Ten minutes after Paul left my neighbor came running over saying a major tsunami warning was in effect. I turned on the local radio station and sure enough they were reporting an 8.0 earthquake with a tsunami coming. I nervously listened as the Samoan d.j. started saying a huge 15-20 foot wave was coming towards the office building. She even starting praying for all of us, and then the radio station went to static. Talk about dramatic. This was especially significant as the radio station is in the same office building in Pago Pago as the National Park. I knew Paul wouldn’t be in the office yet, but it was equally worrisome thinking of him driving along the ocean. I have full faith in Paul’s abilities in a situation like this, but I was not looking forward to potential hours of worrying not knowing where he was.
Thankfully, Paul walked in the door a short time later, having been stopped by a police blockade. At this point we were getting some live news on CNN and the internet, but it was a lot of speculation. We finally were able to contact the superintendent at the National Park and were asked to assist if we could. We left the girls with the neighbors and headed into Pago Pago.
Most of the villages along the way looked fine. We did notice some mud and rocks on the road and more trash in the ocean than usual. As soon as we entered Pago Pago, it was a different story. There was major debris everywhere. Road crews were working to clear the road and we were able to get to Pago Plaza. It literally looked like a bomb had gone off. Cars and buses were flipped over. Paul’s boss' car is seen here, wedged into the second story of a building.

This is the back side of Pago Plaza, followed by the destruction on the first floor of the building.
The first floor of the National Park office was completely destroyed. We worked for a few hours trying to salvage things from the mud and water. A running joke during the cleanup was that this employee’s office was actually improved after the tsunami.
This is what was left of the NPSA visitor center.
Don't Drink the Water, a popular lunch spot, was recently renovated and is now in ruins.
As we worked we listened to people’s accounts of the tsunami. Apparently, there were a total of four major waves. Most of the staff ran upstairs for the first wave, but after having 8 foot high water fill the downstairs and listening to vehicles slam into the building, they questioned the building’s stability. After the first wave, they left and ran up the mountain. Reports of deaths were coming in fast. NPS staff recovered six bodies right after the tsunami. 22 deaths have now been confirmed and seeing all the rubble we suspect there may be more. All National Park Service staff and volunteers were accounted for and all 44 people survived.
We walked around Pago Pago seeing the devastation. It was amazing the amount of random items everywhere. This large boat ended up in the community bingo center.
Many other boats ended up in odd places.
Roadways and sidewalks were destroyed.
The vehicles everywhere really showed the force of the water. National Park vehicles were found under bridges, smashed against trees, even a quarter of a mile down the road.


It was heart wrenching to see the homes. Some people lost everything. More importantly, though, most people were safe in the hills when the tsunami hit.
One of the hardest parts of the day was the looting. Watching people at their worst was not something I will soon forget. People were looting stores, vehicles, offices, really anything they could get their hands on. Cars that were overturned were soon missing their tires as thieves came by. Some people were literally scavenging before a woman’s body was even removed. A lighter moment was some guy walking off with a couple volumes of the National Park Service law and policy books.
Luckily, the tsunami seems to have hit the major Pago area and only a few other villages. It could have been a lot worse. If people had been asleep or more people were on their way to school and work, many more lives would have been lost. We are grateful to be safe.
29 comments:
Hi the Browns. I wanted to ask permission to use your photos on More 4 News here in the UK. Can you let me know if that would be ok at will.jordan@[nospam]itn.co.uk ?
Thanks,
Will
Thanks for the update//Our thoughts and prayers to the residents affected by the event
the photos are painful but thanks for sharing you guys. I'm so grateful you are safe and sound. Love you, Liz
Thank you SOOOO MUCH for the photos, very painful to see, its like were going to start all OVER AGAIN, very sad......but this shouldnt stop us from praying to GOD to help SAMOA...thank you again....pora
Hey Melanie! Thanks for this update. Been tough to find decent photos and news from people that know the island.
Congrats on the new baby too!
Ryan Binns
So glad you are safe...just heard about it this morning....my thoughts and prayers are with you, and with those injured, missing, and lost.
thank you for sharing your story. i was bron and raised in american samoa and although i no longer have immediate family living there, it is still my home. i look forward to more fo your posts.
I wanted to say thank you so much for this. It gives us a play by play of the different things that happened as it was happening. I am glad to hear that your family is safe, and praying for those that have lost loved ones or those that have been injured. Samoa will bounce back, it always does. Thank again, my prayers are with the people of Samoa. Alofas
Thank you for sharing your account of the day. It is incredible heartbreaking to see so much destruction that happened in only minutes.
My prayers go out to the people in your community and all of the Samoas.
Bendecidos mi hermanos y hermanas.
Hi I just came upon your blog...trying to find pictures of the earthquake. My husband is from Western Samoa and found out his village is destroyed. He has family members missing still. Thanks for sharing your story. It was also very cool to look at your familys journey in Samoa. I love all the beautiful pictures. Take care, hope you dont mind I will be visiting your site once in awhile.
Terri Brown
Wow Mel- thanks for the report. We have been following this closely on the news.....crazy. I'm so lgad you guys were okay. Is anyone hurt or missing that is palagi? We are praying for you. Sean and I were talking, and in a way, we wish we were there to help. We love you.
