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_LE: 20 Years Later Page 7 1$ MtMORY in-THE5.I 'Uir.-’OP.r Cill/l NS:WHO LOST V.I NvIS IN ||«, -um OF •EU&WM3R »«a pRAG£R m< ‘ I ^ PRAGUt *§**. ««£$. '‘#«4M,CW- S*.' V ; i T aMSS C^4C\FH rley Owen of Gulfport finds the name of a lost relative. i COAST, 141 DIED DURING CAMILLE Ticane Camille took 141 s on the Coast when she ted her fury here. These the lives she washed away: Gulfport abeth Bishop i. Emma Lyons Hosch i Moffett teas Moses Nyne Newman leieve Owen n Owens ile Prager i. Emile Prager . Rich :. Nellie Rich d Rose hleen Simmons n C. Wagner Long Beach vin Bayer *ard N. Farmer »es B. Farmer rices Ann Magee cy Magee awrence Nelson sie Emma Nelson L.W. Savage ter P. St. Onge . Selma Faye Sykes s Leone Welch Biloxi te Bettencourt tresa Bettencourt xge Brown .. Florence Brown s Maude Colbert . Frances Halat ney Oelke - Evelyn Oelke >ecca Oelke Irwin Oelke n Walker Woznaik . Sheldon Woznaik Pass Christian y Alexander tnah L. Barker nard Barnes . Leonard Barnes ulotte Barrett . Arden Barrett oria Barrett . Belehumion et Bellehumeur 5lia Benoit orrah Berry iam H. Bloodworth nie A. Bogg lin Boyer on Bundy get Burton l Carmichael istian Marie Chauvin Ira Chauvin les Chauvih ileen Chauvin . Wanda Chauvin thia Louise Cornell am Howard Covington a Dambruik abeth Dambruik n Dambruik e Daniels . Bonnie DeMetz or Dykes . Julia McDonald Everett ferick Gerlack ley Ann Geshke ley Geske es J. Gilbert . Corrine Graham rew Green . Jerry Hall Mrs. Helen Harden Margaret Hollins Merwin Jones Mrs. Helen C. Jones Phoebe Jones Luanne Keller Elsie Logan Mrs. Ellen Lundberg Annabelle Luttge Jack Matthews Emma Clare Mayer Olive McBryde Hugh McDonald Mrs. Hugh McDonald Willie James Norman Mrs. S.L. Savage Andrew Hartwig Schenyten Sr. Andrew Hartwig Schenyten Jr. Fred Schudstet Mrs. Charlotte Schudstet George Smith Jr. Helen Smith Mrs. Mary Smith Rose Smith Willie Stallworth Anna Williams Bridgett Williams Charles Williams Clara Mae Williams Deborah Williams Eddie Keith Williams Esther Williams Floyd Williams Jeremiah Williams Myrtle Williams Sylvester Williams. Pass Christian Unidentified White female, age 60s, 140 lbs., 5’8” White female, age 30s, 135/140 lbs., height unknown White female, age 40s, 105/110 lbs., 5’2” North Biloxi Mr. James Gilbert (N. Biloxi) Mrs. Marie Gilbert (N. Biloxi) Hancock County Col. Karl S. Axtater Capt. William Henry John Mrs. Bessie S. John Mamie Gianiiloni Peter Robito George Henry Kamflade Hattie Palmer Roosevelt Palmer Mary Easton Jackson County Father Gilbert O’Neal Miss Jessie Goff Cornelius E. Talbert Emmett Robinson Within State Buchatanna Pearl Holifield Laurel Helen Holifield Picayune Lamont Mitchell. Out of State New Orleans Jack Granville Alexander Mrs. (Mary) Granville Alexander Huey Alexander Granville Alexander Jr. Bessemer, Ala. D.L. Griffin. Residence Unknown Lydia N. Benny Douglas Jones Mrs. Maurice Stella Tucei James H. Woodall Camille howled with a fury, left ‘absolute, eerie silence’ By PATRICK PETERSON THE SUN HERALD ■ A 20-year-old memory of fury and devastation lingers with Coastians who rebuilt their lives in the aftermath of Camille’s wrath. Newcomers can only imagine the fury of the 1969 storm that leveled 68 square miles of the Coast. And for those who did not see the devastation of the 200 mph-plus winds, imagination can never paint a true picture of the destruction. “They just don’t realize that something like that could happen,” said Biloxi’s O.M. “Jac” Smith Jr., who spent the night of Aug. 17 trapped in his Biloxi home. Camille’s floods crashed nearly to Smith’s door in Biloxi’s Magnolia Mall and left a pile of rotting debris in his front yard. “This whole house was tap-dancing and shaking, ” said Smith, a veteran of a dozen hurricanes. “It’s just something that is mind-boggling. Camille brought civilization on the Coast to a sudden halt. In the weeks after the storm, life for the survivors slowly returned to normal. Smith and his family lived without electricity and water. To get drinking water, he found a free-flowing well in a destroyed seafood factory. To cook meals, he built an open fire in the back yard. Coastians who did not experience this cannot comprehend the conditions Camille brought to Biloxi. “They’re interested, ” Smith said. “They’ll listen if you tell them about it. But it is like, out of sight, out of mind.” Newcomers seem to think a disaster like Camille could never again befall the Coast, Smith said. Veterans are not so optimistic. “It could happen any time,” Smith said. “It could happen this year.” Silence after the storm At 5 a.m. on the morning after Camille, Harrison County Civil Defense Director Wade Guice left the Emergency Operations Center, which was near the site of the present courthouse. He couldn’t go far. Debris clogged the roads. Guice drove as far as he could and climbed a pile of debris to survey the damage. “One thing that struck me was