Typhoon Yolanda Linked to Philippine Storm in 1912 15,000 Perished Went Viral

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Washington Herald

Typhoon Yolanda linked to a mighty storm in 1912 that killed 15,000 Filipinos and almost destroyed Visayas particularly in Tacloban the capital city in the province of Leyte. The defunct American newspaper was reported by the Washington Herald published on November 30, 1913 goes viral in social media.

Typhoon Yolanda linked to a mighty storm in 1912 that killed 15,000 Filipinos and almost destroyed Visayas particularly in Tacloban the capital of Leyte. The defunct American newspaper was reported by the Washington Herald published on November 30, 1913 goes viral in social media.

The storm was so strong that destroyed properties and loss of life in the most areas of Visayas including Capiz the capital of Region VI on November 26, 1912. After more than a century a super typhoon Yolanda (Haiyan) slammed again the particular areas of Visayas that the storm in 1912 devastated.

According to the comments from the social media, some netizens posted “history repeats itself” the storm in 1912 that destroyed Visayas regions is similar with Yolanda that destroyed almost the same places of Visayas.

Washington Herald
Screen captured image of The Washington Herald newspaper dated November 30, 1912. (Source: Library of Congress)

 

 Below are the full caption described in the American newspaper.
“That 15,000 persons were probably killed and wounded in a typhoon that swept the Philippine Islands last Tuesday was reported yesterday in cable dispatches to the Bureau of Internal Affairs.
The typhoon swept the Visayas and is said to have practically destroyed Tacloban, the capital of Leyte, and to have wrought enormous damage and loss of life at Capiz, the capital of the province of Capiz.
Tacloban has a population of 12,000. Capiz has a population of over 20,000. Capiz is the terminal of the railroad from Iloilo. It is the most important sugar port.
Aid Rushed to Scene
The first news of the catastrophe came in a dispatch from the governor general of the Philippines. No figures of the dead or injured were given, but it was stated that probably half the population of the two cities had been lost.
The governor general sent his dispatch on Thursday. He informed the department that he was rushing a shipload of food, clothing, and all available medical supplies to Tacloban. All telegraphic noypistuff communication has been destroyed, and it is impossible to get other than vague reports of the extent of the disaster. That Tacloban has suffered an enormous loss of life is believed to be certain.
Following the receipt of the dispatch announcing the heavy casualties in the Visayas, the Red Cross prepared to rush a relief fund to the governor general. The Washington office has cabled the insular government asking how great is their need.”

 

 

 

 

 

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