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A CASE STUDY: Jessica Pain & Chelsey Rohm THE GREAT FLOOD OF AUGUST 19 TH 1955

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The Great Flood of August 19 th 1955. A Case Study:. Jessica Pain & Chelsey Rohm. Floods. Is on overflow of an expanse of water that submerges land. (A Wikipedia Definition) . Thousands of floods occur each year, at marginally different scales. Many to all cause damages of some sort - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: A Case Study:

A CASE STUDY:

Jessica Pain & Chelsey Rohm

THE GREAT FLOOD OF AUGUST 19TH 1955

Page 2: A Case Study:

FLOODS Is on overflow of an expanse of water that submerges land.

(A Wikipedia Definition). Thousands of floods occur each year, at marginally different

scales. Many to all cause damages of some sort Floods occur all throughout the United States. There are different types of floods

Coastal, caused by sever sea storms or by another hazard, including storm surges

Riverine have fast and slow kinds, and caused by rainfall, both sudden and slow buildups of water level and saturation.

Page 3: A Case Study:

WHAT HAPPENED Connecticut was declared to be

“the hardest hit victim of the worst flood in the history of the eastern United States” (Nov. 3, 1955 Connecticut Flood Recovery Committee).

Two hurricanes, Connie and Diane dropped a total of up to 20 inches of rain over the course of 6 days

The most damages occurred along the Mad and Still Rivers in Winsted, the Naugatuck, the Farmington, and the Quinebaug in the Putnam-Killingly region.

Many flood victims had only minutes to evacuate their homes, some being woken up and told they had to leave now.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_X7IVZSzNHo

Page 4: A Case Study:

HURRICANE CONNIE Started off as a tropical wave, progressed

into a tropical storm, and then became a Category 4 hurricane, with winds reaching up to 145 mph.

Formed August 3rd, 1955 and dissipated August 15th, 1955.

Alone, would not have caused much damage. It was followed byHurricane Diane.

Page 5: A Case Study:

HURRICANE DIANE Formed August 7th, 1955, and dissipated August 20th,

1955, came to the coast as a category 3 hurricane with winds reaching up to 120 mph,

Became a major hurricane on the 12th

Was so devastating because of the rain that Connie had dumped on Connecticut only 5 days earlier

Page 6: A Case Study:

WHAT THE 1955 FLOODS COST CONNECTICUT ACCORDING TO GOVERNOR RIBICOFF: 91 persons dead and 12 others missing and presumed dead. 86,000 persons unemployed. More than 1,100 families left homeless. Another 2,300 families were at least temporarily without

shelter. Nearly 20,000 families suffered flood damage. Sixty-seven of 169 towns were affected by the floods. The damage to individual property, to business, to industry,

and to State and municipal facilities has been estimated at almost half a billion dollars. (That’s $4,043,998,764.04 in 2010 money with an annual inflation of 3.87%)

Page 7: A Case Study:

WOODLAND, WA 98674 Woodland has suffered from many floods since it was founded in 1906. In 1996, Woodland and the Cowlitz County

was declared as a National Emergancy, as flooding had breached the dike that had been built to prevent flooding.

There have been many other floods in Woodland, most well know might be the floods that devestated the Hulda Kleger lilac gardens, which is now a historical site.

Page 8: A Case Study:

WORKS CITEDThe Connecticut Floods of 1955: A Fifty-Year Perspective, Connecticut Library, http://www.cslib.org/flood1955.htm

Hurricane History (Section Hurricanes Connie and Diane 1955), National Hurricane Center, Multiple Authors, http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/HAW2/english/history.shtml#connie

$ Dollar Times, HB Brothers http://www.dollartimes.com/calculators/inflation.htm