Individual Event Report
 
| Event #251 - Summary, and parameter estimates with source IDs                                             | 
 
| The MM intensity of  VI  given for  Olympia by Earthquake History of the US seems overstated. The Seattle P.I.  says :"Bad shocks felt in Portland, Tacoma, and Olympia. -- Portland, April 17. -- At 2:50 o'clock this afternoon two heavy shocks of earthquake were felt here. The shocks lasted about ten seconds each... Many persons became frightened when buildings began to tremble, and rushed into the street. No serious damage was done."  the Washington Standard  (Olympia) reports: "it was only severe enough to remind people of the mighty power that nature reserves for occasional display" and the Portland Oregonian states that a single slight earthquake was felt at Portland and that two shocks, the first making many buildings tremble, and the second scarcely perceptible, were felt at Tacoma. Some catalogs have two listings at this time, one for each city. | 
 
| TIME | 
LOCATION | 
MAGNITUDE | 
MAX. INTENSITY | 
FELT AREA | 
 
| YR | 
MO | 
DAY | 
HR | 
MIN | 
AM/PM | 
Time Type | 
LAT(N) | 
LON(W) | 
DEP (km) | 
MAG | 
Mag Type | 
Felt Plc. | 
Felt St. | 
Inten- sity | 
Int. Type | 
Felt Area | 
Felt Area Int. | 
Felt Area Units | 
 
| 1892  | 
4  | 
17  | 
2  | 
45  | 
P  | 
  | 
47.00  | 
123.00  | 
  | 
  | 
  | 
Olympia  | 
WA  | 
VI  | 
MM  | 
  | 
  | 
  | 
 
| N-WaS - 2532 | 
USEQS - 928 | 
 -  | 
 -  | 
USEQS - 928 | 
 -  |  
 
 Underlying Source Material
| Source ID | 
Publication | 
Pub Date | 
Pub Details | 
 
| 2530  | 
Seattle P.I.  | 
1892  | 
April 18, 1892, p.2, c. 1  | 
 
Transcription: THE EARTH HEAVED Bad shocks felt in Portland, Tacoma, and Olympia. Portland, April 17. -- At 2:50 o'clock this afternoon two heavy shocks of earthquake were felt here. The shocks lasted about ten seconds each, and the vibrations were from west to east. Many persons became frightened when buildings began to tremble, and rushed into the street. No serious damage was done. Olympia, April 17. - [Special.] - A severe shock of earthquake was felt here at 2:45 o'clock this afternoon. Tacoma, April 17. - [Special] - Two slight shocks of earthquake were felt here in various parts of the city at 2:55 p.m., the second shock being very faint. The motion of the vibration was south to north. In tall buildings, like the National Bank of Commerce, the shock was quite distinct. | 
 
|   | 
 
| Source ID | 
Publication | 
Pub Date | 
Pub Details | 
 
| 2532  | 
Washington Standard  | 
1892  | 
April 22, 1892  | 
 
Transcription: The Earthquake  It seems that the Pacific Coast has been very generally shaken up the past few days, and had the phenomenon occurred last month the Union precinct adventists would have had some cause for grounding their belief that the end of all things earthly was rapidly approaching.    A very perceptible vibration was felt in Olympia Sunday afternoon, at 2:45, lasting only about five seconds; but it was only severe enough to remind people of the mighty power that nature reserves for occasional display, and of the possible results in less favored countries, where the Earth's crust is so thin that the seething caldron of liquid fire constantly boiling in its interior, may at any time develop titanic forces capable of rending the surface asunder.     The shocks experienced elsewhere have been very light except in California, where the conditions have ever been favorable for volcanic upheavals. The first shocks reported, occurred Tuesday morning, at about 3 o'clock, and were exceedingly disastrous to the towns of Dixon, Winters, and Vacaville, where many brick buildings were shaken down and others cracked so as to be in danger of falling. At Sacramento, Stockton, Nevada, Merced, Grass Valley, and in San Francisco, the shock was severe enough to excite much alarm, but no damage is reported. Wednesday morning about the same hour, other shocks were felt, but none as severe as the first, and the only effect has been to hurry the demolishment of the crumbling walls.      Yesterday morning, at 9:42 the vibrations were resumed, and lasted at San Francisco 20 seconds. At Woodland the shock was more severe than that of Monday morning. At Sacramento the State Capitol is badly damaged. The plaster on one of the statues over the portico, 150 feet from the ground fell and struck 40 feet from the building. A crack was made in the ceiling extending from one end of the building to the other. The beautifully decorated ceiling was broken in many places.     Dispatches from upwards of 25 towns indicate that the quake was quite general throughout the northern part of the State and the Sacramento Valley. No lives were lost but a number of people are reported to have been injured, some of them quite seriously. | 
 
