The Great
White Fleet
&
the Messina Earthquake
On July 27,
1909, the New York Times reported that “The first baby
born in a new house in Messina was named Theodore
Roosevelt Lloyd Belknap Palmieri”! This was Mr. &
Mrs. Palmieri's tribute to those American politicians
and diplomats who had organized the relief effort in
aid of the city of Messina, devastated by a powerful
earthquake on the morning of December 28, 1908. The
quake killed about 60,000 people and destroyed much of
the city. (Some estimates of the number of dead are as
high as 200,000.) In the months following the quake,
US aid was considerable and—to explain the “new house”
in the above quote—included the building of 1,500
frame houses. The rest of the name: Teddy Roosevelt
was US president at the time of the quake; Lloyd C.
Griscom was the US ambassador to Italy; and Reginald
Rowan Belknap was the US Naval Attaché in
Italy.*
The early aid was immediate and direct. It came in the
form of ships from the US Great White Fleet, which was
circumnavigating the globe and, at the time of the
quake, found itself in the “home stretch,” as it were,
of a cruise of 43,000 miles—16 modern warships,
employing 15,000 men—in a brash display of young US
sea power. The cruise lasted from December, 1907,
through February, 1909, and was under the command of
Admiral Charles S. Sperry. The Great White Fleet went
from Hampton Roads, Virgina, around South America and
up to San Francisco; then, across the Pacific to
Australia, the Philippines and Japan, and then across
the Indian Ocean, through the Suez Canal, west across
the Mediterranean, through the Straits of Gibraltar
and back home across the Atlantic.
The fleet was in Egypt when it received news of the
Messina earthquake. The flagship, Connecticut (in the
photo insert, above), with support vessels, arrived in
Messina on January 9, 1909, with thousands of pounds
of food, medicine and temporary shelters for
survivors. About 17,000 persons were pulled from the
rubble, their lives saved by the heroic efforts of the
combined search and rescue crews of the US ships and
of vessels of other nations that were near Messina at
the time of the quake. The US ships docked at the port
of Naples during operations, and their presence is
noted in the January issues of il Mattino, the
Naples daily newspaper. The fleet stayed until late
January and then left for home. In January, 2009, 100
years after the fact, ceremonies were held in Messina
to commemorate the international effort that helped
the city through the tragedy. I really do wonder what
happened to Theodore Roosevelt Lloyd Belknap Palmieri.
I hope he had a fine life.
*see American
House Building In Messina And Reggio: An Account
Of The American Naval And Red Cross Combined
Expedition (1910) by Reginald Rowen
Belknap, pub. G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York and
London.
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