Date: Fri 30-Apr-1999
Date: Fri 30-Apr-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: JAN
Quick Words:
history-summer-storms
Full Text:
History Shows The Other Side Of Summer's Soft Breezes
(with photos)
Our collective sighs of relief that winter is over can be short lived when we
remember storms that made summers in the past as worrisome as any snow or ice
storms.
Hurricanes, cyclones, floods and even tornadoes have touched western
Connecticut in the past and will, no doubt, do so again.
There have been several hurricanes through the years that have caused either
minor or serious damage to property in Newtown.
Considerable damage was done by an unnamed hurricane on September 14, 1944.
Trees, orchards and a corn crop suffered from damage from the wind. The ground
was covered with apples and peaches, and there was serious damage to Henry
Taylor's orchards on Mt Pleasant, according to The Newtown Bee dated September
22.
Though orchards were badly hit, the greatest loss was expected to be sileage
corn, which was so beaten down and shredded that it would be difficult to cut.
However, the storm did not cause as much damage as had been feared, nor was it
as severe as experienced by other towns.
Telephone and electric lines were down in town, with electric service
interrupted for several days in some sections.
The Bee wrote: "In some cases the traditional Saturday night bath was either
omitted entirely or taken in cold water."
On August 13, 1955, Newtown felt the fringe of Hurricane Connie. The entire
town was affected at some time by loss of electricity caused by trees and
branches falling on power lines.
The Newtown Hook and Ladder Company answered one call regarding broken wires
in Sandy Hook that temporarily trapped a motorist in his car.
The trapped motorist was discovered by an Arrow Line bus driver after his car
became entangled in hanging power lines in front of the insurance office of
William H. Knox. The bus driver reported the incident to Edward Pitzschler,
proprietor of the Newtown Barber Shop at the flagpole, and Mr Pitzschler
called the operator at Edmond Town Hall, who alerted the fire department.
Chief Lee Glover and Fire Marshal Albert Nichols rushed to the scene and
released the motorist after the power went off.
Other lines were broken at the home of sculptor John Angel on Old Mill Road,
at the Hennessey residence on Old Zoar Road and at the home of Walter H.
Selberg in Sandy Hook.
Connie's winds blew "lustily," through the morning. Torrential rains, "which
gave Connie her own peculiar claim to fame," according to The Bee , did
considerable damage to town roads. Washouts kept town trucks carrying fill to
the scenes.
The Damage Of Diane
Newtown was fortunate when Hurricane Diane hit the state on August 18, 1955.
Other towns, such as in the northwest corner and lower Naugatuck Valley did
not fare as well.
According to The Newtown Bee dated August 26, Diane was underestimated. The
winds had died down, it was announced, and the shrunken storm was expected to
pass through New England on a northeasterly course.
"But little attention appears to have been given to the capacity of the ground
for holding the vast quantity of rain that fell as Diane pushed into a
widespread mass of heated, saturated air," The Bee reported.
Fifteen inches of rain, more in some areas and less in others, fell in 24
hours. Ground already saturated by rains from Hurricane Connie could not hold
the new rainfall. By midnight Thursday, many brooks and rivers were over their
banks.
"By daylight the greatest flood in the state's history was an actuality," The
Bee stated.
Late on Friday, the flood made itself felt in Newtown when the water rose over
the banks at Shady Rest in Walnut Tree Hill District to flood several homes.
Most seriously damaged was the home of Charles Hull, where the water rose to
within two feet of the ceiling of the one-story house. All the families near
the river at Shady Rest were evacuated by trucks from S. Curtis & Son. A
considerable amount of household equipment and furniture was also moved to
higher ground.
Damage to Newtown roads from the rain was widespread, but not nearly as
devastating as flood damage to the north in Washington Depot, where the raging
Shepaug River washed out bridges and roads, completely wrecking the center of
town.
One other effect of the storm was to the new CL&P dam on the Housatonic
between Newtown and Southbury. On the Sunday following the storm, the dam
looked like any other water-powered hydroelectric plant might look during high
water.
The situation literally arose overnight, when rains upstate poured tons of
water into the streams and tributaries of the Housatonic. The new dam,
scheduled to go into operation late that summer, backed up the flood waters as
far as New Milford, creating in less than 24 hours the lake which was to have
taken weeks to form.
Ducking Donna
On September 16, 1960, The Bee reported that Newtown had been well prepared
for the possible serious threat of Hurricane Donna. Volunteers, including
firemen, Civil Defense workers, town highway crews and town officials were in
action early that previous Monday.
School was canceled in case children would face hazards in the return home.
The town fared better in the high winds and heavy rains than expected.
Nineteen trees went down over town roads, but at different times, enabling men
to be sent to clear the roads. None of the trees delayed traffic too long, but
they did cause widespread interruptions to electrical service. Power was
restored late Monday night.
