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The South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club was a Pennsylvania corporation that operated an exclusive and secretive retreat at a mountain lake near South Fork, Pennsylvania. Its members were more than 50 extremely wealthy industrialists and their families. Most were based in Pittsburgh, the center of steel and related industries.
On the morning of May 31, in a farmhouse on a hill just above the South Fork Dam, Elias Unger, president of the South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club, awoke to the sight of Lake Conemaugh swollen after a night-long heavy rainfall. Unger ran outside in the still-pouring rain to assess the situation and saw that the water was nearly cresting the dam.
South Fork is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) in Howell County, Missouri, United States. [2] It is located 10 miles (16 km) southwest of West Plains on U.S. Route 160. As of the 2010 census, South Fork had a population of 241. [3] A post office called South Fork was established in 1860, and remained in operation ...
Museum of Missouri Military History: Jefferson City: Cole: Central: Military [41] [42] Museum of the Dog: Town and Country: St. Louis: Northeast: Art: website, collection of art devoted to the dog, operated by the American Kennel Club: Museum at the German School: Hermann: Gasconade: Northeast: Local history: website, operated by Historic ...
In Sunlight, In a Beautiful Garden (2001) is a historical novel by American writer Kathleen Cambor. [1]It is based around events of the Johnstown Flood of 1889, when more than 2,000 people drowned after the collapse of the South Fork Dam.
“They donated about 12,000 slides and photos of fishing vessels. So starting in 2016, just about the time the center was opening, Paul Viera, a retired fisherman and volunteer, started scanning ...
To monitor the dam, Morrell joined South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club, which owned the dam. Morrell campaigned to club officials to improve the dam, which he had inspected by his own engineers and by those of the Pennsylvania Railroad. Morrell offered to effect repairs, partially at his own expense, but was rejected by club president Benjamin ...
The Johnstown Flood National Memorial is a unit of the United States National Park Service. [2] [3] Established in 1964 [4] through legislation signed by President Lyndon B. Johnson, [5] [6] it pays tribute to the thousands of victims of the Johnstown Flood, who were injured or killed on May 31, 1889 when the South Fork Dam ruptured.