Long
Branch, NY Tornado
September 15, 1912
THREE KILLED, 50 HURT IN NEW YORK TORNADO
Heavy Wind Leaves Ten-Mile Trail of
Destruction -- Ditches Interurban Cars.
SYRACUSE, N. Y., Sept 15. -- Three
persons were killed and fifty injured by a
tornado which worked a ten-mile trail of
destruction across the northern part of Onondaga
County late today. The property loss is
estimated at $250,000. The dead:
William Madison,
Syracuse
J. Dopp,
Fulton
Charles Chapman,
Salina
Without any warning of its approach the
black, funnel-shaped cloud first appeared near
Long Branch, a pleasure resort ten miles from
this city. About 400 persons were there
and panic followed when building after building
toppled over and two massive interurban trolley
cars were hurled into a ditch.
A number of persons ran in to the dance hall
for safety, but this building was directly in
the pat of the storm and was demolished. Many in
it were injured. The wind, thunder,
lightning and rain were terrific.
The Indianapolis Star, Indianapolis, IN
16 Sept 1912

As far as could be ascertained today the
first farm upon which the full force of the
tornado was vented was upon that of
Robert Loveless,
situated a mile and a half from Long Branch.
Mr. Loveless and his children had been
standing in the yard and the sticks and stones
which the tornado carried began to fall about
them. The top of the barn was torn off,
broken into [illegible] and distributed about
the fields.
The wind then took its path through the
meadows to the farm owned by
Will Walters,
which is situated one-half mile nearer Long
Branch. It completely wrecked the barn and
hen houses, and corn houses and a smoke house
were carried into the woods a half mile distant.
Cuts 500-Foot Swath
The woods into which
Mr. Barker's out houses were blown
are the beginning of the grove which runs down
to Long Branch. The tornado entered the
woods directly in the rear of his house and cut
a swath about 500 feet wide...
When the tornado struck Long Branch it
widened out and its effects were felt for a
width of an eighth of a mile. Its most
disastrous work was accomplished in the
immediate vicinity of the dance hall and
railroad station.
The huge pillars supporting the summer house
in which picnickers generally had their lunches
were blown from under the heavy roof. The
tables and chairs were all smashed when the roof
fell.
H. C. Graves,
employed on the grounds, told a reporter that no
warning was given of the approaching tornado and
that several of the more superstitious employees
and pleasure seekers cried out that the end of
the world had arrived...
The storm then swept down the road directly
to the south and wrecked outhouses and barns
belonging to Waldo Duer.
Mr. Duer was sitting on the porch of his home
when the tornado struck. He with his seven
children narrowly escaped.
Duer Fields Unharmed
Nowhere in the fields surrounding Mr. Duer's
home were the effects of the tornado visible.
It is the [illegible] that its center ascended
into air and that it did not descend until it
reached the farm owned by
Charles Dundee
located near Liverpool.
The damage accomplished on the farms near
Liverpool was great. On one owned by
Frank Bailey,
the barns were torn down and the roof of
the house carried away, but no one was injured.
Two Cars Overturned
The tornado was aided in overturning one of
the Lake Shore & Northern trolley cards by the
roof of the waiting room which was lifted and
hurled against its side with irresistible force.
George W. Dopp,
the motorman of the car, who was cleaning the
windows, was fatally injured in the crash and
died later at Genesse hospital. Many
others were injured when, as a car rolled over,
they were thrown against its roof.
Another trolley car, of which
Patrick L. Devin
was motorman, was torn from its trucks and
rolled over into a ditch near the waiting
station. There were only a few people in
the car. Most of its side was crushed and
had it been crowded there would have been many
fatalities.
Both of the cars were of the lighter type
which are used chiefly between the city and the
lake resorts. Their trolley poles were
torn off, the window lights were all broken and
the front of the car which Dopp was running was
reduced to kindling wood.
Michael Riley,
who was standing at one side of the station when
the storm struck, was still at the Branch this
morning. His nerves were completely
unstrung and his hands and shoulders were
shaking as he told the story of what he saw.
"I can't tell much about it," he said.
"The noise was so great and the shouts of some
women who were standing near me confused me and
I don't remember just how it happened.
