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The Eye of the Storm:
A Journey into the Natural Disasters in Connecticut

The Flood of 1936

On March 12, 1936, rain began falling across Connecticut, as well as all of New England, and poured down for the next nine days. Fourteen inches of rain, coupled with melting snows from the area's mountains, unleashed on Connecticut the greatest floods in its history to that date. The Connecticut and Farmington Rivers and all of their tributaries became raging torrents. Water and ice flows tore out bridges, highways, roads, and railways. The dam at New Hartford burst, and homes and buildings were washed away or destroyed. The waters at Hartford rose to a level of 8.6 feet higher than any previous flood level on record, flooding most of the downtown commercial area. Fourteen thousand people were left homeless, several were dead or missing, and epidemic disease threatened the population. The National Guard was called to action as the ravaging floods paralyzed business, traffic, communication, and home life, as the cities and towns along the rivers became the principal centers of destruction. While loss of life was small, damages exceeded $100 million, making it the costliest New England weather event to that time.

Bushnell Park in Hartford
Bushnell Park in Hartford, Connecticut, during the Flood of 1936.
Photo CD Number 2775 img0005

< Bushnell Park is submerged by the waters of the Flood of 1936. The State Capitol Building is in the background.

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The Connecticut River inundates Hartford
The Connecticut River inundates Hartford and East Hartford, Connecticut, during the March 1936 flood.
Photo CD ID 3153 img0046.pcd

< The devastating encroachment of the flood waters in Hartford and East Hartford, looking south, is shown in this photograph taken by F.F. Fisher.

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Bond Hotel Hartford, March 1936
A crowd observes the flooding of a parking lot behind the Bond Hotel in Hartford during the Flood of 1936.
Photo CD Number IMG0006-1015

< A parking lot behind the Bond Hotel in Hartford, Connecticut, is submerged by flood water.

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Flooding in the streets of Hartford
Flooding in the streets of Hartford, Connecticut, during the Flood of 1936.
Photo CD Number IMG0004-2775

< The streets of Hartford, Connecticut, are flooded after the deluge of March 1936. Note the man on stilts in the middle of the photograph

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Flooding inside the Southern New England Telephone Company
Flooding inside the Southern New England Telephone Company office on Trumbull Street in Hartford, Connecticut, during the Flood of 1936.
Photo CD Number IMG0006-2775

< The first floor of the Trumbull Street office in Hartford of the Southern New England Telephone Company is flooded up to the desktops during the Flood of 1936.

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The National Guard
The National Guard is called up for service in Hartford, Connecticut, during the Flood of 1936.
Photo CD number 2824 img0008.pcd

< The National Guard, shown here in Hartford, was called out during the Flood of 1936.

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Link to other essays in this Journey:

>> Introduction: The Eye of the Storm
>>
The Blizzard of 1888
>> The Hurricane of 1938
>> The Hurricane of 1944
>> The Floods of 1955

>> Guideposts
>> Suggestions for further reading