Showing posts with label New Madrid Earthquakes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Madrid Earthquakes. Show all posts

Friday, April 8, 2022

Where were the largest earthquakes in the continental United States? (Hint--not San Francisco)

by Martha Hutchens

Every now and then, a community has a terrible day. Or in this case, a terrible five months. 

Deposit Photos
Our story starts in New Madrid (pronounced MA-drid), Missouri on December 16, 1811, a small town on the Mississippi River, about 150 miles south of St. Louis. At 2:00 am, many of its 3000 residents were thrown out of their beds when the earth started shaking. The combination of horizontal and vertical motion made the ground roll like ocean waves. Thunder and lightning accompanied the movement, but it came from the ground, not the sky. Fissures opened, geysers spewed sand high into the air, and a sulfurous smell pervaded the area. By 7:00 a.m., a full 27 separate shocks had hit the area, before an aftershock nearly as strong as the first hit.

In the nearby town of Little Prairie, near present-day Caruthersville, the town itself and most of the surrounding land sank, to be inundated by the Mississippi River. The residents who waited until dawn to evacuate faced trekking eight miles through waist-high water.

And this was only the beginning. On January 23, 1812 and February 7, 1812, two more major earthquakes rocked the area. While estimates of the strength of these quakes vary widely, the December quake may have been as strong as 8.1 on the Richter scale. The “hard shock” in February has estimates as high as 8.8, which would put it on the list of top ten earthquakes of all time. Since the Richter Scale is logarithmic, the February shock would have been close to ten times stronger than the first earthquake in December.

Barge on the Mississippi River--Deposit Photos
The Mississippi River was (and is) a major waterway for barge traffic, but the river was no place to be during these quakes. The ground under the river shook, creating roiling waves. The banks fell into the river, and during at least one of these quakes the river ran backward due to a fissure opening upstream and water rushing backward to fill it. During the third earthquake, a waterfall appeared briefly on the Mississippi near New Madrid. Thirty boats went over these falls; twenty-eight of them sank.

During the five months around these earthquakes, the area experienced over 2000 earthquakes. Stop and think about that for a minute. That’s 400 earthquakes a month. Thirteen earthquakes a day. An earthquake every TWO HOURS. During many of these quakes, fissures opened. Some were only a few feet deep and a couple of dozen feet long, but some extended for miles. Some fissures closed nearly as soon as they opened, some closed after a few hours, but some remained until filled by nature. A few fissures measured 12 feet deep in 1912—100 years after their formation. 

Fissure--Deposit Photos
Residents of the area noticed that most fissures opened southwest to northeast, so many cut down trees perpendicular to this path. At the first sign of a tremor, they ran to the felled tree and climbed on top of it. There are records of at least a handful of people having a fissure open beneath the tree, and crediting the tree for saving their life. It is believed that the earth literally swallowed a handful of missing people during these quakes. One woman who lived near the Pemiscot River exited her house after one of the major quakes, only to find that a fissure had opened and the river’s course had diverted into it. Her house and her well now lay on opposite sides of the river.

This area of the country was sparsely populated at this time, but people throughout the modern continental United States felt these quakes. Records show they were felt as far away as Canada to the north, the Atlantic Coast to the east, and the Gulf of Mexico to the south. There are fewer records from the west, but they were felt at least as far away as Nebraska. That is nearly 1000 miles in any direction. The first quake rang church bells as far away as Boston, Massachusetts, and Charleston, South Carolina. In all, the earthquakes could be felt over twenty-seven states and an estimated two million square miles.

Outline of Missouri--Deposit Photos

Many people left the area during this time period. One young man, John HardemanWalker, saw this as an opportunity. Though only 17, he purchased the land from many people fleeing the earthquakes at bargain-basement prices. He left his imprint on the map of Missouri, because he eventually gained enough power and influence to insist that his land be part of the newly formed state. This is why Missouri’s southeast corner dips farther to the south than the rest of the border.

The quakes left their mark in other ways. The most famous is Reelfoot Lake, a shallow lake covering 15,000 acres that was formed during the quakes.

Reelfoot Lake--Deposit Photos
The New Madrid Seismic zone is still active. Strong earthquakes hit in 1843, 1895, and 1968. I experienced two small earthquakes while growing up there. My parents experienced a quake in 1963 that was strong enough to knock down ceiling tiles in my mother’s church. As I write this, southeast Missouri has had 185 earthquakes in the last year, most too slight to be felt. The strongest was centered near Poplar Bluff and measured 4.0 on the Richter scale.

