l6 9 MIDDLEMISS: KANGRA EARTHQUAKE. 



walls at each end of the building have been fractured sio badly as to 

 b9come dangerous ; the upper story portion is being dismantled and 

 rebuilt. 



This is a smaller building, rectangular in plan, pointing N. E. to 

 rt , S. W. It carries a gable roof with three square 



1 ho Quarter © •*• 



Guard. chimney-stacks along the N. W. margin, and around 



it runs a verandah with a flat roof. A small corner of the chimney at 

 the N. angle has fallen towards the N. on to the verandah roof below. At 

 the S. and E. corners, small portions of the wall and roof fell on the 

 verandah roof. 



In barracks No. 2, the tops of two chimneys have fallen, as far as 

 N. .Staffordshire could be seen, towards the N. E. or N. The coni- 

 Linos. cal cover of a small iron chimney is said to have 



been bent by the shock, and is now directed towards the E. N. E. 



In the station hospital a few small cracks occur over 



Hospital Church. -, . -,. . . , , 



r arches indiscriminately. 



The ornamental parapet of a gable of the church has been taken 

 down, because of serious fracture. 



Little damage has been done in the city, and nothing of any inter - 



Ferozepur City. est ha%S happened. 



The arch of the city gate runs east to west; a vertical crack passes 

 right through the building from back to front, at the side of the 

 archway. 



In the mosque of Munshi Eaiz Bakhsh, and also in another mosque, 

 a small minaret has fallen towards the west. 



A portion of the east wall of a tall three-storied house has fallen 

 from the highest story outwards towards the east and has broken 

 through the roof of an outhouse below. In the remaining portion of 

 this wall is a wide crack extending from the roof to the ground. 



Three observers at the Fort felt the shock come from N. to S., 

 Direction and in- an d according to one it was not easy to keep one's 

 tensif y- balance. 



