Lindsey Graham
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
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There, he supposedly sent the city's final message before the hurricane cut Galveston off entirely, only to return home afterward and discover that his house had been destroyed and his wife and child were gone.
Klein had long considered Willis Moore a friend, but he was troubled by the claim that the Weather Bureau had successfully predicted the hurricane.
He sent Moore a letter emphasizing that no warnings had reached Galveston before the wires failed, but Moore continued to portray the Weather Bureau as having expertly tracked the hurricane.
In Collier's Weekly, one of the era's most influential magazines, he claimed that the Bureau detected the storm early and issued timely warnings.
Cuban meteorologists countered these statements, publicly pointing out that they had accurately predicted the storm's Texas landfall, while the U.S.
Bureau was adamant it was heading for the eastern seaboard.
But most U.S.
newspapers accepted Moore's claims as truth and applauded the Weather Bureau's efforts.
The Boston Herald called the service excellent, the Buffalo Courier cited its advanced efficiency, and Chicago's Interocean demanded public recognition for the Bureau and its chief.
In the meantime, the residents of Galveston continued to reckon with the devastation to their city and their lives.
It was not until September 30th that a crew of workmen finally uncovered Cora Klein's remains in the mountain of debris south of Broadway near where Isaac's family had floated to safety.
Years later, he wrote, Even in death she had traveled with us and near us through the storm.
Isaac recognized his wife's body from the diamond ring on her finger, which he kept and later wore as a memento.
In the end, Cora was one of the few hurricane victims given a burial.
As funeral pyres for other victims continued burning through October, crews worked to repair Galveston's damaged wharves and warehouses, while also completing construction on scores of new houses.
On October 14th, 30,000 bales of cotton left Galveston's port, something the city celebrated as a sign of recovery.
By October 22nd, schools began to reopen, though extensive damage and racial segregation created overcrowding problems.
The situation was especially dire for Black students.
One all-Black school was destroyed, and another would be unusable for months, leaving students from all three segregated Black schools to squeeze into a single small elementary school.
Finally, on October 25th, the relief stations closed, followed soon after by the Red Cross warehouse and orphanage, whose wards have been sent to live with relatives or placed with new families.