A full ACCOUNT of the Late Dreadful Earthquake At PORT ROYAL in JAMAICA; Written in two Letters from the Minister of that Place. From a Board the Granada in Port Royal Harbour, June 22, 1692. Licenced Sept. 9, 1692. Dear Friend, I Doubt not but you will both from Gazettes, and Letters hear of the gerat Calamity that hath befallen this Island by a Terrible Earthquake, on the 7th Instant, which hath thrown down almost all the Houses, Churches, Sugar-Works, Mills, and Bridges through the whole Country. It tore the Rocks and Mountains, and destroyed some whole Plantations, and threw them into the Sea, but port-royal had much the greatest share in this terrible Judgement of God; I will therefore be more particular in giving you an Account of its Proceed in the Place, that you may know what my danger was, and how unexpected my Preservation. On Wednesday the 7th of June I had been at Church Reading Prayers, which I did every day since I was Rector of Port-Royal, to keep up some show of Religion among a most Ungodly Debauched People, and was gone to a Place hard by the Church, where the Merchants used to meet, and where the Precedent of the Council was, who acts now in Chief till we have a new Governor; who came into my Company, and engaged me to take a Glass of wormwood Wine with him as a whet before Dinner, he being my very great Friend, I stayed with him, upon which, he lighted a Pipe of Tobacco, which he was pretty long a taking; and not being willing to leave him before it was out, this detained me from going to Dinner to one Captain Ruden's, where I was to Dine; whose House upon the first Concussion sunk first into the Earth, and then into the Sea, with his Wife, and Family, and some that were come to Dine with him; had I been there I had been lost. But to Return to the Precedent, and his Pipe of Tobacco; before that was out, I found the ground rolling and moving under my feet, upon which I said to him, Lord, Sir, what's this? he replied very composedly, being a very Grave Man, It is an Earthquake, be not afraid, it will soon be over, but it increased, and we heard the Church and Tower fall, upon which, we ran to save ourselves; I quickly lost him, and made toward Morgan's- Fort, which being a wide open place, I thought to be there securest from the falling Houses; But as I made toward it, I saw the Earth open and swallow up a multitude of People, and the Sea mounting in upon us over the Fortifications. I then laid aside all thoughts of escaping, and resolved to make toward my own Lodging, and there to meet Death in as good a Posture as I could: From the Place where I was, I was forced to cross and run through two or three very narrow Streets, the Houses and Walls fell on each side of me, some Bricks came rolling over my shoes, but none hurt me; when I came to my Lodging I found there all things in the same order I left them, not a Picture, of which there were several fair ones in my Chamber, being out of its place, I went to my Balconey to view the Street in which our House stood, and saw never a House down there, nor the ground so much as cracked; the People seeing me there, cried out to me to come and Pray with them; when I came into the Street every one laid hold on my and embraced me, that with their fear and kindness I was almost stifled; I persuaded them at last to kneel down and make a large Ring, which they did, I prayed with them near an hour, when I was almost spent with the heat of the Sun, and the exercise, they then brought me a Chair, the Earth working all the while with new motions, and tremble, like the rollings of the Sea; insomuch that sometimes when I was at Prayer I could hardly keep myself upon my knees. By that time I had been half an hour longer with them, in setting before them their Sins and heinous Provocations, and in seriously exhorting them to Repentance, there came some Mercahants to me of the place, who desired me to go aboard some Ship in the Harbour, and refresh myself, telling me that they had gotten a Boat to carry me off; so coming to the Sea, which had entirely swallowed up the Wharf, with all those goodly Brick Houses upon it, most of them as fine as those in Cheapside, and two Entire Streets beyond that: I upon the tops of some Houses which lay leveled with the surface of the water, got first into a Canoe, and then into a Longboat, which put me aboard a Ship called the S●am-Merchant, where I found the Precedent safe, who was overjoyed to see me; there I continued that night, but could not sleep for the returns of the Earthquake almost every hour, which made all the Guns in the Ship to jar and rattle: The next day I went from Ship to Ship to Visit those that were bruised, and a dying, and to Pray with them, and likewise to do the last Office at the sinking of several Corpse that came floating from the Point, which indeed hath been my sorrowful Employment ever since I came aboard this Ship with design to come for England, we having nothing but shake of the Earth, and Thunder● and Lightning, and foul weather ever since; and the People being so desperately wicked it makes me afraid to stay in the Place; for that very day this terrible Earthquaqe was, as soon as night came on, a Company of lewd Rogues whom they call Privateers, fell to breaking open Warehouses, and Houses deserted, to Rob and Rifle their Neighbours whilst the Earth trembled under them, and some of the Houses fell on them in the Act: And those audacious Whores that remain still upon the Place, are as Impudent, and Drunken as ever. I have been twice on Shoar to Pray with the Bruised and Dying