|   | 
 
| Source ID | 
Publication | 
Pub Date | 
Pub Details | 
 
| 77  | 
Rasmussen,  Norman, 1967,  Washington state earthquakes 1840 through 1965, BSSA V. 57, No. 3, pp. 463-476  | 
1967  | 
  | 
 
| Transcription: 77      1892   Apr. 17    22:50          47 N, 123 W           VI           1           Olympia | 
 
|   | 
 
| Source ID | 
Publication | 
Pub Date | 
Pub Details | 
 
| 1578  | 
Morning Oregonian  | 
1895  | 
Feb 26, 1895, Tues.,  p. 5, c. 4.  | 
 
Transcription: THE EARTH TREMBLED.
  A Slight Quake Visits Portland and Awakens Light Sleepers.     Did you feel it? That was the unusual salutation  that early-risers yesterday morning were greeted with. A  seismal disturbance of the earth's surface in this vicinity  was the cause of the query. At 4:47 o'clock in the morning  a slight earthquake shock was felt, and those who were awakened, or are light sleepers, experienced the tremor. The  vibrations were from north to south, and the first shock was  quickly followed by two others, each about three seconds in  duration. Although plainly perceptible, the shocks were not  severe, and, aside from the rattling of loose window frames,  and the swinging of picture frames and hanging lamps, there  were no unusual indications of the presence of the seismic  visitor. So faint was the trembling that the self-  registering barometer in the office of the weather bureau  showed no trace of vibratory action, and Observer Pague says  that on Sunday night there was no indication of earthly or  atmospheric disturbance.     Portland has several times  been visited by earthquake shocks. The most severe one was  on the afternoon of October 12, 1877, when several shocks  followed each other in rapid succession. There was a lively  rattling of dishes, and the walls in several houses were  cracked. Men, women and children rushed into the streets,  and for a few minutes great excitement prevailed. The public schools were in session at the time, and the pupils in  the upper rooms of the old Central schoolhouse, standing on  the present site of the Hotel Portland, for a moment thought  the building would topple over, as it swayed toward the post office. A large crack in the north end of the building,  caused by the shock of 1877, is still to be seen. On February 21, 1892, several slight shocks were experienced in the evening, and on the afternoon of April 17, in the same year,  three distinct shocks were also felt. The earthquake of  yesterday is the first experienced in Portland for three  years. Many people refuse to believe that there was  an earthquake, and by far the largest majority did not notice it. Mr. E. W. Masten, who lives at Irvington, says he  and his wife were awakened by the shaking of their house at  4:47 am, and that the windows rattled in a very lively  manner for a short time after. Mrs. C. A. Coburn, who resides on the East Side, was also awakened by the shaking, and so was Judge Northup, who lives at The Hill house. | 
 
|   | 
 
| Source ID | 
Publication | 
Pub Date | 
Pub Details | 
 
| 1277  | 
Holden, E.S.,  1898, A Catalog of Earthquakes on the Pacific Coast 1769-1897, Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, 1087  | 
1898  | 
  | 
 
| Transcription: 1892. April 17; Portland; 2:56 p.m. The observer of U. S. Weather Bureau reports one light shock.  | 
 
|   | 
 
| Source ID | 
Publication | 
Pub Date | 
Pub Details | 
 
| 2028  | 
Leslie M. Scott, Memoranda of the Files of the Oregonian 1850-1910, Oregon Historical Society  | 
1910  | 
Unpublished index to the Oregonian  | 
 
| Transcription: severest at Portland, Oct. 12, 1877; west wall of Post Office cracked; Feb. 29, 1892; several tremors; Apr. 17, 1892; clocks stopped and dishes rattled; Feb. 25, 1895;  a rather severe quake | 
 
|   | 
 
| Source ID | 
Publication | 
Pub Date | 
Pub Details | 
 
| 2040  | 
Leslie M. Scott, Memoranda of the Files of the Oregonian 1850-1910, Oregon Historical Society  | 
1910  | 
Unpublished index to the Oregonian  | 
 
| Transcription: at Portland, severest Oct. 12, 1877, several shocks, cracked walls; Feb. 21, 1892, several slight shocks; On April 17, 1892, several shocks; on Feb 25, 1895, shock 4:47 a.m. | 
 
|   | 
 
| Source ID | 
Publication | 
Pub Date | 
Pub Details | 
 
| 2053  | 
Leslie M. Scott, Memoranda of the Files of the Oregonian 1850-1910, Oregon Historical Society  | 
1910  | 
Unpublished index to the Oregonian  | 
 
