Flood of January 1959 – East Main Street at Alum Creek
The winter of 1958-59 began with low temperatures and snow. On January 22, 1959, rain began falling on the frozen, snow covered ground, which created the most destructive flooding in Ohio since the Great Flood of 1913.
The rain began melting the snow, but with the ground so frozen, all waterways quickly filled and spilled their banks.
Columbus was the most severely effected of Ohio’s major cities, with many streets flooded, 100 homes badly damages, and 3,200 evacuees cared for at Red Cross shelters – which included school gymnasiums, the (former) Veterans Memorial building and the Naval Reserve Training Center.
Images of the flood impacting the greater Columbus area are available on the Columbus Dispatch website at:
Written by Nancy Beck
Originally published in Historical Herald, Fall 2018
If you have information to add to this topic, please let us know.
Images of the flood impacting the greater Columbus area are available on the Columbus Dispatch website at: Photos: 1959 flood in Ohio.
If anyone has Bexley specific images from this event, and are willing to share, please contact us. We would very much like to add images to this article specific to Bexley. Thank you.
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Comment(1)
Judy Godby says:
October 10, 2023 at 10:02 pmI just remember as a little girl, we lived in aberdeen,ohio. The river came all the way up to our back porch.