Earthquake Exodus, 1906 tells the story of the ten-week relief effort
in the East Bay after the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and fire. Within
hours of the earthquake, the people of Berkeley began to organize a
citizens' committee, knowing that terrified masses of stricken refuges
would pour into their town within hours. By revisiting both their
challenges--smallpox, fires, and keeping public order--and acts of
grace, such as taking in the homeless, setting up temporary camps, and
dispensing food, Richard Schwartz illuminates a nearly forgotten episode
in Bay Area history. Containing many breathtaking photos and
illustrations not seen for nearly one hundred years, this new visual
history offers up singularly human details of one of the nation's most
infamous disasters.