'06 quake through eyes of woman ahead of her time
San Francisco Chronicle
Sunday, April 17, 2011
Decades later, Troutman, now 85 and living in Beverly Hills, opened the boxes and found the bounty of an extraordinary life. Among the discoveries were artifacts from her adventurous aunt's solo journeys in her Model T across the Western United States; souvenirs from trips to Alaska and Europe; diplomas, business cards and dental instruments; photographs of Leonie in high fashion; and thousands of pages of an autobiography typed out on onionskin paper.
Leonie von Zesch, the daughter of a German countess, graduated in 1902 at age 19 from the College of Physicians and Surgeons, San Francisco, and built a thriving dental practice in the city prior to the great quake and fires of 1906. Among the typewritten pages bequeathed to her niece was a description of the disaster as it eerily unfolded around her. She would lose almost everything, including her home and office.
But on the evening of April 17, 1906, just hours before San Francisco crumbled, Dr. Leonie von Zesch, 23, thought only of the new outfit she planned to wear to her Market Street dental office in the morning. It would be a grass-green, instep-length pleated dress and an Eton jacket with three-quarter sleeves. "A small, flat chip hat covered in flowers with a long black quill standing from the crown was to be tilted over the eyes," she wrote. "I looked forward with a good deal of interest to the appearance I should make the next day; it would give a lift to one which would be otherwise like too many others."
Troutman says her aunt always hoped her writing would be published. Now, 105 years to the day after Leonie von Zesch envisioned her decorative attire, she has her wish.
A little after five in the morning, the house began to tremble. Only those who have experienced earthquakes know that weird, helpless feeling that follows the first unnatural shake. Simultaneously Mother and I cried, "Earthquake!" I crooked my knees to put my feet on the floor, but before my toes had touched the carpet, my head was back on the pillow. The house rocked violently and I rocked with it, unable to uncrook my knees or straighten my spine until the first series of turbulent tremors was over.
Above Mother's bed hung a picture thirty-six inches long, popular at that time, called "A Yard of Roses." This swung out from the wall time and again; each moment I expected to see it fall on Mother's head. The bureau, opposite the foot of my bed, on which I kept an aquarium with goldfish, lurched across the room, bringing it up against the bed with the goldfish gasping in a half inch of water.
On the mantel above the tiled fireplace were several dozen assorted china after-dinner coffee cups and saucers. These inched to the mantel edge, dropped over, and slivered to pieces on the tiles. In the kitchen empty Mason jars fell from the pantry shelves in a series of crashes, crockery and canned goods following. And all the while, a seeming eternity of a few minutes, there was an unforgettable humming, grinding sound that not even the walls shut out, the grinding and breaking of myriad things all over the city.
When finally the tremors stopped, we got up and dressed. I put my right shoe on my left foot and vice versa for the only time in my life, and didn't know it until later. Then we hurried up to the roof to look down over the city. The humming sound increased as we got outdoors.
The city looked quite as usual from where we were on top of the hill, except for a gas tank near the waterfront south of Market Street. This was one of those immense Pacific Gas & Electric storage tanks. A cloud of black smoke like an anchored balloon funneled from its top. It had sprung a leak, and it was from such places that the fire started.
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