Showing posts with label Flooding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Flooding. Show all posts

Saturday, December 26, 2009

Floods in Canada

MONTREAL, April 21. – There are heavy freshets prevailing throughout Lower Canada. Many villages are flooded, and there has been great destruction of property.

The locks and dams near Ottawa are in danger.

The Western trains have been interrupted for the last three days. The road is washing out near [Cornwall], but is expected to get right to-day.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, April 26, 1862, p. 4

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

The Flood in the Connecticut

SPRINGFIELD, MASS., April 21. – The freshet in the Connecticut river at this point is the greatest ever known. At 9 o’clock this evening the water had fallen 15 inches, and is still receding slowly. At Northampton the water is two feet higher than ever before, and at Hadley there is no land to be seen, the inhabitants go from house to house in boats.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, April 26, 1862, p. 4

Saturday, December 12, 2009

The Flood Subsiding

BOSTON, April 22. – Advices from the interior report that the freshet has reached its height and the waters are now receding. Railroad travel is resuming gradually.

HARTFORD, April 22. – The river is now rapidly falling after having reached a height lacking only 14 inches of the great flood of 1854. – Trains are now running regularly throught to Springfield.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly-Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, April 26, 1862, p. 3

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

From Cairo

(Special to the Chicago Journal.)

Water rising rapidly, and families removing from the houses and leaving for the country for shelter and safety; also sending off their horses and cows. The railroad track is under water on the Pache bottom, just above the city. A heavy N. W. wind would drive the Mississippi over the levee. The Chicago train waited till daylight for the downward train at Mound City junction – it came in three hours behind time. The telegraph line is in jeopardy.

We are all surprised here this morning at finding the intelligence from Ft. Pillow given to the country through the Navy Department at Washington, and published in all the papers yesterday morning, when we have regularly had the same intelligence stricken out of the dispatches up to last night.

– Published in The Davenport Daily Gazette, Davenport, Iowa, Saturday Morning, April 19, 1862, p. 1

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Roads and Bridges

The continued heavy rains and corresponding muddy roads and high waters have laid a complete embargo on that reciprocation of mutual dependence which exists between town and country. Yesterday three farmers living beyond Duck Creek, which magnificent stream courses within a mile of our corporate limits, attempted to reach our city on horseback. Hey tried the bridge of the Dubuque route, but found the road leading on to it washed away; they then went up to the Harrison street bridge, which they found in the same condition. Proceeding up to the next bridge and finding it in a similar condition and determined to come to town anyhow, they plunged their horses into the stream, and after much floundering and considerable swimming made this shore. Whether they have attempted to return we know not. Our Supervisors should attend to the condition of these and other bridges on the different roads throughout the county speedily as possible, as we are informed some of them are washed away, and all in a wretched condition.

– Published in The Davenport Daily Gazette, Davenport, Iowa, Friday Morning, April 18, 1862, p. 1

Sunday, October 11, 2009

Damage By The Storm

The storm of Tuesday night and Wednesday morning was very destructive in the rural parts of the county. The streams have swollen so much as to carry away fences and bridges. The bridge over Duck Creek near the old fairground had the dirt washed away on its north side, of course weakening the structure. The bridge over Crow Creek on the Jersey Ridge road is carried away. The embankment at both ends of the bridge over the same stream on the Le Claire road was also washed away, and to get on the bridge a person must drive through two or three feet of water, and perhaps more now. The rain of yesterday has probably added much to the amount of damage done.

– Published in The Davenport Daily Gazette, Davenport, Iowa, Friday Morning, April 18, 1862, p. 1

Sunday, August 16, 2009

Iowa Items

The rivers of Iowa are having a good time all to themselves; which is more than can be said of the dwellers on their banks; a number of buildings have been started from their positions at Des Moines, and a large number of families have been obliged to leave their furniture in the safest places in their houses, and escape in skiffs to higher grounds, sick people have been hurried from their homes in skiffs. There is consequently much suffering among a portion of the people at the Capital.

The Des Moines Register says that fourteen men of the 4th infantry, wounded at the battle of Pea Ridge have died since the battle.

Captain Granville Berkley of company F 2d Iowa Cavalry, was mustered out of the service on March 29th.

Samuel M. Wise, a Captain in the Iowa First Infantry, has been commissioned Maj. Of the 17th Regiment, Col Rankin.

The 17th regiment has been formally accepted by the War Department. It has 900 men now in camp at Keokuk, and 200 more on the way there.

