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#1
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I just received this link which points to an old newsreel covering
the Hurricane of '38 (35MB for the DivX version, but worth it IMO): http://www.archive.org/movies/detail...ectionid=37350 Towards the end there is a section where you see what is described as a section of road on the Mohawk Trail. The remains of the road are being bulldozed into the river. I am fairly sure it is Route 2 and I now I know why that strectch is so freaking rocky!!! Can some of you MA lifers confirm? |
#2
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GaryM wrote:
I just received this link which points to an old newsreel covering the Hurricane of '38 (35MB for the DivX version, but worth it IMO): Very interesting stuff. PBS (WGBY) just did a special on the floods of '36 a few months ago. The building I'm located in was in about six feet of water, and we're FAR away from nearest natural water, the Connecticut River. http://www.wgby.org/localprograms/flood/ (check out the photo gallery) -- TL, Tim ------------------------ http://css.sbcma.com/timj |
#3
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GaryM wrote:
I just received this link which points to an old newsreel covering the Hurricane of '38 (35MB for the DivX version, but worth it IMO): Very interesting stuff. PBS (WGBY) just did a special on the floods of '36 a few months ago. The building I'm located in was in about six feet of water, and we're FAR away from nearest natural water, the Connecticut River. http://www.wgby.org/localprograms/flood/ (check out the photo gallery) -- TL, Tim ------------------------ http://css.sbcma.com/timj |
#4
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GaryM wrote:
I just received this link which points to an old newsreel covering the Hurricane of '38 (35MB for the DivX version, but worth it IMO): Very interesting stuff. PBS (WGBY) just did a special on the floods of '36 a few months ago. The building I'm located in was in about six feet of water, and we're FAR away from nearest natural water, the Connecticut River. http://www.wgby.org/localprograms/flood/ (check out the photo gallery) -- TL, Tim ------------------------ http://css.sbcma.com/timj |
#5
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![]() "Tim J." wrote in message ... GaryM wrote: I just received this link which points to an old newsreel covering the Hurricane of '38 (35MB for the DivX version, but worth it IMO): Very interesting stuff. PBS (WGBY) just did a special on the floods of '36 a few months ago. The building I'm located in was in about six feet of water, and we're FAR away from nearest natural water, the Connecticut River. http://www.wgby.org/localprograms/flood/ (check out the photo gallery) Nice pics! Check out the beautiful (now incredibly rare) Whitesell being oared in the picture from Elm and Central Streets in Springfield. The trademark for those boats was that the transom was out of the water. --riverman |
#6
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![]() "Tim J." wrote in message ... GaryM wrote: I just received this link which points to an old newsreel covering the Hurricane of '38 (35MB for the DivX version, but worth it IMO): Very interesting stuff. PBS (WGBY) just did a special on the floods of '36 a few months ago. The building I'm located in was in about six feet of water, and we're FAR away from nearest natural water, the Connecticut River. http://www.wgby.org/localprograms/flood/ (check out the photo gallery) Nice pics! Check out the beautiful (now incredibly rare) Whitesell being oared in the picture from Elm and Central Streets in Springfield. The trademark for those boats was that the transom was out of the water. --riverman |
#7
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I was a year old and I can remember my parents years later talking about it.
I'm fairly familiar with Rt. 2 west of Greenfield, but I didn't recognize anything, nor would I expect to. That shot could be of the Cold River that borders Rt. 2 above Charlemont. I did see shots of Springfield. We lived in the Hungry Hill section of the city, high above the Connecticut River. The flood control dikes in West Springfield are still there and doing their job. However, the North End of Springfield has suffered many floods because of lack of dikes to control the water. When I was a kid, the Connecticut was terribly polluted. Today it has been cleaned up and people enjoy boating and swimming just north of Springfield. |
#8
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I was a year old and I can remember my parents years later talking about it.
I'm fairly familiar with Rt. 2 west of Greenfield, but I didn't recognize anything, nor would I expect to. That shot could be of the Cold River that borders Rt. 2 above Charlemont. I did see shots of Springfield. We lived in the Hungry Hill section of the city, high above the Connecticut River. The flood control dikes in West Springfield are still there and doing their job. However, the North End of Springfield has suffered many floods because of lack of dikes to control the water. When I was a kid, the Connecticut was terribly polluted. Today it has been cleaned up and people enjoy boating and swimming just north of Springfield. |
#9
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GaryM wrote:
I just received this link which points to an old newsreel covering the Hurricane of '38 (35MB for the DivX version, but worth it IMO): http://www.archive.org/movies/detail...ectionid=37350 Towards the end there is a section where you see what is described as a section of road on the Mohawk Trail. The remains of the road are being bulldozed into the river. I am fairly sure it is Route 2 and I now I know why that strectch is so freaking rocky!!! Can some of you MA lifers confirm? Yes, the Mohawk Trail is now Route 2 (don't know when they started calling it Route 2). The whole Connecticut Valley was affected by that hurricane. My father and his brother lived just above the Chicopee Falls. When the bridge was washed out, they 'borrowed' a rowboat from a neighbor and ran a ferry for several weeks. Th-- Stan Gula http://gula.org/roffswaps |
#10
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GaryM wrote:
I just received this link which points to an old newsreel covering the Hurricane of '38 (35MB for the DivX version, but worth it IMO): http://www.archive.org/movies/detail...ectionid=37350 Towards the end there is a section where you see what is described as a section of road on the Mohawk Trail. The remains of the road are being bulldozed into the river. I am fairly sure it is Route 2 and I now I know why that strectch is so freaking rocky!!! Can some of you MA lifers confirm? Yes, the Mohawk Trail is now Route 2 (don't know when they started calling it Route 2). The whole Connecticut Valley was affected by that hurricane. My father and his brother lived just above the Chicopee Falls. When the bridge was washed out, they 'borrowed' a rowboat from a neighbor and ran a ferry for several weeks. Th-- Stan Gula http://gula.org/roffswaps |
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