical research, this family project has further opened my eyes to the significance of details and numbers when reading old documents, as well as the relief efforts associated with major tragedies.  

I not only understand how the Johnstown Flood became the impetus of the Red Cross becoming an international relief organization but have gained a deeper gratitude for all individual relief efforts 136 years ago as they ensured my family’s survival. 

I also feel more fortunate to be part of the organization that saved my great grandpa. From working in that little clinic in Germany as a new Army wife to my hometown of Cleveland as part of the Service to Armed Forces, I’m proud to be a Red Cross volunteer.  

Clara Barton Answers the Call to America’s Largest Flood

By Doug Bardwell, American Red Cross volunteer

Just before 3 p.m. on May 31, 1889, 14 miles west of Johnstown, Pennsylvania, a dam broke, releasing 20-million tons of water into the Conemaugh Valley. In this narrow valley, the water reached 60 feet high as it barreled toward the city at speeds of 40 m.p.h.

By the time it struck Johnstown, the 4 billion gallons of water brought with it everything in its path. Four square miles of downtown were completely obliterated by the crushing flood waters. By the time it was over, 30 acres of human bodies, homes and debris were piled 70 feet high against the stone-arched railroad bridge at the far edge of town. The pressure and amount of the water was later compared to all the water flowing over Niagara Falls in 36 minutes.

johnstown55

Photo credit: Johnstown Flood Museum

Between the force of the water and the ensuing explosions and fires that broke out, more than 2,200 people died, 1,600 homes were destroyed, and $17 million worth of damage was done (close to $500 million in today’s valuation.)

From War Relief to Disaster ReliefClara B

In Washington, D.C., Clara Barton got word of the event.  Prior to this time, she had provided relief to the Civil War soldiers, but was lobbying for the American Red Cross to provided relief for peacetime disasters as well.  Five days after the flood, Clara and five Red Cross workers arrived in Johnstown. Within days, she had assembled a team of 50 doctors, nurses and relief workers.Johnstown Flood

Setting up headquarters in the city, she immediately began organizing donations that began arriving from all around the world.  Food, clean water and supplies were passed out immediately to survivors as they tried to create shelters however they could.

 

“Red Cross Hotels” were opened to provide shelter for those left homeless before the winter weather set in.  The first “hotel” was so successful, five more were quickly erected.

Johnstown Flood 2

Photo credit: U. S. National Park Service

They also began building 3,000 “Oklahoma houses,” a type of prefabricated home, to aid the city in rebuilding. Furniture donations and domestic items were then organized and distributed to outfit these homes.

Clara didn’t leave the city for five straight months, only returning to Washington on October 24, 1889.  The city presented her with a number of gifts to show their lasting gratitude.  One editorialist wrote, “Too much cannot be said in praise of this lady…To her timely and heroic work, more than that of any other human being, are the people of the Conemaugh Valley indebted.”

Today if you visit the Johnstown Flood Museum, you’ll see a section devoted exclusively to Clara Barton and the Red Cross’ success in helping restore the town, along with some of her original papers and one of the first Red Cross blankets to be distributed.

Johnstown Flood 3.docx

Photo credit: Doug Bardwell/American Red Cross

Based largely on the success of her mission to aid the Johnstown residents, the American Red Cross received its Congressional Charter 10 years later, in 1900.

Today you can continue the legacy of Barton and volunteer to help with the next big disaster to strike this country.  Volunteer today at https://neoredcross.org/volunteer/.

Access the ProVia Employee Red Cross Volunteer Application here.