– Published in The Davenport Daily Gazette, Davenport, Iowa, Wednesday Morning, April 16, 1862, p. 2

Thursday, July 2, 2009

High Water

Last Friday the Cedar river commenced rising and continued to raise until about 4 o’clock, Monday morning, when it was at its greatest highth [sic], being some 10 or 11 feet higher than at ordinary stages. About noon on Sunday [it] was discovered that the water was cutting away the [abutment] at the north end of the bridge, and nothing [but] the most prompt and energetic action saved at least [the abutment] from destruction, and perhaps the entire structure. The same day about 8 P.M., the south end commenced giving away, and a delay of twenty minutes would probably have been sufficient time for the water to have swept away that portion of the bridge. Sunday night just before 12 o’clock, the race bridge went off with a fearful crash. At this point had been erected a sort of temporary dam to prevent the water inundating the mills below. Against this vast quantity of logs and drift-wood collected and the pressure proved too great for the structure, and away it went. The road leading to Cedar City, which is formed by an embankment thrown up through a slough jutting out of the river is cut through and [through] by the water, so as to be impassable. – the [railroad] pile bridge just east of the depot is destroyed – the water cut the piling out, and swept it away leaving the stringers which are only supported by their [extreme] ends which rest on the banks. Also the bridge [still a] little further east, by the tank house, is severely [illegible] and one pile taken entirely out. The damage to the railroad is such that no freight can be received or shipped at this point until the damage is repaired.

The race embankment on the river side, just above the mills was cut through, and the water continues to pour through the gap in great volumes. We hear of no other damage to private property other than the loss of some lumber and logs which were swept away from the mill when the race bridge went. C. Bozarth lost 2,000 feet, John Keller sixty dollars worth, and several others were losers in small quantities.

Sunday afternoon the waters rose with fearful rapidity and when night set in presented a rather appalling aspect. Though it was apparent to all that should the water continue to rise during the night as rapidly as it had during the day, the danger to the bridge and several buildings was imminent, yet but three men thought it worth while to stay and watch the freaks of the angry waters, and from ten till four o’clock these men were unceasingly employed in fighting back the devastating flood. They undoubtedly saved the river bridge from being swept away. During the night they discovered that the water had again commenced cutting away the abutment, and only with great difficulty succeeded in stopping the break. The water also commenced running over the road leading to the bridge and had they not been there to throw up an embankment to turn the water back, it would have swept away Barnum and Melendy’s new warehouse. The names of these three men are P. Melendy, Byron Culver, and Daniel Willard, and they deserve great credit for their exertions that night. The two latter had no personal interest at stake whatever, and deserve all the more credit on that account. It was a trying position in which to place three men, when there was work enough for fifty, and where so many interests were at stake. Yet they were true to their trust and during all of that long night, the battled for the victory and gained it. The bridge leading into town being gone, they could not go for help.

The water lacks a little of being within three feet as high as during the great flood four years ago. It is providential that we have had no rains, for if we had the business part of the town would surely have been inundated.

Thursday morning the water again commenced to rise, this morning being as high as at any previous time during the freshet. In consequence of there being no flood gate at the head of the race the water continues to pour through there with a constantly increasing force. The banks on either side of the race are slowly, but surely being cut away from the swift current. The damage already sustained must be near eight hundred or a thousand dollars. Mr. Henry’s new building and Darrah’s grocery store are in great danger of being undermined and swept down stream. The race must be damned [sic] at its head before the ravages of the water can be prevented to any extent. Maggarth’s blacksmith’s shop on the north bank of the race is about to take a dive; Barnum & Melendy’s warehouse has been in danger, but it is now thought to be averted by the forming of the breakwater out of tree tops, logs, brush, etc. Stead and Huffman saved their dry house by removing it.

The cause of the swift current through the race and the attending danger and loss, was the breaking away of the embankment just above the mills and the destruction of the bridge and temporary dam which were depended upon to keep the water back. Unless steps are immediately taken to shut off the water at the head of the race, we are afraid that we have as yet experienced but a small part of the damage which will result from allowing the water to pour through the channel uninterrupted – Cedar Falls Gazette.

– Published in the Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, April 12, 1862, p. 1

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Some Days Since . . .

. . . in speaking of the heavy rains and the number of bridges washed away on the annual recurrence of high waters, we alluded to those on Duck Creek as all being destroyed during a season of freshet. It was a slight error, two remained uninjured after the subsidence of the waters. Both of these bridges were built under the supervision of Mr. John R. Jackson of this city. He also built the substantial culvert near East Davenport. As his name has recently been mentioned in connection with the office of Street Commissioner, we hope his worth may be considered, and a man be placed in that position who is not only really needy, but makes it a rule to do well whatever he undertakes.

– Published in The Davenport Daily Gazette, Davenport, Iowa, Wednesday Morning, April 16, 1862, p. 1

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Gratitude

Our bosom heaves with unutterable gratitude with the reflection that the season of boating and skiffing across the Flat is now over! It is to be hoped that no more inundations, for the present year at least, will overwhelm the Des Moines valley. To persons living on the other side, whose business is on the west side of the river, the flood has imposed a considerable tax. To pay from 20 to 40 cents a day for the simple item of having your physical system transferred from one side to the other, is no small bill of expense when kept up protractedly, in these hard times. But this expense and annoyance are trifling when compared with those graver evils and sacrifices of property from which our citizens have suffered whose residences were invaded by the flood!

– Published in the Daily State Register, Des Moines, Iowa, Thursday, April 24, 1862