Blast Kills 500 School Disasl Be Worst I Search Debris For Mang- '' led Bodies Of Child- t ren Dead, Dying :]n HEARING IS HELD Accumulation Of Gas In ,! Cellar Believed To Be ! Cause i JCcw London, Tex.?Workers are still searching the wreckage of the r London Consolidated school for more ( bodies to be added to the toll of the 5 worst school disaster in the world's 1 history. * Hundreds of students were literally blown to bits in a gas explosion which * demolished the richest rural school in * America ten minutes before the boys 1 and girls would have been dismissed ' for the day. Estimates placed the ' total dead at about 500. Gov. James V. Allred immediately ( declared martial law, and sent ali state highway patrolmen to the scene, r which is 12 miles north of here. Na- ) tional Guard troops were ordered out 1 as the entire populace of the neigh- , borhood thronged about the school hysterically waiting for the bodies of 1 their loved ones to be dragged forth. I\ sidcnt Roosevelt promised every : id from the federal government. j At the time of the mighty blast ? fifty or move mothers were attend- , a Farent-Tcacher association meeting in the school gymnasium, a separate building several hundred ij feet away from the main structure, j Hearing the rumble of the blast, j they rushed to the windows in time J i to see a hail of debris flying through \ the air and the big building col laps- \ ing upon their children. Mothers Race to Aid. t O .. I . . it . . , oc reaming nysiericaiiy, me motn- j era raced across the campus and with t their bare hands clawed at the debris \ trying desperately to reach the chil-1 { dren whose cries could be heard from beneath the crumbled structure. Near- , j by oil fields, some of which could be ( seen from the school grounds, shut . down and frantic workers rushed in , t to try to rescue those who still re- ' i mained alive. The terrible force of the eruption U sent the mangled bodies of boys andj, irirla flying through the. air like they , were rag dolls. The brick walls were j | blasted out. The roof raised in the air and then fell back on to the mass | of crying and struggling humanity. < Bricks were hurled more than a quar- t tor of a mile. 1 Dismembered bodies lay all around < on the school lawn. Some were de- j capitated. Others had limbs missing. Som? of the children still were alive. . k The scene quickly became one of : extreme confusion. Hysterical women fainted, shrieked, and prayed, kneeling on the grass. , Many parents, the women either screaming hysterically or silently sobbing, ran frantically from one body to another, seeking their loved ones. There were gasps of horror and occasionally a woman slumping . to the ground in a faint, indicating , i she had found what she had fearfully \ l i I uupea she wouldn't. ? I Mutilation of the bodies made \ I their tragic task increasingly diffi- | | cult. One couple hovered over the ] I form of a little boy, his face and ( body so mangled and bloody they t couldn't be certain if he were their son. t "Must Be Jim," Mother Cries. ? "O, it's Jim, it must be Jim," sob- s bed the woman. Picking up one of the little victim's feet, she argued s hysterically with her husband. "See, a it's his tennis shoes," she cried. "I (1; remember he asked to wear them to i n school this morning." c "No, no," her husband replied, al- t most happily. "Jim changed into his other shoes when he came home for lunch." o "O, merciful God, he may still be d alive then," the mother cried as they d P?t up and hurried away to scan c other little bodies. f For a few minutes after the roof t caved in, leaving jagged remnants ?f wall standing like the ruins of a o medieval castle, flames shot out above L \ the wreckage. But the building was of fireproof construction and the a laze, having almost nothing to feed upon, soon died out. It was well that t 11 did, for nearbv communities have ?aly small fire fighting forces. ?' T he narrow roads to the school, f situated between the oil fiel i com- ii munitiea of London and Ne^ Lonon? unncorporated hamlets, soon were clogged with a stream of ve- r? m The CI In Texas ter; Said To j n U. S. History ; licles. More than 15,000 persons assem- J1 -led at the scene in the next few 11 lours, either anxious over the fate \ f their relatives, to help in the res- ' ue work, or sightseeing. Call Doctors and Nurses. Every available ambulance, doctor, ,nd nurse in all surrounding towns 1 irere summoned by telephone and * adio. As far away as from Shreve>ort. La., came doctors and nurses ' >y airplane, sent by the American 1 ted Cross. Thirty doctors and seventy-two Jurses, twelve of them from the Red ! 3ross, came from Dallas. Accompanying them were twelve ambu- j ances, twenty-five embalmers, and ive hearses. AH sorts of vehicles?laundry :rucks, private cars, ambulances, and vhat not?speed to the scene, and vere used to carry the bodies away. But. with no one in authority and \undreds of persons wrought up to i frenzy, many of the cars soon were entangled in a hopeless snarl. Because of this siutuation, Goverlor Allied ordered all state highvay patrolmen ond uty in the district j o hurry here and take command. All available Texas Rangers and I lighway policemen also were being ushed there from Dallas, Houston. \ustin and Tyler. Fingerprint experts were sent from Austin on the lossibilitlv they might assist in Identifying the bodies, many Texas school children having been finger ninted. Find Few Survivors. Five hundred workers from the oil fields arrived at the wrecked build ng scon after the explosion and caned into thp mine n ? - ?uk biicic were Vw survirors for them to rescue, and heir main work was carrying out )odies. Later an additional 1,000 men went o work on the debris. In the early itages they passed up the bodies oi' hose obviously dead in the hope of hiding those in whom there might >e life. Three hundred and sixty bodies vere taken by ambulance, truck, and . very possible