Deluge
The rain has been falling down in
sheets. The constant roar of the drops on my roof seems to drown out any
thoughts to write about other than the drumming of the water pouring from the
heavens. It is a definite challenge to make any thoughts rise above the sound
of the deluge. As I look back at stories that were told to me by my family, I
can remember a powerful deluge and a flood in the area. The flood occurred in
Melcroft, Pennsylvania in the year 1943. I was just talking with a u=one hundred-nine
year old about it. I couldn’t remember what year the flood occurred, but he
did. This older gentleman is a member of the Chestnut Ridge Historical Society.
This remarkable man has all of his mental facilities and has a wonderful sense
of recollection.
The reason I recall the story of
the flood is because my Aunt Estella Beck Strawderman and her Daughter Shirley
were caught up by the flood that occurred in Melcroft, Pennsylvania. They were
washed away by the high water and tossed into a tree. Estella and Shirley
managed to cling to the branches until they were seen and rescued.
After the flood, my Grandfather
Edson Thomas Beck tore down the family farmhouse and built two smaller homes on
the banks of Indian Creek in the town of Indian Head, Pennsylvania. The homes
were constructed from reclaimed lumber taken from the old farmhouse.
Behind my parents Carl and Sybil
Miner Beck’s house there was a small stream, runoff water from our natural
spring. In the springtime melting snow caused it to overflow its banks and
flood the lower part of the yard. Debris and trash from Route 711 would wash
down and fill the stream. My dad would shovel the gravel, broken bottles, and
other pieces of trash to reopen the channel. As kids we played in the stream,
but we had to be careful of broken glass or sharp pieces of metal.
Several years ago, another
torrential rain event caused flooding in the Mount Pleasant and Connellsville
areas of Pennsylvania. Many streams rose rapidly, doing much damage locally.
Lately there has been localized flooding, but more of the damages are being
done by lightning and the wind.
Because Pittsburgh is a
confluence of three rivers, the snow and ice that melt or intense rain storms
in the southwestern Pennsylvania mountainside will cause flooding at the Point
where the Monongehela and Allegheny Rivers join to form the Ohio Rivers.
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