People, and to Christian Children, where I met too many Drunk and Swearing, I did not spare them, nor the Magistrates neither, who have suffered Wickedness to grow to so great a height; I have I bless God, to the best of my skill and power discharged my Duty in this place, which you will hear from most Persons that come from hence; I have Preached so seasonably to them, and so plain in the last Sermon I Preached to them in the Church; I set before them what would be the issue of their impenitence, and Wickedness, that they have since confessed, that it was more like a Prophecy than a Sermon; I had, I confess, an impulse on me to do it: And many times I have preached in this Pulpit, things that I never premeditated at home, and could not, methought, do otherwise. The day when all this befell us was very clear, afforded not the suspicion of the least evil; but in the space of three Minutes, about half an hour after Eleven in the Morning, Port Royal, the fairest Town of all the English Plantations, the best Emporium and Mart of the this part of the World, exceeding in its Riches, plentiful of all good things, was shaken and shattered to pieces, and sunk into, and covered for the greatest part, by the Sea, and will in a short time be wholly eaten up by it; for few of those Houses that yet stand, are left whole, and every day we hear them fall, and the Sea daily incroaches upon it; we guess, that by the falling of the Houses, and the opening of the Earth, and the Inundation of the Waters, there are lost Fifteen hundred persons, and many of good note, of whom my good Friend Attorney General Musgrove, Provost Marshal Reves another, my Lord Secretary Reves another. Will. Turner, Thomas Turner's Brother is lost, Mr. Swymer escaped, but his House-mate, Mr. Watts, is lost. I came, I told you, on board this Ship in order to come home, but the People are so importunate with me to stay, I know not what to say to them; I must undergo great hardships if I continue here, the Country being broken all to pieces and dissettled, I must live now in a Hutt, eat Yams and Plantans for Bread, which I could never endure; drink Rumm-Punch and Water, which were never pleasing to me. I have writ to send a younger person, who may better endure the Fatigue of it than I can; but if I should leave them now, it would look very unnatural to leave them in their distress; and therefore whatever I suffer, I would not have such a blame lie at my door; and I am resolved, That by reason of the present distress, to continue with them a Year longer: They are going all in haste to build a new Town near the Rock in Linnavea, the Guardian of this Island. The French from Pituguaveis did attack this Island on the North side, but were all defeated and destroyed it being about the time of the Earthquake. June 28, 1692. EVer since that fatal day, the most terrible that ever I saw in my life, I have lived on Board a Ship, for the shake of the Earth return every now and then; Yesterday we had a very great one, but it seems less terrible on Shipboard than on Shoar, yet I have ventured to Port-Royal no less than three times since its desolation, among the shattered Houses to Bury the dead, and Pray with the Sick, and christian the Children. Sunday last I preached among them in a Tent, the Houses that remain being so shattered, that I durst not venture to Preach in them; the People are overjoyed to see me among them, and wept bitterly when I preached to them: I hope by this terrible Judgement, God will make them reform their lives, for there was not a more ungodly People on the Face of the Earth. It is a sad sight to see all this Harbour, one of the fairest and goodliest I ever saw covered with the dead Bodies of People of all conditions floating up and down without burial, for our great and famous Burial-place, called the Pallisadoes was destroyed by the Earthquake, and the Sea washed the Carcakasses of those that were buried out of their Graves, their Tombs being dashed to pieces by the Earthquake, of which there were hundreds in that place: Multitudes of Rich Men are utterly ruined, whilst many that were poor, by watching opportunities, and searching the wracked and sunk Houses, even almost while the Earthquake lasted, and terror and amazement were upon all the considerable People, have gotten great Riches. We have had Accounts from several parts of these Islands of the Mischiefs done by the Earthquake; from St. Ann's we hear of above 1000 Acres of Woodland changed into the Sea, and carried with it whole Plantations, but no place suffered like Port Royal; where whole Streets were swallowed up by the opening Earth, and the Houses and Inhabitants went down together, some of them were driven up again by the Sea, which arose in those breaches, and wonderfully escaped; some were swallowed up to the Neck, and then the Earth shut upon them, and squeezed them to death; and in that manner several are left buried with their Heads above ground, only some Heads the Dogs have eaten, others are covered with Dust and Earth by the People which yet remain in the place, to avoid the stench. Thus, I have told you a long and a sad Story, and God knows what worse may happen yet: the People tell me, that they hear great bellow and noises in the Mountains, which makes some very apprehensive of an eruption of Fire; if so, it will, I fear, be more destructive than the Earthquake. I am afraid to say, and yet I know not how, in point of Conscience, at such a juncture as this, to quit my Station. FINIS. LONDON, Printed for Jacob Tonson, and Sold by R. Baldwyn. 1692.