September 10th 2021 marks the 90th Anniversary of the 1931 Hurricane which devastated the then Belize Town . Let us keep in our prayers always those who died during that time . We hope that no storms especially of that magnitude ever comes to our shore .
Diane StewartMy grandmother's story sounded like something you'd see in a movie. She was swept out of a window, and the force of the 10-15 ft. water caused her to be jammed between a vat and the house. She was then pulled back into another window by someone who saw her. That person had to grab her by her hair first to pull her towards that window. She ended up with a huge gash in her leg, and the only thing handy for antiseptic was whisky-which supposedly did the job! Gran was 30 at the time. My grandmother said that during the eye of the storm when it was calm, people came out on the streets-but the calm was followed by a tsunami. She said the water by the Bird's Isle/Wesley College area retreated, then when it came rushing back, it pushed a lot of empty drums that were piled up at the shore, down Albert St. She said the drums made an incredible ruckus rolling ahead of the water down the street.
Micheal G MastryMy Dad and family also told stories of the 31 Hurricane… people decapitated by flying corrugated iron roofs and bodies floating by second floor windows in the tidal wave.
Lesley SullivanYes my grandfather told stories of that too. Back then they didn't get the kind of warnings we have today and so people didn't know to take shelter. Also they didn't realize that the worst part of the storm can be after the eye passes and so many went out side thinking it was over only to caught in the second half of the hurricane. From all the evidence looking back it probably was a Cat 4 or 5 hurricane.
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Dora RiverolThe 1931 destruction of Queen Charlotte Town also called Coolie Town inhabited by East Indians sometime in the 1870s and after...not to far from St John's College at Loyola that was totally flattened killing some 11 priests and foreign students including Dato Burns the first Belizean Jesuit priest...he was the brother of Andrew Burns long time owner of Angelus Press...Hon George Price as a 12 year old student narrowly escaped with his life...guess the good Lord had other plans for him.
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Burial of the students that perished at Loyola Park after the 1931 hurricane.
Andre CampbellThe area still exists but is now covered in the bush ang mangrove. The Rt. Hon. George Cadle Price recollected his experience in an interview of how he was washed away from Loyola Park at the southern end of the city and ended up clinging on for life on Albert Street at Wesley Methodist Church. All alumni s of SJC past to present should know about this history as we remember the souls of the Jesuit Missionaries, teachers staff and students who perished in this tragic natural disaster.
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George VillanuevaA view in a corner section of one of the residential sections in Belize, where boats, gasoline drums and other wreckage swept in by the sea was hurled against the already wrecked homes that were left in the wake of the recent tidal wave & hurricane in 1931 which left Belize in total ruin as well as taking an estimated toll of over 2,500 lives.
The aftermath of the tidal wave & hurricane that hit Belize in 1931. Besides the heavy destruction, there were also a death toll of over 2,500 people.
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It seems from the caption on theses photo, there were many cases of liquor strewn all over the place after the tidal wave hit.
Melhado Liquor Warehouse after Hurricane of 1931