Age twenty. Male child, a few days old. One brass check No. One paper needles. Female. Height 3 feet 2 inches. Male. Auburn hair. Weight 140. Age six. Male. Height 5 feet 6 inches. Pocket knife. Female. Gold ear-rings. Valuables placed in hands of John J. Geis. Purse with one cent. White Age two years. Blue calico dress with white spots. Charles Baines received the above. Johnstown's first call for help requested coffins and undertakers. Male. Weight 125 pounds. Knife. Postcard Real Photo Main Street Flood Body Found Johnstown Pennsylvania 1936. Witnesses Charles Diamond, E.B. Large gold ring on third finger of left hand. Spectacle case. Valuables recovered by brother, T. P. Keedy. Henry Clay Frick led a group of Pittsburgh speculators, including Benjamin Ruff, to purchase the abandoned reservoir, modify it, and convert it into a private resort lake for their wealthy associates. Height 5 feet 6 inches. Scar on side of face. Button shoes. Blue and white striped shirt. Red flannel underwear. Height 5 feet. Light underwear. Calico dress, striped blue and white. Female. Sent to Prospect. Johnstown Flood | The Worst Dam Break in American History Gold watch chain. The body of one victim was found more than 100 miles away in Steubenville, Ohio. Leather boots. Purse with $1.96. A Pittsburgh man. Ear-rings. Height 4 ft. Buttoned shoes. Male. Identified and removed by her mother. Height 5 feet 8 inches. Female. Age eleven. Ear-rings with white set. Eighty. Barton would leave Johnstown a hero. Dark hair. Weight 165. Age about sixty years. Valuables, A male. Supposed to be William Owens. Light hair. Age thirteen. Female. Some patches of quilt on body. Other men tried digging a ditch at the other end of the dam, on the western abutment which was lower than the dam crest. Buried at Prospect, June 9th. Male. Heavy plaited chain and locket. Weight 115. Plaid dress, belt with two buckles. Brown dress with small steel stripes. Age forty. Barred cotton dress pleating in front, buttoned behind. Age eight or nine. Light hair. Blue calico dress, new, with white vine stripes. Girl baby. Supposed to have been a passenger east bound train. Age thirty. Proper number lost. Buttoned shoes. Laced shoes. Heavy gray undershirt. Blue eyes. Red underwear. Female. according to records compiled by the johnstown area heritage association, bodies were found as far away as cincinnati, and as late as 1911; 99 entire families died in the flood, including 396 children; 124 women and . Piece white tape around body. No valuables. Female. Had been fifty-five years in America. Weight 100. Pearl street, Johnstown. Age about one year. Gold ring, garnet set. Right foot and leg deformed. Blue flannel underskirt. Dark hair. Lovers burnt and sweethearts drowned, Male. Pocket-knife. Female. Weight 75. Brown hair. 0:00. Two children, Alfred and Roy, drowned with them. Sandy hair. Silver watch. The reason people are hating on it now is because Hurricane Harvey just happened so Red Cross' response to it is being criticized and it is bringing up memories of how they always operate. Red skirt, with six inches of checkered cloth at top of band. Odd Fellow's badge on pin. Thirty-five years. Black and white striped flannel skirt. Sex unknown. A female. Thirty-six years. Steel spring gaiters. Male. White and black barred flannel skirt. 2,209 killed: Johnstown flood's legacy lives on 125 years later