total, absolute, erie silence,” said Guice. “No automobiles running, no birds singing, no dogs barking.” The Coast likely has never been so quiet. The death toll reached 141. Among the dead were 36 housewives, 22 students and 8 children under 6 years old. These deaths still haunt Guice, even though the evacuation plan has been credited with saving 50,000 lives during the storm that destroyed 5,662 homes and caused major damage to nearly 14,000 homes. Living with the memory of Camille, Guice has spent the past 20 years working to prepare the Coast for the next major hurricane. His efforts have included at three-year lobbying attempt to make it a crime to disobey an evacuation order. During the next hurricane, anyone who refuses to evacuate can be forced to leave and fined. If a hurricane like Camille again approached the Coast, everyone in the danger zones will evacuate, Guice said, though some might leave their homes under arrest. “I don’t think we would lose anyone, ” said Guice, who has been unable to finish a book about Hurricane Camille. “Every time I pick it up, I start to weep and have to put it down,” he said. Like an A-bomb Dr. Kinsey Stewart, a clinical psychologist at the Counseling Center in Biloxi, is one of the few Coastians who had seen destruction similar to what Camille wrought on the Coast. As a young man, Stewart had been in Nagasaki, six weeks after an atomic bomb was dropped on that Japanese city. “It sure made me think about that, ” Stewart said. “That sense of looking out at that absolute destruction, this was the same kind of thing.” Camille leveled 68 square miles of the Coast — the same effect as seven seven strategically placed 5 megaton nuclear bombs. Stewart and his family evacuated to Jackson. They returned to find the bottom floor of their home stripped to the studs by the floodwaters. Stewart gained a respect for hurricanes that many Coast newcomers do not have. He moved his family to a house 20 miles inland. During hurricanes Elena and Fredric, he offered to let his office staff seek refuge in his home. “Most of my younger staff and those that did not experience any of the other storms, did not come out, and just were not concerned.” After Camille, Stewart read that a hurricane of such force comes only once in a 170 years. Nevertheless, he decided to put a safe distance between his home and the beach which had been leveled in the storm. Newcomers to the Coast remain optimistic that hurricanes will not harm them, but for the generally optimistic Stewart, Camille changed his way of looking at storms. “You just don’t believe that anything can happen that bad,” Stewart said. “Up until that time, I sort of really believed it just wasn’t really going to happen. ” The survey “There was a serious underestimation, particularly by the stayers, of the potential destructiveness of the storm.” “There was evidence of the ‘spirit of defiance’ said to be characteristic of disaster culture.” “Examples of reckless challenge of the storm were rare, but there was extensive evidence that the population as a whole preferred not to evacuate. By late Sunday evening nearly everyone knew that a violent, potentially lethal storm would hit their area. Even at that time, leaving was seen by most people as a thing to do only as a last resort.” From another perspective it is remarkable, given the tendencies noted above and the characteristics of the storm and the area, that so many respondents did evacuate and that so few persons were killed.” After the disaster, bitterness and skepticism was not widespread. In a survey of 384 people, some 81 percent agreed that the communities along the Coast would cooperate to rebuild the area. ► 84 percent felt the hurricane warning system was effective. ► 89 percent felt most involved in the emergency after the hurricane did a good job. ► 73 percent disagreed that a disaster like this seems to bring out the worst in people. ► 63 percent believed the Coast would be a better place to live than it was before Camille. Some 24 percent didn’t know. ► 15 percent felt the hurricane' had been hurled against the Coast as a punishment for sins. ► 87 percent felt that people on the Coast would be much better prepared for future hurricanes. One person who stayed through the storm commented “This place will clear out immediately the next time evacuation is recommended.” An interview with 107 people who stayed through the storm revealed: ► 38 percent stayed because they felt safe. ► 20 percent had lived through earlier hurricanes. ► 15 percent didn’t want to leave their property. ► 12 percent did not understand or believe the warnings. ► 8 percent were influenced by others. ► 6 percent had a sick person at home. ► 4 percent had no place to go. ► 8 percent said either the traffic was too heavy, they waited too late, stayed to help others or had fatalistic thoughts. ► 3 percent gave no answer to the survey. &
Hurricane Camille Camille-20-Years-Later (07)