| Transcription: at Portland, also Olympia, Apr. 17, 1892 | 
 
|   | 
 
| Source ID | 
Publication | 
Pub Date | 
Pub Details | 
 
| 817  | 
Reid 2, unpub., Scrapbook and Cardfile, on microfilm at USGS in Menlo Park  | 
  | 
  | 
 
| Transcription: Portland                        2:50p   April    17,    1892 W-E;          Duration          10          seconds. | 
 
|   | 
 
| Source ID | 
Publication | 
Pub Date | 
Pub Details | 
 
| 360  | 
Byerly, Perry, 1952, Pacific Coast Earthquakes, Condon Lecture, pp. 33-38  | 
1952  | 
U.W. Library, N979 B991p, Special Collections)  | 
 
| Transcription: 1892, April 17 Portland. Two heavy shocks. Many persons became frightened and rushed into the street when the buildings began to tremble. No damage | 
 
|   | 
 
| Source ID | 
Publication | 
Pub Date | 
Pub Details | 
 
| 879  | 
Reid 2, unpub., Scrapbook and Cardfile, on microfilm at USGS in Menlo Park  | 
  | 
  | 
 
| Transcription: Olympia                 2:45p   June                     17, 1892           severe              Felt      at      Tacoma. | 
 
|   | 
 
| Source ID | 
Publication | 
Pub Date | 
Pub Details | 
 
| 1706  | 
Woodward Clyde Consultants,  unpublished  | 
1981  | 
Woodward-Clyde Consultants (1981), Historical Catalog (1841-1980) for the Pacific Northwest Region, unpublished catalog prepared for the Washington Public Power Supply System.  Copy provided to UW in 1993.  | 
 
| Transcription: 189204172250000 47000-123000  VI                 NO 6 01 | 
 
|   | 
 
| Source ID | 
Publication | 
Pub Date | 
Pub Details | 
 
| 1274  | 
Holden, E.S.,  1898, A Catalog of Earthquakes on the Pacific Coast 1769-1897, Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, 1087  | 
1898  | 
  | 
 
| Transcription: 1892. April 17; Tacoma, Washington. Two shocks were felt at 2:55 o'clock this afternoon. The second was scarcely perceptible. Buildings trembled. The vibrations were from south to north.  There was a severe shock at Olympia at 2:39 this afternoon which lasted seven seconds. Intensity II at Tacoma and at Castle Rock.__P.  | 
 
|   | 
 
| Source ID | 
Publication | 
Pub Date | 
Pub Details | 
 
| 928  | 
U. S. Dept. of Commerce, 1973, Earthquake History of the United States, V. 41-1, revised ed., pp. 89-96  | 
1973  | 
  | 
 
| Transcription: Apr.    17        14:50          Near Olympia, Wash                   47       123       -        VI        3-25,25 | 
 
|   | 
 
| Source ID | 
Publication | 
Pub Date | 
Pub Details | 
 
| 1276  | 
Holden, E.S.,  1898, A Catalog of Earthquakes on the Pacific Coast 1769-1897, Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, 1087  | 
1898  | 
  | 
 
| Transcription: 1892. April 17; Olympia; 2:45 p.m. Severe.  | 
 
|   | 
 
| Source ID | 
Publication | 
Pub Date | 
Pub Details | 
 
| 987  | 
U. S. Dept. of Commerce, 1973, Earthquake History of the United States, V. 41-1, revised ed., pp. 89-96  | 
1973  | 
  | 
 
| Transcription: 1892. April 17. Near Olympia, Wash. A shock whose epicenter was uncertain, but probably near Olympia, was felt sharply at Portland, Oreg., and at Tacoma, Wash. At Portland, people rushed into the street when buildings trembled. | 
 
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| Source ID | 
Publication | 
Pub Date | 
Pub Details | 
 
| 503  | 
Townley,  S.D. and M.W. Allen, 1939, Descriptive Catalog of earthquakes of the Pacific Coast of the United States 1769 to 1928, Chapter II, Earthquakes in Oregon--1846-1928, BSSA, V. 29, No. 1, pp. 253-258.  | 
1939  | 
  | 
 
| Transcription: 1892 April 17. 2:50 p.m. Portland. At 2:50 o'clock this afternoon two heavy shocks. They lasted about ten seconds each, and the vibrations were from west to east. Many persons became frightened and rushed into the street when the buildings began to tremble. No damage. The observer of U. S. Weather Bureau reports one light shock at 2:56 p.m. | 
 