Jessi
Hi Browns, thanks so much for your update on the tsunami. My name is Jane and I live in Atlanta. I was born on Aunu'u to a Samoan woman and a palagi father. I was adopted by my palagi parents back in 1964. My Samoan mother's family name was Maliga. Have you heard any word about how Aunu'u is? I've been worried as it sounds like there was so little time to react after the quake. I haven't visited in 20 years. While I was there, I met my biological uncle and a few relatives, including a boy named Taylor that's probably about 33 now. If you have any word about Aunu'u and/or anyone there, could you please post or email me? Thanks so much! So glad to hear your family is safe! God Bless!
Thanks for the photos. We use to be missionaries in Samoa and we love the people so much. We call Samoa our home because there has never been a place in our ministry that we loved so much.
Pastor John & Marie Rankin
Thank you for such an interesting post. It's sad to see the devastation.
New Zealand has such close ties with Samoa, I've posted a link to your blog on http://travelingnewzealand.blogspot.com/.
Lyn Harris
Meredith Bergey...thank you for the link...and thanks for posting on the tsunami...I am gonna post ur link on my facebook so that friends and family can see. Any word on the devastation in Fagasa? I heard my house is just gone! Wanted to see pictures! Thank you again! Our hearts are with you!
Please, do you have any pictures of the village of Fagasa? Am thankful no fatalities there but heard my house was gone...I mean wiped out with no evidence ever being there. Thank you again for your posts!
Thank you for describing your experience and sharing photos. I am glad to hear that you and your family is safe. Aloha, Risa Oram
we are glad that you are okay--and that paul didn't get all the way into pago.
we were hoping to do something to help and thought about possibly putting together some school supplies through our kids' school or church. if it seems that this would be helpful, or if you have other ideas of local needs, please let us know. how did pacific horizons hold up?
i have been in contact with the hospital, and may try to make arrangements to help out briefly if there is a need there.
again, thanks for the post. i think these are the best photos that i have seen to document the extent of the damage.
take care,
david and myndie tullis
Thinking of all of you and sending hope that all of your lives will get back to normal as quickly as possible. Your photos paint a very painful time for Samoa - wishing everyone our best from a sister territory on the other side of the world.
Rafe Boulon, VIIS/VICR
St. John, US Virgin Islands
Tragic experience. It goes to show people why the goverment needs to put strong measurs to control any development in hazard prone areas. This is an ongoing issues with steep slopes, flood areas, forest fires, hurricanes and earthquakes and Americans continue to pick up the tab. My heart goes out to the people and Park Service staff. Godbless.
Hope you guys are doing better, stay safe. Help is on the way. From another sister territory and other side of the World, San Juan Puerto Rico.
Hey, Brown family... Glad to hear that you are safe and all is well with the NPS family over there! Please keep us posted, and our thoughts and prayers are with you.
Hey Paul & the Brown Family:
I'm so glad to hear that all of you are OK, and just want to send you the best wishes from all of us here at Stanford.
Those pictures are amazing - especially the remains of Peter's flying car!
I'm a member of the NPS family by adoption and absorption.
Thank you for so graciously giving us a window into this incredible event.
My prayers are with you, and the rest of the folks on the islands as they begin to dig out and build again.
My husband and I lived in American Samoa for three years in the 1990s and are absolutely horrified to see all the destruction. Thank you so much for posting pictures of a lot of the places we knew so well. We lived in Pava'ia'i.
Eileen and Jack
My husband Jack and I lived in American Samoa for three years in the 1990s and are horrified at the devastation. Thank you so much for publishing pictures of places that we held so dear. We'd love to see more. The National Park Service had once bought 6-7 of my paintings of National Natural Monuments on Tutuila, but I guess they are also destroyed now as well.
Eileen George
Paul:
Glad to know that you and your family are OK. I followed this issue closely in northern CA because of ties to people I have taught boating classes to throughout the Pacific, including yourself. Best wishes to you as the rebuilding begins.
Greg
Talofa Browns,
This link was given to my by a friend. I wanted to ask your permission to use some of your photos in my collage I wanted to do for all the Samoans...I received a song from a Samoan kid living in Utah, and he requested if I could make a collage using his song about the tsunami. Would greatly appreciate it!
Dear Browns, thanks once again for all your posts. It's nice to get up close and personal account of what's going on in Samoa. My family and I continue to pray for all of American Samoa and its people.
I wanted to share with you one small miracle that came about after the tsunami. Living in Atlanta, I don't get much exposure to Samoa and heard only small bits and pieces about Samoa. I left a post after your original tsunami blog. The post asked if you had heard of anyone on Aunu'u and/or a family named Maliga. On Oct 5th, a woman saw that post and subsequently found me on Facebook. She said she knew my birth mother and famly very well. She asked me if I really wanted to know more about them and she told me she could "really open a whole new family" to me. I Facebook-ed her and said "absolutely." She called me that day and told me she was my sister. I bawled like a baby. She has been looking for me for years...I have been an only child for 45 years. Now, I'm big sis to her and 2 brothers. I have a whole new Samoan family that I cannot wait to learn more about, meet, etc.
Many prayers & much alofas!!!
Jane Sweazy Carruthers
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