24 August 1858 Pyay (Prome) Burma Earthquake
24 August 1858 Pyay (Prome) Burma Earthquake
24 August 1858 Pyay (Prome) Burma Earthquake
A Catalogue of Indian Earthquakes from the earliest time to the end of AD 1869
Allan Myo—‘Vibrations violent, rapid, upheaving jerks from east to west in rapid
succession; crisis of earthquake about sixteen seconds after commencement;
feeling was as if the convex side of an immense circle was passing with great
impetus under your feet. Vibrations had a rolling feeling, as if the waves violently
jerked, were passed rapidly under you in a different direction to the feeling
caused by the crisis of the shock.’—G. Barr, Collector of Customs, Thayet Myo,
13 th September 1858.
Ava and Pagan Myo &c.—Shock was felt at Ava, but slightly; some slight injury
done to the old temples at Pagan.
Akyab—Motion said to be from south to north; lasted about a minute and half;
unusually severe; dislodged bricks out of masonry walls of Collector’s office and
shook down some plaster.
In the Madras Presidency a slight shock is said to have been felt on the 24th
August from north to south, and at Adyar, close to Madras, also very slight at 4 or
4.15 PM. The magnetic instruments at Madras Observatory were distinctly
disturbed, not the meteorological.
In Bombay a very slight shock is said to have been felt at Carinjah Island,
opposite Bombay, between 4 and 5 PM. This however, could scarcely have been
from the same center.
In Punjab on enquiry being made, it was reported that the shock was felt, but so
slightly as not to have excited any notice. At Paneeput, Rhotuk, Jullunder,
Umritsur, Lahore, Jhelum, Jhung, Rawul pindee, Peshwar, the time is differently
stated from 2 to 6 PM. I think from all this we may safely conclude that the
shocks of the afternoon of 24th August were not felt at Punjab. In the
northwestern Provinces it was not felt; the only place where any shock is stated
to have been felt about same time is Mozuffernuggur, where a very slight
shock is reported about 4 o’clock PM; said to have been from northeast to
southwest.
Bengal—It would serve no really useful end to give in details the various
statements sent in by district and local officers from all parts of Bengal. To take
extreme localities, I may mention that the shock was just felt at Darjiling. At
Hazareebagh, it was felt as two distinct waves; duration less than half a minute,
and apparently from east to west. At Chota Nagpore, it was felt so slightly that no
notes were taken. At Singhbhum, Cuttack, Balasore, not felt; at Cachar, not
noticed. At Sylhet, 3.30 PM lasted 30 seconds. An earthslip, 20 feet long by
4 feet broad, fell from one of the teelahs. In Assam, seems not to have been
felt. In Cossia hills (Cherra) only slight, about 3.45 PM. At Tavoy, on
Tenasserim Coast, it was so slight as to be scarcely perceptible, and was not felt
at Mergui to south.
These observations enable us to mark out with tolerable accuracy the limits of
the seismic area affected by this severe shock. And although, unfortunately, but
little is on record of any accurate measurements of the direction, still by grouping
the observations, we can arrive at a satisfactory conclusion, I think, that the
seismic focus of the 24 th August 1858 must have been under the ranges of hills
lying between the Irawadi and the Bay of Bengal, in or about the parallels of
Prome [now known as Pyay;18.81 N: 95.21 E] and Thayet Myo [19.31 N:95.18 E]
THE CALCUTTA REVIEW
Volume XXXII, January to June 1859; Serampore, Friends of India Press, 1859
March 1859; Page 8
As we are writing, the earthquake of the 24th of August 1858, so distinctly felt in
Calcutta on that day, is still being written about in the daily journals; it appears
that Prome in Burmah, barely fifty miles East of the active volcanoes at Ramree
and Cheduba, has suffered considerably, many pagodas have been shaken
down and houses destroyed. A correspondent writing from Kyouk Phyou
[presently spelled as Kyaukpyu- 19° 25′ N: 93° 33′ E] gives the following graphic
description of this severe earthquake.
“The 24th of August 1858; we had rain all yesterday and today; in all the
Pluviometer showed 7-3 inches. The weather was anything but cheerful. There
was a heavy sombre ill-fore-boding, nasty Arracan atmosphere pervading the
whole of the Island. In the midst of this, the H. C. S. V. Proserpine had just
undergone some repairs, and had started early in the morning for Akyab, but she
had not made much way when certain indications in the Barometer induced the
Commander, Captain Eales, to return and anchor again opposite the wharf. The
day passed on drearily till between 4 and 5 P.M. a slight shaking of the floor was
first perceptible (such as would be felt when a person heavily treads the boards
of an old house,) this was suddenly followed by a rumbling noise and a vibratory
motion of the ground, till the earthquake became so violent that the stoutest heart
was obliged to fly his house. An officer writing to a friend on the occasion said, "I
never in the whole course of my life felt anything like it. Indeed it was terrific in
the extreme." The rocking of the earth had so confused many that for a while
they seemed as if they had lost the power of utterance. This state of the
upheaving vibratory action of the earth from E. to W. lasted for about 2½
minutes, and then suddenly ceased, but in that short time the injury to property
was extensive. No lives were lost but an idea may be formed by the following
detail.
The Magistrate, Captain F. W. Ripley, fled in the rains and with some friends
reached the beach—his house being perfectly new escaped unhurt. Several
clocks were tossed off' their brackets, and much valuable property completely
smashed to pieces.
The Medical Officer in charge of the Station, with his infant child and wife, ran out
and sought shelter under a friendly tree, but all his articles of a fragile description
shared the same fate as above.
The Salt Superintendent, Mr. J. Hind, has had his house almost rendered
untenable, and much property which cannot be named utterly destroyed. The
School House, the Commissioner's Circuit bungalow as also the Cutcherry, much
and seriously damaged. The Principal Jail gate lost its upper part of solid
masonry. It is said that several pagodas have been upset and toppled down hill;
the earth opened in varied places, and a peculiar bluish soft sandy matter devoid
of any smell exuded from them, and finally the horrible scene closed by an
eruption from the volcano. In fact such a fearful convulsion of the earth has not
been witnessed in Arracan by the oldest inhabitant.
The Barometer was 29.82. The Proserpine was lying in 11 fathoms of water at
the time of the shock, and the sensation felt by those on board was much like
that experienced when running on a reef, and the vessel, it is said, trembled in
every part of her.