|   | 
 
| Source ID | 
Publication | 
Pub Date | 
Pub Details | 
 
| 1580  | 
The Oregonian  | 
1896  | 
April 3, 1896,  p. 10, c. 3.  | 
 
| Transcription: THE EARTH DID SHAKE And It Aroused Portlanders Out Of A  Sound Sleep. The Earthquake Yesterday Morning Was Severe,  and Lasted Ten Seconds, but Did No Damage.     The earthquake of yesterday morning is said to have  been one of the most severe that has been experienced in  Portland in many years. It did no damage to property, but  it managed to waken thousands of people from sound slumber,  and caused no little alarm. Earthquakes are very rare in  Portland and many people did not know the cause of the  strange rumbling and shaking, until they read their morning  paper. Strange to say, the instruments of the  weather bureau office failed to record the earthquake.  There was no indication whatever upon the barograph, or  self-registering barometer used for recording changes in the  air pressure. But Mr. Blandford, Mr. Pague's assistant, was  able to furnish some information about the shock.   "The earthquake," he said, "occurred at 3:13 this  morning, and lasted between 8 and 10 seconds. It began with  a severe and quick jerky vibration, and then, after a  moment's interval, the vibrations resumed with lesser force  until the finally died away. As far as I could tell, the  vibrations seemed to go from the northeast to the south  east. I should say the earthquake was rather severe at  first." The time at which Mr. Blandford fixes the  shock was corroborated by almost everyone who thought to notice the time, though there was considerable disagreement as  to the duration of the vibration, some contending that it  did not take up more than five seconds.  That it was  a severe shock is proven by the general attention it attracted. Many were the stories told yesterday of what the  earthquake had done. One young man said it wakened him, and  as he looked at the wall he saw the pictures swinging to and  fro and heard the shutters moving, though it was a quiet  night. The unusual loudness of the rumbling which accompanied the shock was what attracted general attention, many  of those who noticed the earthquake saying that it sounded  like the collapse of some big brick block. One man who,  with his entire family was aroused from sleep, said that his  house rocked as if it were about to tumble. It nearly overturned a lamp standing on a table besides his bed, and  twisted the nails in the woodwork.  The shock was  less severely felt in The Oregonian building then almost  anywhere else, which probably accounts for the barograph not  recording the vibrations. The record is made by a fine needle on smoked glass. So sensitive is it that the slightest  vibration will affect the needle and indicate the disturbance on the surface of the glass. The only instruments of  this kind on the coast are at the observatory at Mount Hamilton, and at the weather bureau office in Carson City.   Of course, the earthquake caused all the old-timers  yesterday to limber up their up their tongues and turn loose  their experiences of the "airly days" in the Northwest, and  such stories found ready listeners.  The most severe  shock of the past of which there is any record occurred here  October 12, 1877. There were several shocks following each  other in rapid succession, the first of which was felt seven  minutes before 2 o'clock in the afternoon. The vibrations,  which were from north to south, were very pronounced.   Considerable damage was done by the breaking of  dishes, lamps and glassware, and buildings were shaken up  and walls and ceiling cracked. A portion of the west wall  of the post office building was cracked by the shock, which  is there even now.  There was great alarm among the  people, hundreds of whom rushed, pell-mell, out of their  stores and dwelling into the streets. No one was hurt  through the shock, which was felt as far north as the Sound.   February 21, 1892, there were several slight tremors  of the earth about 8:15 in the evening, lasting 8 1/2  seconds. The vibrations, as usual, were from north to  south. April 17, of the same year, there were three distinct shocks, at 2:56 o'clock in the afternoon, clocks being  stopped and dishes, doors and windows rattled by the vibrations.  On February 25, 1895, there was quite a  severe earthquake. It came in three severe shocks, lasting  about nine seconds, the vibrations being from north to  south. | 
 
|   | 
 
| Source ID | 
Publication | 
Pub Date | 
Pub Details | 
 
| 570  | 
Smith, W. D., 1919, Earthquakes in Oregon, BSSA,  V. 9, n. 3,  pp. 58-71  | 
1919  | 
  | 
 
| Transcription: 1892. April 17; 2:50 pm.; Portland.  At 2:50 o'clock this afternoon two heavy shocks.  They lasted about ten seconds each and the vibrations were from west to east.  Many persons became frightened and rushed into the street when the buildings began to tremble.  No damage.  The observer of U. S. Weather Bureau reports one light shock at 2:56 p.m. | 
 