conveyance to Hender;on. Dozens of other bodies were aken to Kilgore, Overton, Ark., Troup, Longview, ar.d Tyler. While waiting for the arrival of sufficient vehicles to move the great lumber of dead the bodies were caricd from the wreckage and laid in cng rows on the lawn. Mothers and fathers dragged the todies of still more victims into the ichool gymnasium until the vehicles :-ame back for more loads. There the children and their teachers lay, tide by side, many of them unidentified. Stricken School Was Richest In United States Henderson, Tex.?The London Con;olidat??d school, wrecked in the hor ible explosion which blotted out the lves ot nunureas 01 cnuaren instantly, is believed to have been the :inest rural school of its type in the United States. In the heart of the Sast Texas oil fields, it is located in me of the wealthiest sections of he world. The blast itself is believed to have >een caused by explosion of natural fas from the seven oil wells on the chool campus. The school district encompasses ome thirty square miles with an issessed valuation of 16 million dolars. The community sprang up alnost over night following the disovery of one of the most producive oil fields known. Quickly Paid For. With "black gold" flowing from its wn wells, the school plant had no lifficulty in raising the several hun- I red thousand dollars spent in its onstruction. It is not only debt ice but its original value has muliplied many times. In 1931, when wealth gushed out f the ground for the communities of ondon and New London, the schools Irving the two villages were merged nd the present district set up. The school lies midway between he two communities. The site of the disaster scene can eadily he located by drawing a line rom Tyler, a city of 35,000, largest i the district, to Henderson. 1.500 in Eight Grades The wrecked school had an en^llment of 1,500 students, from the lerokee Scout, Murphy, fifth grade to the third year of hi; school. The building had been construct in units, the first of which was bu n 1934. The completed structure co lained 30 classrooms and an auditc um large enough to accommoda lalf of the total enrollment. Equipped to teach stenograph Ttusic, manual training, and sewin is well as academi subjects, it w he proud boast of the community th its institution was as fine as could I found in any rural section of t! :ountry. At one side of the main buildii ;tood the gymnasium, and at the otli stood a grade school for childr from tho kindergarten to the fif jrade. The home of the superinten ;nt also stood on the school grounc All Are Fireproof. All of the buildings were of fir proof construction and ample sis The grade, or grammar school, w a two story brick building about l1 by 125 feet. After I Amid crumbling masonrj killed and mangled by cxplos Manv T ^ 0 $?<* **"""^ t : Volunteer rescue workers Spectator Tells of Awful B '" in the ^tV'theTcmna 5,000 persons lay ln t, U * VhTreat ^UU standing. The -d Tones were.pUjd-g^fplnderousoU trucks tot* Dig and * Rescue workers at seen# out the dead. _ N.C. T !hi VIOLET NEWS ed ! Our school term ended here, March n J 9. The teacher, Lucile Mateson, has (r_ returned to her home in Andrews. The ones that received presents for going everyday to school were: Zuda Murphy, Lottie Taylor, Nola Davis, Winston Taylor, Clayton Davis,! ?' i Wayne Taylor and Hule Davis. a> Miss Monda Payne spent last Fri-I at I >e The main building had a two story) ic init in the center, about 50 feel wide and 00 feet deep, which housed the ip auditorium and various laboratories, or md wings on either side. These *r wings, each 30 feet deep and 65 feet th long, gave the building a frontage of d- ISO feet. s. From a high window of the school me could look out across a plain e- dotted almost solidly as far as the lie. eye could reach by oil derricks, as Thousands of these rear their smut-| 50 covered skeletons from 50 to 100 feet in the air. )eath Struck School r and steel, rescue workers and frantic pa) ion. imes This Scene wJ 1'ANfci! bringing out the body of ona of tha victims of debris covering the children were stretched stout cables. Sweating oil I t field 'roughneeks' turned err ants of IclSl mercy?many seeking their own ed the sons and daughters, taster: "In 11,0 manner of stevedores, about die3r lined up on the rock and passed ints of debris hand-to-hand to a clearing, er por- "Blood smeared an upturned vail at brick. With a shout, the workers brick gathered available shovels and 15 feet lights and stretchers wt?e called. From An arm, a head appeared?terribly : mass crushed. In a few minutes it was Cut Away Their Pa ?, jt - soor. after Texas school was blown up, en* hursday, March 25, 1937 day night with her cousin. Miss Edna Rose. Miss Estal Graharfi was the Sunday dinner guest of Miss Lottie Taylor. M iss Hoi lice Murphy and Mrs. Vesta Beaver visited Alenc Taylor Saturday evening:. Mrs. Walter Graham spent Saturday with her sister. Mrs. Janie Davis. Mrs. Vandora Taylor and Miss Monda Payne were visitors at Mrs. Clara Taylor's Saturday evening. Mrs. Parthenia Graham spent a few days last week with her daughter, Mrs. Nora Martin. Mr. Lester Taylor spent Saturday afternoon with Mr. Marion Morrow. Mrs. Mary Beaver is on the sick list at this writing. Her many friends wish her a speedy recovery. HATTIE PALMER NOTARY PUBLIC 1 SCOUT OFFICE in Texas ircnts hunt for bodies of children * is Repeated \ of the school disaster. c on the stretcher, carried to a waiting ambulance and speeded to the nearest temporary morgue. ''The scene \vas repeated over and over. Finally the worst of the' shock was over and the men and families settled down to a quiet, organized effort to ?et out the bodies as quickly as possible?not actually in the hopes of life but to make certain relatives would be spared the anguish of ignorance of their children's fat??which the rescuers knew too veil." ^ _ 1 T\ 1 itn to uead r Sk . * [aged in hazardous task of bringing