Stanford University and the 1906 Earthquake

Timeline of Events

1884
March 13: Leland Stanford Jr. dies from typhoid at the age of 15 in Florence.
1885
November 11: As a memorial to their son, Leland and Jane Stanford sign the Founding Grant, establishing Leland Stanford Junior University. Their hope is that the school will educate young people to pursue useful careers.
1887
May 14: Laying of the Cornerstone ceremony. This officially begins the construction of the university. The date marks what would have been Leland Stanford Jr.'s nineteenth birthday.
1888
The Stanfords, F.L. Olmsted, and Sheply, Rutan, and Coolidge agree on a General Plan for the University, with lateral quads stretching out on either end of a main Quad. Construction on the Quad was already underway.
1891

March: David Starr Jordan is named as Stanford's first President

October 1: Opening Day ceremony. Two dormitories (Encina and Roble Halls), the Inner Quad, and a scattering of other buildings welcomed the more than 500 students and 15 faculty members that first year.
1893

June 21: Leland Stanford Sr. dies, throwing the institution into a financial crisis.

Because the university had not been incorporated separately from Stanford's other properties, its assets and income were tied up in probate proceedings. To compound the problem, the federal government filed suit against Leland Stanford's estate for his presumed share of construction loans originally made to the Central Pacific Railroad. Jane Stanford refused to close the university and funded faculty salaries and university operations with an allocation made to her from the probate judge. By 1898, the financial problems were resolved.

1894
The Museum opens to the public.
1898

After Leland Stanford's estate is settled, Jane Stanford can draw on a large amount of funds to finish constructing the university she and her husband had initially planned.

During this period, called "Stanford's second stone age" by President Jordan, the Outer Quad buildings, Memorial Arch, Memorial Church, the Chemistry building, the new Library, the Gymnasium, and extensive additions to the Museum were built. This focus on building limited the resources available for academic programs and the faculty looked forward to the end of construction and a greater financial commitment to academic pursuits.
1900
The Library moves from Building 1 to the Thomas Welton Library in the Outer Quad, now called Wallenberg Hall. Construction on Memorial Church begins.
1903
January: Memorial Church is dedicated to the memory of Leland Stanford.
1905
February 28: Jane Stanford dies in Honolulu.
1906

April 18, 5:12 AM: A magnitude 7.7-7.9 earthquake hits the Bay Area.

The earthquake struck when many local residents were asleep or still at home, and initial reports centered on damage to campus housing. Word spread quickly of major destruction at Encina Hall, the men's dormitory. Young men in various states of dress streamed from the building and worked to free those trapped by fallen debris. Students and faculty members living in other areas of campus took quick stock of their own circumstances, returned briefly to their residences to get proper clothing, and set off to see the destruction elsewhere on campus, and help where they could.

A survey of campus began as soon as faculty and students were dressed and had attended to those in urgent need. The Main Quad and adjacent buildings were the first destination for many, and the sight was overwhelming. The second of the two deaths that day occurred at the university痴 Power House, located just to the south of the Quad. Otto Gerdes, a staff member, realized the danger of fire and rushed back into the building to turn off the power and steam. He was crushed as he exited, when the upper section of the one-hundred-foot smokestack crumbled.

Deep piles of rubble lay around all areas of the Quad, and keystones dangled out of the tops of arches. The entire south outer arcade fell and sections of walls in numerous buildings had collapsed. Crowds, gathered in front of Memorial Church and the Memorial Arch, were awestruck by the damage. Students went to the campus telegraph office to cable their parents, but were told there were no lines open in any direction. Cables sent to the university by parents and friends went undelivered for many days.

The hours following the quake were filled with fears of aftershocks. Everyone was warned to keep clear of buildings, and one report sent students into the foothills to await another major shock. Work was undertaken to erect tents or other makeshift accommodations on lawns and tennis courts. As the day wore on, security concerns grew, and students were recruited to act as guards at the Quad and at the dormitories for the night. As the Stanford community attempted to grapple with the damage on campus and President Jordan announced the university would close for the rest of the term, students and faculty began to consider their next step.

A Commission of Engineers is formed to study the damage.

April 19: President Jordan closes the University.

The Stanford Mansion on Nob Hill in San Francisco is consumed by flame. Everything in the house was lost to the flames.

May: The Commission of Engineers reports that buildings necessary to University work can be made ready before next term.

Students who elect to stay in the area help assist relief efforts at "Camp Stanford", located at 25th and Guerrero Streets.

July: Reconstruction begins under the supervision of the Commission of Engineers.

Under direction from the Board of Trustees, the commission focused their efforts on the two dormitories, Roble and Encina, and Outer Quad buildings, including the Assembly Hall, Thomas Welton Stanford Library, and Physics corner. Contracts were signed and construction began in early July, barely two months before students were to return. A labor strike in late July threatened further delays, but sufficient repairs were completed to allow the university to reopen for the fall semester.

August 23: The 1906-07 term begins.

September 15: The 1906 "Calamity Class" celebrates their graduation.

The Class of 1906 was dubbed the 鼎alamity Class? after suffering tragedies in three of their four spring semesters (typhoid epidemic, 1903; Mrs. Stanford痴 death, 1905; and the earthquake, 1906). They celebrated their graduation on September 15, 1906, with University of California President Benjamin Ide Wheeler as the speaker. It was the first commencement where students wore caps and gowns.

1908
Reconstruction of Memorial Church begins.
December: Commission of Engineers issues its final report.
Lawson report published. The two volume report (with atlas) is considered an “invaluable compilation of post-1906 scientific investigations” by geologists today.
1917
Reconstruction of Memorial Church completed.
1919
The new Main Library (Green Library Bing Wing) opens.
1945
The Museum, after years of neglect, is closed for "inventory."
1954
After an art auction raises the possibility of permanent closure, renewed interest is invested into the Museum. By 1963 it will become a more important part of university life.
1962
Math Corner is retrofitted using the expensive "gut and stuff" method.
1967
After a series of papers establishes it as a predominant theory, the Theory of Plate Tectonics is accepted as a force driving plate movement, which in turn causes earthquakes.
1971
The San Fernando earthquake prompts lawmakers to make significant upgrades to the California building codes for seismic safety.
1974
The John A. Blume Earthquake Engineering Center is founded. The Center functions as an umbrella for all earthquake engineering activities at Stanford.
1975
History Corner is retrofitted after a ceiling collapses in a second floor room. This corner was not "gutted and stuffed" but seismically reinforced. The work is finished by 1979.
1992
November: Memorial Church restoration completed.
1994
The Northridge earthquake prompts lawmakers to make further upgrades to California building codes regarding seismic safety.
1999

Cantor Center for the Visual Arts (the Museum) reopens.

October: Green Library Bing Wing reopens.

2006
The centennial of the Great San Francisco earthquake of 1906.

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