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New
book marks 70th anniversary
of Louisvilles experience
Author
Bell captures the effect on the city
and its people; will sign book in La Grange, Ky.
By
Helen E. McKinney
Contributing Writer
LOUISVILLE, KY. (March 2007) Dennis
Miller vividly remembers being awakened at 2 a.m. or 3 a.m.
by the Louisville Fire Department to evacuate his Ormsby Avenue
home when he was 7 years old.
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March
2007
Ky. & Ind. Edition Cover
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Along with his parents and six brothers and
sisters, the family was bustled outside in the cold darkness
of a winter night while still in their nightclothes to board
a waiting flatbed wagon that would take them to safety.
Water covered the floor of his home and was almost over
the house by the next day, he said. Miller was referring
to the flood of 1937, a natural disaster that displaced many
families and forced some to become homeless refugees for quite
a long time.
Miller and his family stayed with his grandmother at Preston
and Lee streets in Louisville, and we almost had to
leave there because of the rising water. Unable to walk
down the city streets, his father and two brothers took a
boat back to their home to get clothes.
The thing he recalls most is my parents saying how devastating
the flood was for Louisville. They also spoke of American
Red Cross efforts and food aid that was sent out to families
in need.
The family had to wait a long time before they could move
back home. When they did, it was only after the plaster had
been torn off the walls and repaired and the house rewired.
It is memories such as these that Louisville author Rick Bell
has recorded in a recently released book, The Great
Flood of 1937: Rising Waters, Soaring Spirits. Bell
chronicles the emotions, facts and historical significance
of the event in the lives of many Kentuckians through photos,
historic maps, log books and diaries.
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The
Great Flood of 1937
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Like
San Franciscos earthquake and
Baltimores
fire,
the flood of 1937 became a Louisville benchmark; modern
Louisville started with it. So said Harpers
Weekly, and most historians agree.
Seventy years ago, in January 1937, the Ohio River flooded
in biblical proportions. Like New Orleans after Katrina,
two-thirds of the city of Louisville,
Ky., was under water. But the citizens of Louisville,
under the inspired leadership of Mayor Neville Miller,
fought
through
the hardships and the challenges of the citys worst
natural disaster to overcome extraordinary tragedy to
save their city.
This is the complete story of those heroic days. Through
historic photographs, maps, log books, diaries and personal
recollections, author Rick Bell re-creates, in thrilling
detail, the magnitude of the devastation and the totality
of the citys eventual triumph.
Source: Book publishers
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The Ohio River flooded in wintertime in late
January and early February 1937. Families found themselves
cold, homeless and hungry during a period when the country
was in the middle of the Great Depression following the Dust
Bowl.
The river was above flood stage for 23 days, with flooding
from Pittsburgh down to Cairo, Ill. More than 1 million people
were homeless along this route, with 385 dead. Property losses
topped $500 million.
It was the greatest natural disaster up until that time,
Bell said.
More than 19 inches of rain fell during January, leaving more
than 60 percent of Louisville under water and without power.
Businesses were devastated. Other areas, such as the 118-acre
Rose Island amusement park, was lost and never rebuilt.
Ive been interested in the flood all my life,
said Bell, 60. He grew up in the Portland area of Louisville
and remembers his family relating stories of the flood. Growing
up in Louisville in the 1950s, you heard people talk
about it.
Bells parents lived above a grocery store, and for this
reason faired better than some. His brother was six months
old at the time, and the family had to live in the attic amidst
valuable antique furniture his mother had stored. It was this
same furniture that was burned for his brother to have dry
diapers.
Bells mother died 1 1/2 years ago, and she is partly
the reason he wrote this book.
People really do want to share their story and experiences,
he said.
Portrait artist and former Louisville resident Geraldine McCollum
was 4 years old in 1937. Like Miller, she recalls her family
being awakened in the middle of a dark night in Louisvilles
Portland neighborhood and taken to the fire station in a mail
truck.
It was a very dark night, no lights in the neighborhood,
said McCollum, who now resides 50 miles upriver in Madison,
Ind.
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Photo
by Caufield and Shook Collection
Lincoln
Standing on Water, one of
the most famous images associated
with the 1937 Flood, is a bit of an illusion.
The photo was taken several days
after the floods crest when the
water had lowered to the feet of the
statue, located at Fourth and York
streets. Water marks on the walls of
Louisville Free Public Library show the
high water mark actually reached
to Lincolns knees.
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Shell never forget the fear
and hearing the cries of people all around to send a
boat in the black darkness. Youd really have to
experience it.
After his family was safe, her preacher father spent the remainder
of the night assisting rescue efforts. During this devastating
time, there was one small spark of humor to the situation.
In the confusion of darkness and sudden fear, McCollums
mother accidentally tied the strings of her 7-year-old brothers
knee boots together. This rather hampered his movement
in that excited darkness!
In his past position as assistant to the director of the Filson
Club, Bell gave a presentation for the 50th anniversary ceremony
of the flood. This information formed the core of his book.
There were lots of remembrances for the 50th anniversary,
he said.
Some of the photos in the book have never before been published.
