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<br />I <br />I <br /> <br />\92\ FLOOD <br /> <br />Excerpt from the article appearing in: <br />"The Boulder County Miner and Farmer" <br /> <br />Thursday - June 9, 1921 <br /> <br />I <br /> <br />I <br /> <br />Excerpts from the article appearing in: "Longmont Ledger" <br />Friday - June 10, 1921 <br /> <br />The Great <br /> <br />Rain <br /> <br />mont is almost completely cut off <br />from the outside by destruction of <br />roads and bridges and within the <br />city considerable damage was done <br />by a flood of the St. Vrain river <br />and a tremendous local rain storm <br />which turned the streets into <br />rivers of rushing water. <br /> <br />The County bears heavy loss in <br />bridges washed out and destruction <br />of road beds on many of the County <br />highways. <br /> <br />St, Vrain Canyon roads are closed <br />for a brief time with bridges out <br />and road beds damaged. The valley <br />roads are largely unpassable be- <br />cause of missing bridges. <br /> <br />To tell the story of the great <br />rain of Friday, June 3, and the <br />night following. one hardly knows <br />where to commence Or stop. <br /> <br />The report came to Longmont <br />Wednesday morning that the <br />Foothills Reservoir was in danger. <br />and that a large force of men with <br />sacks had gone up to mend the <br />damage. There was considerable <br />truth in the rumor for it seems to <br />be a fact that the ditch that <br />carried the water to this <br />reservoir was full and ordinary <br />means of stopping its flow did not <br />succeed, so the men were called <br />upon with the sacks to go and stop <br />the ditch, then the reservoir <br />would be safe. The report was <br />that the creek had changed its <br />course and was flowing into the <br />reservoir, which was not so. If <br />it had been the reservoir would <br />not have lasted five minutes, <br /> <br />Storm <br /> <br /> <br />South of main Longmont townsite, 1921. <br /> <br />I <br /> <br />The rain storms of last week and <br />the latter part of the week before <br />brought huge damage throughout the <br />northeastern part of the state and <br />at Pueblo a tremendous flood in the <br />Arkansas and Fountain Rivers over- <br />ran the business section and low- <br />lands of the city and drowned a <br />large number of people. Latest re- <br />ports are 135 known dead and many <br />more not accounted for. Property <br />loss, it is conservatively stated, <br />will amount to $5,000,000. <br /> <br />In Boulder County, the Towns of <br />Lafayette and Erie were flooded. <br />Houses washed from their foundation <br />or filled with mud and water. Long- <br /> <br />I <br /> <br />I <br />I <br /> <br />I <br /> <br />I <br /> <br />I <br /> <br />I <br />I <br /> <br />I <br /> <br />I <br />I <br /> <br />I <br />I <br /> <br />I <br /> <br />The heavy rain commenced about 2 <br />o'clock Friday afternoon, and by <br />the next morning 4.4 inches had <br />fallen and by Monday morning 5.39, <br />according to the sugar company's <br />records. The first section of <br />rain was short but hard '" <br /> <br />The great mass of water was <br />caused by the overflow of ditches <br />which swept through the city from <br />northwest to southeast, and after <br />reaching Main Street ran down <br />Fifth Avenue to the alley from <br />Fifth Avenue to Fourth Avenue <br />between Kimbark and Emery Streets. <br /> <br />It has been said that if the <br />ditches had not carried off an <br />immense volume of water before <br />they overflowed Longmont would <br />have suffered a great deal more <br />than it did. <br /> <br />The auditorium has perhaps <br />suffered the most. Right in line <br />of the overflow of water from the <br />northwest it was soon in the <br />middle of a flowing lake, and the <br />inside of the auditorium filled <br />with water. <br /> <br />By the overflow of St. Vrain, <br />Commodore Walker has lost all his <br />buildings and his farm south of <br />the sugar factory. Barns and <br />sheds went first and then the <br />house commenced to topple over and <br />an attempt was made to save it but <br />of no avail. <br /> <br />By Tuesday morning, more rain <br />had fallen and the factory <br />records showed a fall of moisture <br />of 5,87 inches. <br /> <br />A bridge over a dry creek on <br />the main road south sunk, but some <br />real trouble occurred at the main <br />bridge Over the St, Vrain. <br /> <br />We have endeavored to obtain an <br />idea as to losses to crops. if <br />any. from excessive rains. and <br />find that there may be some wheat <br />knocked down. some beet fields <br />flooded so that the extent of <br />dsmage may Come out. We have <br />heard little or no complaint, <br />J,M. Anderson of Longmont reports <br />that he has twenty-five acres of <br />beets on Boulder Creek. that was <br />under water from two to three feet <br />on Tuesday. <br /> <br />The Peterson bridge a couple of <br />miles east of Lyons is in bad <br />shape one end of approach having <br />been washed out the same way only <br />worse. It is on the road from <br />Lyons to Boulder and cannot be <br />used. <br /> <br />The big bridge about five miles <br />ease of Longmont over the St, <br />Vrain after its junction with <br />Boulder Creek has gone out. <br /> <br />-9- <br />