There was little damage to town roads and catch basins coped with heavy rain
runoff.
Civil Defense, under the direction of Ross M. Phillips, was on the job early
and set up emergency radio communications. Full crews of firemen were on duty
at each of the firehouses. When the power went out, the fire department
generator was taken to Edmond Town Hall to supply power to operate radios.
A `Mean Woman'
According to The Newtown Bee dated September 3, 1971, Hurricane Doria was
identified as a tropical storm. However, Doria ripped her way through "with
all the fury and rage of a hurricane, letting everything in her path know that
she was a mean woman," The Bee reported.
Heavy rains fell the afternoon of August 27. By early Saturday morning, winds
had reached their peak, taking down trees, huge branches and power lines.
The rains kept up through Saturday and by the time it was over, there were
swollen creeks, newly created lakes in low-lying areas and flooded basements.
Power failures because of fallen wires caused outages of as long as 48 hours.
About 12,000 customers in Newtown, Danbury, Brookfield, Bethel and Monroe lost
power. Crews from New York, Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire and Rhode
Island were called in to help out. By 6 am Sunday most people had their power
back.
According to CL&P, 115,000 high voltage fuses had to be replaced. By
Wednesday, town road crews had finished the clearing of fallen trees.
Flood
On October 15 and 16, 1955, Newtown was not as lucky as it had been in August
when Hurricane Diane devastated other parts of the state. A flood ravaged the
town after three days of rain, The Bee reported on October 21.
The Pootatuck River, usually a mild stream, had risen and spilled over the
highway in Sandy Hook. The Housatonic River rose over the banks at Shady Rest,
and Half Way River was near the roadway of Route 34 at Stevenson.
The rain washed out roads and highways throughout the town. Damage to roads
was estimated at $100,000.
The most damage to a state highway was the partial destruction of Glen Road
near what was then the Plastic Molding Company. A large section of fill and
blacktop slid into Pootatuck Glen.
Damage to private property was believed to be as high as $200,000.
A dozen homes were flooded and many basements were flooded. Among them was
that of Charles Hull. Flooded out on August 19, the Hulls had the bitter
experience of seeing their home again inundated by water.
Tornadoes
Though many of us would like to believe that tornadoes do not happen here,
there have been occasional wind storms that fell under that classification in
Newtown and were reported on by The Newtown Bee .
Though they may have paled in magnitude from those common to other regions of
the country and even in this state, these storms did considerable damage to
trees and property.
A tornado on September 15, 1901 in South Center was reported on September 27.
"It made devastation such as never seen before in Newtown in the memory of
man," The Bee reported.
The velocity of the wind damaged property of E.L. Johnson estimated at about
$1,200.
Sixty-five apple trees were uprooted and blown over and a section of one barn
lost a roof, which was later found in a ravine.
Dozens of large healthy trees were partly uprooted or snapped off. One tree
was carried "65 rods" by the wind. Large chestnut, maple, and ash trees were
laid low.
A section of stone wall lay flat, a small farm building was on the ground in
sections, and a field of corn was wiped out as if a steam roller had run over
it.
While Mr Johnson said he regretted the loss of his orchard, he was thankful
that a row of shade trees near his home were spared, that no lives had been
lost, and damage to the buildings had been slight.
On July 1, 1898, what was described as a "young" tornado hit around 4 pm with
most of the fury of the storm centered over the borough.
Trees were down at the residences of the Misses Dikeman and Mrs S.C. Glover,
D. Beers at Sandy Hook, and large limbs at the Beers-Sanford residence.
"A curious freak of the wind was the twisting off of the metal gutters from
the west side of the Congregational parsonage and bending them neatly about
the big chimney like an up-to-date necktie," The Bee noted.
An empty wooden pail in Mr Ekins' yard hurled through the air and struck the
wind shield of Mr Morris' 1922 Dodge car, smashing it to pieces.
The storm also took down an ash tree, two apple trees, and a pear at the
property of A.D. and R.D. Fairchild in Taunton. A big silo was a total wreck,
and when it went down, it moved a smaller silo off its foundation.
Baby Cyclone
On May 25, 1934, The Bee reported on what it called a baby cyclone that
brought damage to the Sandy Hook area the previous Tuesday.
Trees were toppled, including a century-old maple in front of the house of Mrs
Lawrence Warner, which was uprooted and thrown against the house, causing
"quite a little damage." A tree on Miss Mary O'Dea's property was blown across
the driveway of Morris Beers, a tree on Mrs Alonzo White's property went down,
and the top of a tree in the yard of Dr Corrigan blocked the state highway.
"It was a fierce, wicked wind while it lasted and thoroughly affrighted almost
everyone. Up street, the tents of the Mardi Gras on Baxter Field were more or
less demoralized," The Bee reported.