General Slocum Disaster
June 15, 1904, New York City
1,000 Lives may be Lost in Burning of the Excursion Boat Gen. Slocum
This headline appeared on June 16, 1904 in the New York Times. What started as a pleasant excursion on the East River ended in disaster. St. Marks Lutheran Church in the East Greenwich Village neighborhood of Little Germany chartered the General Slocum for a pleasant voyage to Locust Point on the north shore of Long Island. 1,358 church and community members consisting primarily of women and children departed from an East Third Street pier at about nine o'clock on the morning June 15, 1904.
The General Slocum
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The ship never arrived at its destination. A smoldering fire in the lower compartments, fanned by a swift breeze and the movement of the ship,
quickly engulfed the vessel as it neared Randalls Island and Hell Gate.
Newspaper headlines, June 15, 1904 View larger image in PDF format |
As a result of the disaster, William H. Van Schaick, the
sixty-eight year old captain was indicted and later convicted.
The record of conviction reads, "the lives of nine hundred persons,
whose names and sex are unknown, were then and there destroyed..." |
Enrollment Certificate for the General Slocum View larger image in PDF format |
The criminal case heard in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York and the Certificate of Enrollment, filed with the ship's record of admeasurement, are among the holdings of Regional Archives in New York City. |
More information on the Slocum can be found here:
- NYC Public Television, WNET, documentary
- National Public Radio broadcast
- Edward T. O'Donnell's web site on The General Slocum Disaster
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