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    Historical Rain: Hurricane of 1938    
    Wednesday, August 13 2008 @ 11:25 AM GMT+5
    Contributed by: cgrotke

    History"The seeds of the flood could be traced back to the wettest summer in many years. Frequent and protracted rainy spells had kept the ground soaked for weeks and then on Sept. 13 another period of rain set in. For eight days it fell intermittently, totaling seven inches in Brattleboro."

    So was the description from a special 10 cent supplement published by the Brattleboro Daily Reformer just after the hurricane of 1938 to illustrate the extent of the damage in Brattleboro and surrounding towns.

    .....

    On Wednesday September 21, 1938 a Category 5 hurricane that had been coming up the east coast hit New England dead-on as a category 3 storm near New Haven, leveling trees and structures with wind damage and adding heavy rains to an already soaked landscape. It took a path up the Connecticut River valley in an almost straight line, where it turned further inland, crossed over upper New York state and eventually died out in Canada.

    New Englander's had little warning. It hit Brattleboro at about 4 in the afternoon. Electricity was out from 5:30 past midnight. The storm built up strength over the next few hours (moving at about 50 mph, with winds over a hundred miles per hour) and pounded Brattleboro with wind and rain. Thousands of trees were damaged.

    Streams and rivers overflowed, wiping out bridges and roads. The Connecticut and West River rose and flooded.

    The Whetstone Brook flooded Flat, Elm, Frost and Williams streets as well as portions of West Brattleboro.

    The Deerfield river took out a cement bridge in Wilmington. West Dover lost a covered bridge. Putney had roads washed away. Grafton lost nearly a dozen bridges to the Saxtons River. Spofford lost trees all around the lake.

    Power and phone communication was lost due to downed poles. Train service was interrupted for a week.

    The Brattleboro highway team and WPA workers were said to have streets opened in just a couple of days.

    No deaths or injuries in town, but Brattleboro estimated the cost for damage at $15-20,000, mostly in the form of stately old shade trees. (Cedar Street lost four large trees in a row to the winds.)

    ....

    One of the lighter local moments of the storm and flood started out somewhat ominous. Madeline Moore, 17, disappeared just before the storm according to the special report. Her parents worried for three days until they learned that she had eloped with a chef who worked in their restaurant. Not dead; happily married.

     

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  • Historical Rain: Hurricane of 1938 | 6 comments | Create New Account
    The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they may say.
    Historical Rain: Hurricane of 1938
    Authored by: annikee on Wednesday, August 13 2008 @ 01:38 PM GMT+5
    Thanks, Chris. An original Brattleburger recounts the '38 hurricane as "one big mudbath" to me. It worries me this year, with all the rain we've had. Should September bring the usual rain, and not even a hurricane, the ground could get very unstable under everything. Trees falling, roads caving, floods, etc. are what we really don't need right now.

    ---
    "Satisfy, have peace of mind, love your neighbor as your brother."- Richie Furay

    annikee/Laura
    Historical Rain: Hurricane of 1938
    Authored by: Maus Anon E on Wednesday, August 13 2008 @ 05:04 PM GMT+5
    The flood of '38 had economic effects that, one could argue, are still felt in some parts of Vermont, including Windham County. There was incredible loss of property and infrastructure - from bridges to miles of railroad tracks.
    If you know where to look in some towns, you can still see the scars: old cement abutments from bridges long gone, bits of foundation along what is now riverbank, things like that. (Wilmington Town Hall has a line painted on it, about 6 feet up, showing the flood level. I probably have photo somewhere.)

    Nice article, Chris. It will be 70 years this fall, and people still talk about it.


    ---
    Psyche!
    Historical Rain: Hurricane of 1938
    Authored by: Joann on Wednesday, August 13 2008 @ 07:05 PM GMT+5
    I was a kid on Bridgewater Hill; it was the night my first baby tooth came out! I remember my parents brought the pigs up into the woodshed. For a long time the road down to Route 4 was washed out and my mother drove the horse and buggy to take us to school through the neighbor's pasture to get by the damaged road.

    Not the good old days!

    Joann
    See some things are cyclic
    Authored by: mr.mike on Wednesday, August 13 2008 @ 08:25 PM GMT+5
    It appears we've had this happen before. And to think it happened just as cars were beginning to run the roads. I wonder what caused the planet to have a fever back then?

    ---
    ibrattleboro.com:the epitome of the fairness doctrine.
    See, some things are unrelated to today's weather
    Authored by: pjmelton on Wednesday, August 13 2008 @ 08:34 PM GMT+5
    There are three operative words to consider when discussing the planet's "fever":

    Global (that means involving the entire world)
    Climate (that means involving long-term weather patterns)
    Change (that means not staying the same)

    It is true that you cannot directly correlate today's weather in Brattleboro with global climate change.

    But neither can you look at a weather event in Brattleboro that happened 70 years ago and deduce from it that global climate change is NOT occurring. Which is, I gather, what you are getting at. Please correct me if I'm wrong.

    ---
    Paula
    See, some things are related to logic
    Authored by: annikee on Thursday, August 14 2008 @ 09:14 AM GMT+5
    Well put.

    ---
    "Satisfy, have peace of mind, love your neighbor as your brother."- Richie Furay

    annikee/Laura
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