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<br />36 THE ARKANSAS RIVER FLOOD OF JUNE 3-5, 1921. <br /> <br />one of the greatest floods in the 19w..er Arkansas River as occurring <br />in 1844. Rufus Sage,12 who crosS€d this region in tliat year, records <br />the fact that the streams in the lower Arlmnsns Valley were of un- <br />precedented size and velocity, and this caused frequent delays to his <br />journey. At Paunee Fork his party was compelled to wait four weeks <br />to ford the river. <br />The foregoing evidence indicates that the flood of Indian legend <br />probably occurred during 1844. ' <br />Mr. Archie Proflitt, a resident of Pueblo, stntes thnt an Indian <br />showed his uncle, who came to Pueblo in 185\), ri \'er silt in crc\;ces <br />of the rock along the mesa. near City Park, which the lmlian claimed <br />waS the high-water mark of all vlll Ilood. This mark W:IS at about <br />t,he elevation of the floor of thc yiaduct, ",hidl i~ 12 fect ~tI)<)Ye the <br />flood of 1\)21. It may haye bcen lIlallc hy tIlt' Ho()'! of Indian lefTend. <br />. ... .. ~ <br /> <br />FLOODS OF AUTHENTIC RECORD, <br /> <br />Regular observations of the stage of Arkansas niyer began in <br />1885, 'when a gaging station was established at l{ock Canyon, 9 <br />miles above Pueblo. This station was maintained until late in 1887. <br />The station at Pueblo was established in the fall of 18!J4 and has been <br />maintained almost continuously since that time. Records of floods <br />from the settlement of the Arkansas Valley to the estnhlishment <br />of the gaging station on the river are found chiefly in the files of the <br />local newspapers and in the testimony of witnesses in the Kansas- <br />Colorndo water suit before the United States Supreme Court. ' <br />The first flood of authentic record occurred in 1855, after :1. winter <br />of very heavy snowfall, although the flood itself was probably cauS€d <br />by hard rain during a period of melting snow. No information re- <br />garding the exact date and approximate height of this flood is <br />available. . <br />The next flood recorded was that of June 11, 1864, caused chiefly <br />by very heavy rains. The early settlers in Pueblo agree that this <br />flood reached a point near Third and Santa Fe avenues. The flood <br />of 1921 was nearly 3 'feet deep at this point, and if, as seems prob- <br />able, the street has been graded down since 1864, the latest flood may <br />have been but very little higher than that one. As Pueblo waS then <br />but a small settlement of less than 100 inhabitants, with only a few <br />houses to obstruct the flood flow, it is probable that the same .amount <br />of water now would reach a considerably higher stage in the city. <br />During this flood all the streams in the valley were very high and' <br />overflowed their banks for great distances, Turkey, Beaver, and <br />Hardscrabble creeks being especially high, Fountain Creek wns the <br />i:..~~ ~n ";C:P. and many cabins on its banks at a point back ot the <br />