Heard Terrific Noise
"All that I know is that I heard a great
sucking sound and it seemed as if my ears would
break open. The thing that struck me peculiar
was that when I saw the station move from its
base there didn't seem to be much noise with it.
"I saw a man, whom I suppose was
Madison,
throw his hands in the air just as the building
moved and then I threw myself on the ground.
Sticks fell all about me, but I was too
frightened to pay any attention to them.
"When it was all over I was dazed and the
other people were looking at each other
strangely. Then someone shouted to look
for the injured. It didn't look natural
and those that were standing about didn't look
like people at all.
"Soon after that we formed an exploring
party. All of the lights were out and we
had to feel our way over fallen trees, torn
wires and all kinds of wreckage. At every
step we thought that someone would touch a live
wire."
Syracuse Herald, Syracuse, NY 16 Sept
1912

THE DEAD
William Madison,
killed at Long Branch
Charles Chapman,
hurt at Pitcher Hill. Died at St.
Joseph's hospital
George W. Dopp,
hurt at Long Branch. Died at Genesee
hospital.
THE SERIOUSLY INJURED
Mrs. William Madison,
whose husband was killed, is at her
home. Her spine is broken in many places.
Patrick L. Devin,
No. 218 Center Street, ribs and left hip
fractured
Frank Phippen,
No. 331 South Warren street, head badly
cut and two ribs broken; at St. Joseph's
hospital
Miss Corrine Cowan,
daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. R. W. Cowan, who live near
Long Branch, jaw broken
Frank Sheen,
Pitcher Hill, ribs broken and internally
injured
Fritz Kronder,
Pitcher Hill, concussion of the brain and
several ribs broken. Condition serious.
John Wilkinson,
broken rib and back badly injured.
William Merrell,
broken right arm, cuts on hands and
fingers
Fred Grunder,
fractured shoulder
Thomas E. Bennett,
internal injuries
Mrs. Thomas E. Bennett,
bad gash on the arm and scalp wounds
Mrs. Orville May,
Collamer, severe burns on arms and
shoulders
Dorothy Keith,
finger broken and cuts
Mrs. H. W. Smith,
severe scalp wounds
C.C. Kinslow, Phoenix,
severe bruises and sprains of arms and shoulders
Samuel P. Smith, Jr.
No. 1808 Park street, skull fractured
and right arm severed at shoulder
OTHERS INJURED
Mrs. H. W. Cowan,
back, face and body cut and bruised
Miss Laura Park,
Corning, badly sprained ankle
Mrs. F. B. Boughton,
Oswego, face and back badly cut and
bruised
Henry Morey,
leg badly lacerated
Miss Laura Hazelmyer,
face and eyes cut by glass and left leg badly
cut
William Michaels,
body bruises and cuts about the head.
Joseph Jones,
No. 1081 North Clinton street, injuries
to right shoulder, suffers from shock
Leo Menzel,
No. 427 Sunset avenue, bruises and cuts to right
shoulder and hands
W. E. Hodge,
No 128 North Granger street, severe bruises to
left knee and right shoulder
John Kinslow,
Baldwinsville, bruised and cut
Mrs. John Kinslow,
cuts and bruises
Miss Ida Cooper,
Baldwinsville, cuts on both arms from
glass
Mrs. Charles Chapman,
cuts on head and suffers from shock
Mrs. Louis Haber,
cuts on head and face and bruises about the body
Miss Myrtle Healey,
bruises and cuts
Miss Edna Odin,
bruises about the body
Clarence Healey,
cuts about the face and body
Leonard Healey,
cuts about the face and bruised
Mrs. H. P. Wendell,
cuts on arms and bruises of body
Miss Effie Davis,
No. 201 Orange street, scalp would, bruises and
cuts about face and [illegible]
Miss Wilkinson,
bruises and cuts about the body and face
Mrs. P. H. Coughlin,
Syracuse, minor injuries
Arthur Hoffman,
Baldwinville, bruises about face and neck
Catherine
[illegible], arm cut and bruised.
Syracuse Herald, Syracuse, NY 16 Sept
1912
continued
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