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IET January 22,1937

Local River Gauge Now Under Water; Rise 1.6 Inch an Hour

Submitted by Diane Sparling

            A local crest of at least sixty-three feet, with possibility and in fact probability that the 1913 record mark if 67”10 ˝” inches may be reached, was the dark prediction made by government engineers today following a morning survey of sluggish bulging Ohio river.

            Water has gone over the local river gauge and any estimate as to the Ironton reading is marked by a bit of guesswork.  However, comparisons with the Ashland gauge indicates that Ironton at 11a.m. had a river stage of somewhere near 59 feet and six or seven inches.  The picture is made all the more darker by the fact the is climbing here at a rate of better than 1 ˝” per hour and no immediate relief is in sight.

            The latest reading at Ashland, at 11A.M. was 62.8 feet and W.C. Dovereau of Cincinnati has predicted a crest of at least 65  or 66 feet at Ashland, which means that Ironton will get between 62 and 63 feet at least,  or better than three more feet of water.  Persons closer to the situation that this a conservative estimate and that the river will go even higher on water now in sight.

            The   river was rising through out its length, with a climb of .2 feet an hour at Pittsburgh in the face of a rain fall of 1:20 inches.  Four more feet of water are expected there.  Wheeling had a rise of .6 foot an hour, rainfall of 1.0 inches and expects 8 more feet.

            In the New Martinsvulle neighborhood the river is climbing at the rapid rate of .4 foot an hour, or better  than four inches an hour.  Near Marietta the climb is at a rate of .2 foot an hour and from Parkersburg down to Ravenwood the climb is at a rate of .2 foot an hour and from Parkersburg down to Ravenswood the climb is 1 1/8 tenths foot an hour.

            The local rainfall since Thursday morning was .90 inches and this has been general throughout the valley, serving warning on all residents that the greatest January flood in history and perhaps the greatest of all months is in the making.  

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Flood Wall Holds But City Quits Pumping Sewers

Water Pouring Over concrete Wall Today; 18,000 Homeless As Flood Tide Sweeps City

            Portsmouth, O. Jan. 22-(AP)- A – Tide of debris filled waters spilled over Portsmouth’s flood wall for the first time in 24 years today and swished into streets like through a mill race.

            Waters in the business section, carrying boxes, tree limbs and cans and portions of  small buildings which had fallen before the pressure of the flood rose rapidly.

            Topping  of the 60- foot flood wall protecting the south side of the city by the turbid Ohio river current followed breaks in the earthen levees over a half-mile stretch in the west and north sections bordering the Scioto river.  

            All main roads leading into Portsmouth had been cut off by flood waters at Operations on the Chesapeake and Ohio and Baltimore and Ohio railroad lines were halted . The Norfolk and Western continued to operate, but its trains were running far behind schedule.

            No persons could be seen on the streets when the warning cry from flood barrier guards came that water was “coming over.”.

            The waters, which pushed along at a sluggish pace of five miles an hour in the Ohio and Scioto rivers, seemed to rush pell mell through Portsmouth’s  streets.

            City officials, receiving reports of continued  rains further up the valley and no leasening of the flood waters below to allow a run-off of the high waters here prepared for a siege of at least a week.  Most grocery stores were stripped of all available supplies.

 

 
 
 

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Copyright 2003, Martha J. Kounse, and Sara M. Strohmeyer..