Until the events of September 11th, the sinking of the General Slocum disaster was responsible for the largest loss of life in New York City. The tragedy forever changed the composition of the Lower East Side, yet the incident has largely receded from city memory.

General Slocum boat
Photo via National Archives

On June 15, 1904, St. Mark’s Evangelical Church chartered a boat, the General Slocum, to take 1358 members of its German-American congregation for a fun-filled day on the water and on a Long Island beach. For the kids, this was a day to look forward, a chance to breathe the fresh air and play outside away from the dirty tenement scene.

The General Slocum was not a well-kept ship, to say the least. The crew was inexperienced, especially at handling emergencies. Not far from shore, a fire burst out, and quickly consumed the ship. The combination of faulty lifeboats and life jackets, a panicked crowd of non-swimmers, and a cowardly crew that sought their own escape first led to mayhem and death. The crisis was made worse by the captain’s refusal to bring the burning ship to shore, ostensibly to prevent the fire from spreading, and the unfortunate timing of the fire occurring while the boat was in Hell Gate’s notoriously rough waters.

The General Slocum sank just off North Brother Island with victims and debris washing up on shore. The staff of the hospitals on the island served as rescue staff for the event.

1,021 people died either by fire or drowning that day. Only a few hundred survived. The disaster also devastated the large German-American population on the Lower East Side. (Back then, the “East Village” was considered part of the Lower East Side). Hundreds of families lost relatives that day and some entire families were wiped out. The grief led to suicides and depression, and eventually the wholesale movement of the community out of the area. Many resettled on the Upper East Side, which retained a German-American flavor for many years.

The tragedy also created an unfortunate legacy for Henry Warner Slocum, who served with distinction alongside William Sherman as a major general for the Union during the Civil War. After the war, he served as the rep from New York’s 42nd Congressional District (we now only have 27 districts) and lived in Brooklyn, where he is buried.

Slocum steamboat accident memorial fountain

On a more uplifting note, the idea of taking large groups of kids out of the projects to a more bucolic setting for the day is an excellent one. Sponsoring such large outings was once the hallmark of Tammany Hall, which would bring kids up the Hudson and serve them picnics in the park.

Today, a marker in Tompkins Square Park and a plaque next to the Merchants House Museum serve as reminders of this event.

Next, discover 5 other famous shipwrecks in NYC and 10 Maritime Memorials in NYC