| POPULAR MECHANICS, OCTOBER 1915 |
| EXTRA! | RAISING THE EASTLAND | FALSE BOW | EDITORIAL | CLASSIFIEDS |
RAISING THE ILL-FATED "EASTLAND"
The "Favorite," a wrecking tug, was anchored at the bow of the "Eastland," while aft, near the stern, a large pontoon carrying a heavy hoisting apparatus was moored. Cables were extended entirely around the hull of the sunken ship from both of these vessels and secured to the starboard, or upturned, side. The forward cable was fastened to the iron standard streak and passed over a big sheave at the stern on the "Favorite." This line was then wound on a large winch. The aft cable reaching from the pontoon was fixed to the "chop" forward of the stern.
When everything was in readiness to attempt the actual righting of the vessel, both the "Favorite" and the pontoon were flooded until the tug was lowered 8-1/2 ft. and the latter 9 ft. The weight of the "Eastland" is about 1,200 tons. Its boilers held approximately 40 tons of water and its hold a large quantity of coal, while a considerable amount of water also remained in the hull. This was the load which had to be negotiated in order to keel the ship, which, it was estimated, would right itself upon being pulled to a 45 degree angle. When the engines had drawn up the cables until the tug and pontoon had been pulled as deeply into the water as advisable, pumps were started exhausting the water from both. It was the natural buoyancy of these two vessels, coupled with the work of the engines, that finally brought up the "Eastland".
Instead of righting itself at 45 degrees, however, the death ship had to be pulled to approximately 70 degrees. Before this point was reached the water was taken from the boilers and still more expelled from the hold. The ship was not completely trimmed, however, until the coal and wreckage, thrown to the port side, had been removed.
LAKE BOATS ENTER OCEAN STEAMSHIP SERVICE
Vessels for transatlantic and coastwise shipping have been in considerable demand since the opening of hostilities abroad. This has been responsible for the sale of a
number of Great Lakes freighters to ocean steamship companies and the subsequent delivery of the ships at eastern ports. This has been done by taking the vessels through the Welland Canal, connecting lakes Erie
and Ontario, and thence down the St. Lawrence River. The locks in the waterway, however, do not permit the passage of boats greater than 270 ft. in length, which has made it necessary in several instances to cut
the freighters in two amidships and float the segments through separately. This was done with the 'Matoa' recently, which has a length of 291 ft. The ship was cut apart at Port Huron, Mich., and the hull sealed
with heavy bulkheads. The aft part of the vessel proceeded under its own steam as it was steered by a tug, while the bow section was towed. Concurrent with this four other ships were similarly prepared at Buffalo for the trip.
"Safety First" Eastland Memorial
The other Chicago calamity, the fire in the Iroquois theater a few years ago, also
claimed chiefly as its victims women and children. That disaster so awakened the sluggish
public that today scarcely a theater throughout the entire United States but has been
made either safe or far less dangerous as a result.
The most imaginative novelist could scarcely have had the temerity to weave in fiction
what actually took place in the case of the "Eastland", so unusual were the conditions
and so startling the effect. Monuments in stone and a memorial of some benevolent character will
commemorate the event, but the best memorial would be that which will make a repetition
impossible, and safeguard the public for all time to come.
Scuttling American Ships
As a result the Pacific Mail S.S. Co. will very soon withdraw its ships from the trans-Pacific trade;
and when the Great Northern does the same, as its vessels are unprofitable, there will remain no American
trans-Pacific line, and this vast oceanway will be left to Japan to claim and use. That Japan will not be
slow to seize the opportunity goes without saying, for Japan subsidizes the ships that fly her flag,
while the United States refuses a dollar of encouragement and imposes restrictions and requirements which
are in effect a practical prohibition.
Even the Great Lakes are not immune; for when the idiotic La Follette act takes effect next November, the American
Flag will come down from a forest of mastheads, not to fly again until the law is changed. Labor unions are credited
with the conception of the La Follette bill, which was heralded as an act "to promote the welfare of American
seamen," but which in its results will promote thousands of sailors out of a job. The Interstate Commerce Commission
has also lent a helping hand, and the lake steamers of railroad lines will have to tie up. Inasmuch as these lines
have not been particularly profitable under fairly good conditions in the past, it is not to be expected navigation
companies will spring up and clamor to buy these ships. With the close of navigation on the Great Lakes next December,
the American Flag will be practically exterminated on the inland seas. The boats will almost certainly be sold to other
countries.
What a fine thing it all is; what a grand accomplishment; how proud we all should be to have made it almost a misdemeanor
to fly our own flag, and to have thrown so many obstacles against its being flown from the masthead that an owner and captain
stand a mighty good chance of going to jail every time they do it! While almost every other nation which has even a few miles
of seacoast is striving in every way to encourage its marine, we, with the largest available seacoast on earth, have apparently
neglected nothing to exterminate the little marine we had. This country will pay a costly penalty one of these days, and will reap
in humiliation and dismay the bitter harvest which shortsighted and misguided politicians have sown for us.
FOUR real photographs of the Eastland for ten cents in coin. Lafbury Co. 305 North Fifth Ave., Chicago.
FOUR real photographs of the Eastland - valuable exposure meters for Graflex and other camera - descriptive of the best
Anastigmat Lens on earth, and the finest round-cornered roll-film camera made in America, all for ten cents in coin. Lafbury
Co., 305 North Fifth Ave., Chicago.
At this writing the sorrow of the "Eastland" disaster is rapidly
fading into history, while the usual investigations by various city,
county, and Federal officials are progressing. Various causes will be
set forth as more or less contributory, but the simple verdict of
"overloading" will include all the others. Owners and managers, by
reason of immunity from accident in the past, naturally grow impatient
at restrictions imposed, and use every means to load to maximum capacity.
A maximum load on either a man or machine is just a little more than prudence
will suggest, as it removes that margin, though small, which furnishes the factor
of safety.
If an enemy had succeeded in driving the American Flag from the high seas only a fraction as effectively as our
lawmakers have legally done, the whole nation would be aroused and in arms. Apparently no effort has been neglected
to make the burden of flying the American Flag as heavy as possible.