This seismic zone is something of a scientific mystery. Most earthquakes and volcanoes occur along plate boundaries, such as the fault lines in California and the Ring of Fire circling the Pacific Ocean. Missouri is in the middle of the North American Plate. Since the mechanism is so poorly understood, predictions of the next great quake vary widely. Going on a strictly historical basis, we are overdue for our next moderate-to-strong quake in the area. Some new theories link the zone to the retreating glaciers of the last ice age and suggest that the fault line is not dormant but dying. One thing history has told us is that earthquakes are unpredictable, and the Missouri fault is no exception. 


Martha Hutchens is a transplanted southerner who lives in Los Alamos, NM where she is surrounded by history so unbelievable it can only be true. She won the 2019 Golden Heart for Romance with Religious and Spiritual Elements. A former analytical chemist and retired homeschool mom, Martha is frequently found working on her latest knitting project when she isn’t writing.


Martha’s current novella is set in southeast Missouri during World War II. It is free to her newsletter subscribers.


After saving for years, Dot Finley's brother finally paid a down payment for his own land—only to be drafted into World War II. Now it is up to her to ensure that he doesn't lose his dream while fighting for everyone else's. No one is likely to help a sharecropper's family.

Nate Armstrong has all the land he can manage, especially if he wants any time to spend with his four-year-old daughter. Still, he can't stand by and watch the Finley family lose their dream. Especially after he learns that the banker's nephew has arranged to have their loan called.

Necessity forces them to work together. Can love grow along with crops?

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Monday, May 13, 2019

The New Madrid Earthquakes: Danger Beneath the Mississippi


Did you know that the most active seismic area in the United States, created by the unstable Reelfoot Rift, lies near the junction of the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers? And that the most devastating earthquakes in national history originated here between December 16, 1811 and March of 1812?

Thousands of smaller quakes occurred, but the major ones happened:

  • December 16, 1811 – 8.1
  • January 23, 1812 – 7.8
  • February 7, 1812 – 8.8

Before the quakes, tame animals acted wild and wild animals tame. Snakes came out of hibernation. A comet appeared in the sky, remaining visible for seventeen months.

Afterwards, fissures up to five miles long opened. Shocks rang church bells in Boston. Following the last quake, the Mississippi River ran backwards for several hours.

I first came across mention of The New Madrid Earthquakes when researching for my c. 1805 historical novel releasing this year (The Witness Tree). I was studying the diaries of Moravian missionaries in Cherokee Territory during the period. According to their records, the quakes created great trauma even in current-day Georgia.

Chickens fell from their coops, buildings were damaged, and massive sinkholes opened. Cherokees flocked to them demanding an explanation. Others hid in the hills, believing the conjurers’ reports about a great snake underground and the anger of the Great Spirit that they had adapted too much to the ways of white people.

Continuing my research for my current work-in-progress set during the Red Stick War, a part of the War of 1812, this link unfolded further. Native Americans responded in a similar manner across the nation. 




Shawnee Chief Tecumseh (“Shooting Star”) and his brother, The Prophet, had predicted comets, eclipses, and the earthquakes (though some visiting astronomers were said to have clued them in about the eclipses). In response to losing three million acres of Indian land in the 1809 Treaty of Fort Wayne, Tecumseh advocated a Native American confederacy. He traveled to the southern tribes to stir up support approaching the eve of The War of 1812, when his people fought as British allies. The prophecies about the earthquakes and the comet, known as “Tecumseh’s Comet” in America and “Napoleon’s Comet” in Europe, served to strengthen his cause.

Two hundred years later, the danger remains under the Mississippi.

Represented by Hartline Literary Agency, Denise Weimer holds a journalism degree with a minor in history from Asbury University. She’s a managing editor for Smitten Historical Romance imprint of Lighthouse Publishing of the Carolinas and the author of The Georgia Gold Series, The Restoration Trilogy, and a number of novellas, including Across Three Autumns of Barbour’s Colonial Backcountry Brides Collection. A wife and mother of two daughters, she always pauses for coffee, chocolate, and old houses! Connect with Denise here:

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