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| Source ID | 
Publication | 
Pub Date | 
Pub Details | 
 
| 1571  | 
The Oregonian  | 
1892  | 
April 18, 1892;  pg 3, c. 4  | 
 
Transcription: 1892, April 17. Portland, Olympia.      A slight earthquake shock was felt yesterday at 2:57  pm. By many it was unobserved. People at tables noticed it  plainly. By some it was thought to be a single vibration  from west to east. Others report three shocks in connected  succession, one from west to east, one from north to south,  and another from west to east. Dishes rattled and doors  creaked. On Portland Heights it was plainly felt. The  doors of the big safe in the Portland Hotel safe rattled.  In other parts of the building it was not noticed. Those  who felt it waited a moment expecting to experience a repetition of the big shock two or three weeks ago, but none  came.
  Felt in Tacoma .     The earthquake was also felt in Tacoma. A dispatch  from that city last night says:     "Two earthquake shocks were felt here at 2:55  o'clock this afternoon. The second shock was scarcely perceptible, but in the first many buildings trembled, and the  vibrations seemed to be from north to south." | 
 
|   | 
 
| Source ID | 
Publication | 
Pub Date | 
Pub Details | 
 
| 1093  | 
Townley, S. D. and M. W.  Allen, 1939, Descriptive Catalog of Earthquakes of the Pacific Coast of the United States 1769-1928, Chap. III Earthquakes in Washington, 1883-1928, BSSA, V. 29, No. 1, pp. 259-268  | 
1939  | 
  | 
 
| Transcription: 1892 April 17. 2:45 p.m. Olympia. Severe. [Probably the same shock as the following.] | 
 
|   | 
 
| Source ID | 
Publication | 
Pub Date | 
Pub Details | 
 
| 1094  | 
Townley, S. D. and M. W.  Allen, 1939, Descriptive Catalog of Earthquakes of the Pacific Coast of the United States 1769-1928, Chap. III Earthquakes in Washington, 1883-1928, BSSA, V. 29, No. 1, pp. 259-268  | 
1939  | 
  | 
 
| Transcription: 1892 April 17. 2:55 p.m. II. Tacoma. Two shocks were felt at 2:55 o'clock this afternoon. The second was scarcely perceptible. Buildings trembled. The vibrations were from south to north. There was a severe shock at Olympia at 2:39 o'clock this afternoon which lasted seven seconds. Intensity II at Tacoma and at Castle Rock.-P. | 
 
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| Source ID | 
Publication | 
Pub Date | 
Pub Details | 
 
| 2481  | 
Coombs, H.A., W.G. Milne, O.W. Nuttli, and D.B. Slemmons,  "Report of the Review Panel on the December 14, 1872 earthquake",  | 
1976  | 
Appendix D: Selected Supporting Information -- Professor Plummer's Paper on "Recent Volcanic Activity" Read before the Academy of Science - Tacoma Ledger - February 28, 1893  | 
 
Transcription:  (This is part of an 8 page article - see the WPPSS table for entire text RSL 7/1995) 
  On April 17, 1892, at 2:55 p.m., two slight shocks were- felt at Tacoma. | 
 
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| Source ID | 
Publication | 
Pub Date | 
Pub Details | 
 
| 259  | 
Bradford, Donald C., 1935, Seismic History of the Puget Sound Basin, BSSA, V. 25, No. 2,  pp. 138-153  | 
1935  | 
  | 
 
| Transcription: 1892 April 17; 2:45 p.m.  Olympia; severe. | 
 
|   | 
 
| Source ID | 
Publication | 
Pub Date | 
Pub Details | 
 
| 258  | 
Bradford, Donald C., 1935, Seismic History of the Puget Sound Basin, BSSA, V. 25, No. 2,  pp. 138-153  | 
1935  | 
  | 
 
| Transcription: 1892 April 17; II; Tacoma; two shocks were felt at 2:55 o'clock this afternoon; the second was scarcely perceptible; buildings trembled; the vibrations were from south to north.  There was a severe shock at Olympia at 2:39 o'clock this afternoon which lasted seven seconds. Intensity II at Tacoma and at Castle Rock. P. | 
 
|   | 
 
| Source ID | 
Publication | 
Pub Date | 
Pub Details | 
 
| 1275  | 
Holden, E.S.,  1898, A Catalog of Earthquakes on the Pacific Coast 1769-1897, Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, 1087  | 
1898  | 
  | 
 
| Transcription: 1892. April 17; Portland, Oregon. At 2:50 o'clock this afternoon two heavy shocks. They lasted about ten seconds each and the vibrations were from west to east. Many persons became frightened and rushed into the street when the buildings began to tremble. No damage.  | 
 
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