Flood Stories from Lawrence County Ohio
Flood Chronicles
Ironton Register, Jan 28, 1937

Shifting our sobs and turning our faces from the wreckage of homes
and businesses, the heroic people of Ironton, Coal Grove, Hanging Rock
and other communities smothered under the deluge of the Ohio’s rushing
waters, will begin at once the mighty task of reconstruction.
The loss in Ironton runs into millions of dollars but there prevails a
spirit of mutual helpfulness that grew out of the disaster and from
the ruins will emerge a greater and a better Ironton, and and a
greater Ohio Valley. Only those who faced the menace of the encircling
and engulfing tide realize the fear that gripped the hearts of every
person in the path of the seething wall of water, the most destructive
force at the command of the elements. Residents of the higher ground,
never before touched by the massive floods in the Ohio Valley in 1884
and 1913, saw the encroaching fingers of the deluge grasp them and
damage and destroy their properties.
Never before were the utilities put to a greater test and never was
the response so noble. Gas services was maintained as long as humanly
possible; water was supplied long after the pumping station was
submerged; and the life-saving current of electricity never failed.
For that we are thankful. Had all the agencies of heat and light been
destroyed the grim monsters---famine and cold would have levied a
heavy toll.
With the waters receding we must combat disease and it is necessary
that all of us follow the directions of the health department. There
will be a great supply of serums for anti-toxic, typhoid prophylaxis,
etc. and every precaution must be taken to prevent the outbreak of an
epidemic that would cost the lives of hundreds of our people. It is
our earnest prayer that the receding waters have written across the
nation a scroll the necessity of an immense program of flood control
for this rich valley, whose safety and growth and prosperity is so
essential to the national welfare. Every agency in the land should
stress the importance of immediate action so that the disaster of 1937
never again be repeated.
FACTS FROM 1937 FLOOD
| 334 bodies were cremated at Louisville, KY |
|
| 20% of the homes in West Ironton have floated away from their
foundation |
|
| CREST |
70ft 5in |
| DAMAGE DONE |
3 Million Dollars |
| HOMELESS IN IRONTON |
12,000 |
| HOMELESS IN RUSSELL |
1,800 |
| HOMELESS IN COAL GROVE |
1,500 |
| HOMELESS IN ASHLAND |
8,000 |
| HOMELESS IN GREENUP |
1,700 |
| HOMELESS IN PORTSMOUTH |
18,000 |
| HOMELESS IN OHIO VALLEY |
350,000 |
| 90% of Ironton covered by water |
|
| 100 homes in Ironton, Coal Grove and Hanging Rock washed away. |
|
| COLLAPSED DUE TO FLOOD: |
| Sam Layne 2 story store building on 2nd St above Center |
| Vogue Shoe Store 2nd St, north of Center |
| Cotton Shop N. 2nd St, badly damaged |
| Handley Garage and barn on Madison St. |
| Brumberg Garage Third near Washington |
| DESTROYED BY FIRE: |
| Hutsinpillar Hdw. Store Loss $75,000 |
| W.C. Eicher Store Hanging Rock Loss $10,000 |
| [Eicher badly
burned about hands, patient at Deaconess Hospital] |
| EMERGENCY HOSPITALS: |
| Episcopal Parish House |
| Kingsbury School |
|