The University of Louisville staff members worked with Bell,
giving him access to the thousands of archived pictures in
their archives.
James Manasco served as photo editor for the book and works
in Special Collections at the U of Ls Ekstrom Library,
where the photos are stored. We should preserve our
history, said Manasco.
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Photo
by R.G. Potter Collection
Louisvilles
flood brought out the
best in people, many of whom used their
boats to transport 230,000 victims to
safety in only three days.
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The Ekstrom Library has more than 40 collections
of archived flood photos, some of earlier flood periods (1884)
and even the mayors scrapbook. There are almost 2 million
images stored at U of L, Manasco said.
Individuals have donated much of this material, but there
were several local major photography companies that had saved
negatives and donated their collections as well, said Manasco.
The significance of these photos lies in the fact that many
of them are the only remaining record of some of the buildings
that once stood in downtown Louisville.
Its important to know where our culture has been,
he said. These images show what America, not just Louisville,
would have looked like at the time.
The flood touched everybody in this community,
said Bell. It reshaped the community. There are a lot
of people around who experienced it. Its what made us
who we are today.
Ruth Klingenfus, 85, lived in Pewee Valley, Ky., at the time
of the flood. She remembers attending school in nearby Anchorage.
The school had to close for a time because of the flood.
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1937
Flood Facts:
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Four of the greatest floods of the Ohio River Valley occurred
in 1884, 1913, 1937 and 1997.
Overall total precipitation for January 1937
was four times its normal amount in the areas surrounding
the river. In fact, there were only eight days in January
when the Louisville station recorded no rain.
Though the rains began to fall early in the month,
the most significant rainfall occurred between Jan. 13-24.
The morning of Jan. 24 was perhaps the darkest
moment in the history of the flood as the entire Ohio
River was above flood stage. The river in Louisville rose
6.3 feet between Jan. 21-22.
With the river reaching nearly 30 feet above
flood stage, Louisville had the greatest height of the
flood. The previous record set in 1884 had been broken
by 11 feet.
The river crested at Louisville Jan. 27. It measured
57.1 feet on Louisvilles upper gage, while farther
down the river, in Paducah, the river crested at 60.6
feet on Feb. 2.
Louisville was the hardest hit city along
the Ohio River, where light and water services failed.
Almost 70 percent of the city was under water, and 175,000
people were forced to leave their homes.
The Weather Bureau reported that total flood damage
for the entire state of Kentucky totaled $250 million,
an incredible sum in 1937. Another flood of this magnitude
would not be seen in the Ohio River Valley until 60 years
later.
Information taken from the Kentucky Climate
Center website at http://Kyclim.uku.edu/factsheets/ohioRiver.htm. Fact
Sheet: Ohio River Floods, by David Sander, Research
Assistant, and Glen Conner, State Climatologist Emeritus
for Kentucky. |
It was quite a hard time, she said.
Many people lost a lot of things.
Klingenfus husband, Carl, had an aunt in the St. Matthews
area with whom he went to stay. But many people had to leave
Louisville and find temporary shelter in surrounding counties,
such as Oldham and Shelby. People were brought out to
more secure places, she said.
One of these shelters was the vacant Confederate Home in Pewee
Valley. During this time, Sis Marker, 88, went to work there
for the Red Cross. Two hundred refugees came to the
Confederate Home, she said.
Marker was attending Spencerian College at the time and remembers
coming home on the last day of school with Klingenfus
sister, Anne Malone. We had to detour to get home.
She had an aunt that lived on Preston Street come and stay
with her family. When relatives went back to her home to see
what they could salvage, she told them to get her dog at all
costs. She would rather have been shot than to have
lost that dog, said Marker.
We were proud to publish this book, said Carol
Butler of Butler Books. Not only did Rick Bell do a
fantastic job recounting the 1937 flood, it was a commemorative
book. Its important for the community to capture their
personal recollections.
Butler said her company published this book because it
was a role we wanted to play. These stories will live forever
and capture a legacy.
For the past 2 1/2 years, Bell has served as the executive
director of the U.S. Marine Hospital Foundation, where he
is overseeing restoration of the historic building. (See the
RoundAbout article on the U.S. Marine Hospital at our website
under Archived Articles and click on December
2005 stories.)
Author Rick Bell will hold a book
signing at Karens Book Barn & Java Stop, 127 E.
Main St., La Grange, Ky., from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. March 17.
Visitors can purchase the book for $25. Call (502) 222-0918
for information. The book is also available at Louisville-area
bookstores or ordered directly from Butler Books by calling
(502) 897-9393 or by going online at: www.butlerbooks.com.
To donate photos or other collections to the U of L
Ekstrom Library, contact James Manasco at (502) 852-8731 or
Amy Purcell at (502) 852-1861.
The Oldham County History Center is also interested
in collecting memoirs and photos of the flood to add to their
collection. Contact Executive Director Nancy Theiss at (502)
222-0826 or email her at: ochstryctr@aol.com.
The Jefferson County (Ind.) Historical Society Museum
Archives, 615 W. First St., Madison, Ind., also has a large
collection of 1937 Flood photos in its collection. Contact
archivist Ron Grimes at (812) 265-2335.
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