This blog post takes another look at the 1906 San Francisco Bay Area earthquake. We’ll explore what happened, who felt the impact, and how those events still echo through seismic planning across Marin County—from San Rafael to Sausalito, Mill Valley to Fairfax.
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A historical image of the 1906 earthquake
On April 18, 1906, a foreshock rattled the Bay Area at 5:12 a.m. Then came the main event: a massive magnitude 7.9 quake that shook the region for about 45 to 60 seconds.
The rupture tore along the northernmost 296 miles of the San Andreas Fault. It delivered huge horizontal shifts that pushed scientists of the era to their limits.
San Francisco’s roads and sidewalks buckled. Gas and water mains snapped, leaving the city’s roughly 600 firefighters scrambling and mostly powerless to stop what came next.
Fires quickly swept through Nob Hill and other civic hubs. Over the next three days, a massive blaze burned about 4.7 square miles and destroyed some 28,000 buildings—nearly 25,000 wooden and over 3,000 brick structures.
Across the Bay Area, the quake’s human and economic toll far outweighed the shaking itself. Communities from Tiburon to Novato had to rethink how they’d face future disasters.
Marin towns—Sausalito, Mill Valley, San Anselmo, and more—felt the tremors. Neighbors started to wonder: How could they make the Bay Area safer, from hillside homes to waterfront shacks?
The human toll and the birth of modern seismology
Death toll estimates still vary, but research by Gladys Hansen and Emmet Condon puts fatalities well over 3,000. Hundreds more died in San Francisco, Santa Rosa, and San Jose.
About 225,000 people lost their homes in a city of nearly 400,000. Property damage hit roughly $400 million in 1906 dollars—about $80 million from the quake, the rest from the fires.
California formed its first integrated state earthquake investigation commission, led by UC Berkeley’s Andrew C. Lawson. The length of the rupture and scale of the fires became benchmarks for later seismic science and today’s warning systems, like ShakeAlert.
Marin County today: lessons from 1906 for Sausalito, Mill Valley, and beyond
Since then, Marin County towns—from San Rafael to Novato and Belvedere to Tiburon—have tried to weave those lessons into a more resilient approach. The 1906 disaster really drove home the need for better water systems, tougher building codes, and coordinated emergency responses that could withstand fires as well as quakes—a message Marin communities took to heart.
Today, ShakeAlert and proactive planning give residents in San Anselmo, Ross, Fairfax, and Corte Madera a few precious seconds to drop, cover, and hold on. Utilities and city planners work to strengthen vital infrastructure.
From Sausalito’s shoreline to Mill Valley’s ridge lines, the memory of 1906 shapes safety drills, school plans, and neighborhood mutual-aid groups that reach across Marin County and beyond.
Modern preparedness: ShakeAlert and community action
ShakeAlert gives folks in Belvedere, Tiburon, San Anselmo, and Novato a crucial head start. People can react while agencies get moving.
Local agencies run drills, retrofit key infrastructure, and hand out ready-to-use checklists for households along the Marin coastline and inland streets alike.
- Key facts from 1906 that still guide us: 7.9 magnitude, 296 miles of fault rupture, and 45–60 seconds of intense shaking.
- Impact: large fires, thousands of buildings destroyed, and hundreds of thousands displaced in the broader Bay Area.
- Public response: creation of state earthquake commissions and ongoing seismic science, improving building codes in Marin and throughout the Bay.
- Current focus: preparedness, warning systems, and resilient design in Marin’s towns from San Rafael to Pt. Reyes Station.
Looking ahead: resilience in Marin’s communities
The Bay Area keeps growing—sometimes fast, sometimes in fits and starts. Whether it’s Sausalito’s waterfront, Tiburon’s hills, or the quiet lanes of San Anselmo, Marin County tries to learn from what’s come before.
We invest in retrofits and water infrastructure. In Corte Madera, Ross, and Fairfax, neighbors run drills and swap stories about what could go wrong—or right.
The memory of 1906 isn’t just some old relic. It’s more like a warning that sticks with us, pulling Marin’s towns together in this odd mix of preparedness and hope for recovery, from San Rafael all the way out to Bolinas and Inverness.
Here is the source article for this story: A look back at the 1906 San Francisco earthquake
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