I am posting an entire article on the 1910 snow slide that brought terror to Burke and other areas. I was in one when I was 4 years old, and I imagine that is what was the deciding factor for my family to move from the suburbs of Burke to the metropolis of Wallace. Here is the link and the story of one that happened many years before the one that damaged our home when I was four.
http://www3.gendisasters.com/idaho/17403/burke-id-fatal-snowslide-feb-1890
"A Spokane Falls dispatch of the 5th says:
The town of Burke, Idaho, in the Coeur d'Alene mining district, has been
nearly destroyed by disastrous avalanches. Half of the business houses
are in ruins. Three men were killed, and the terror-stricken
inhabitants have fled to the tows of Gem and Wallace, fearing a
repetition of the disaster. Patriculars are meager, as the wires to all
points in the mines have gone down, leaving no means of communication.
The disaster occurred yesterday afternoon, and this morning, with
scarcely a moment's warning, a tremendous mass of snow and rocks swept
down upon the town from the west side of the narrow gulch in which it is
situated. Five men were buried beneath the snow. Two were rescued,
but the others are dead and their bodies have not yet been recovered.
The ill-fated town lies in a narrow gulch through which Canyon Creek
pours its water into the south fork of the Coeur d'Alene. It had about
200 inhabitants, who have deserted their wrecked or menaced homes and
places of business. The nearest town is Gem, also upon Canyon Creek,
and three miles down the stream.
Yesterday another disastrous avalanche swept down upon the boarding
house connected with the Custer mine, which is situated upon Nine Mile
Creek, about five miles from Burke. The boarding house was full of
miners, six of whom were killed. The others had a narrow escape, and a
number were more or less injured. The disasters are not a surprise to
those familiar with the topography of that section. The towns are
situated in very narrow gulches, on either side of which abrupt
mountains rise. The snow all this winter has been unprecedented in the
history of the country. Within the last few days it has been raining
hard, which had the effect of loosening the deep snow banks and
precipitating them upon the town and the houses below.
The Coeur d'Alene mining district is one of the richest in the world,
both for gold and silver. It includes the famous Bunker Hill and
Sullivan Mines, perhaps the greatest fissure vein in America. The
principal town is Wallace. The other towns are Wardner, Osborne, Burke
and Gem.
Later reports from Burke indicate that no lives have been lost there.
MR. and MRS. WISE and JACK WAITE and wife were buried in the snowslide,
but all were rescued with slight injury. At Custer mine, however, the
disaster was worse than at first reported. Among the dead are JACK
GALBRAITH, foreman of the mine; MIKE FLYNN, cook; and TOM MAHONEY, a
young miner. Forty men are employed at the mine in two shifts. One
shift was below and the other was eating dinner at the time the
avalanche came upon the boarding house. Many other avalanches have
occurred in the Coeur d'Alene district. The canyons are full of snow,
rocks and great trees. The people of that whole section are
terror-stricken."
Centralia Enterprise Washington 1890-02-08
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