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TIME: Almanac 1995
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1994-09-09
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<text id=94TT0974>
<title>
Jul. 25, 1994: Disasters:Hell and High Water
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Jul. 25, 1994 The Strange New World of the Internet
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
DISASTERS, Page 28
Hell and High Water
</hdr>
<body>
<p> Freakish rains flood three Southern states, leaving damage that
Georgians compare to Sherman's march
</p>
<p>By Marguerite Johnson--Reported by Ann Blackman with Clinton and Scott Norvell/Bainbridge
</p>
<p> Only 14 hours after arriving home from his trip to Europe last
week, President Clinton donned a pink shirt, khakis and cowboy
boots to survey the epic flood that has devastated a vast section
of Georgia and the Florida-Alabama panhandle. As his DC-9 descended
through the clouds to the airport in Albany, Georgia, the President
stared at the muddy waters of the Flint River cascading through
the city streets below, washing over the roofs of stores, houses
and churches. Even before stopping at a disaster-relief center,
Clinton had pledged $60 million in federal disaster aid to help
the three states provide emergency shelter and drinking water,
rebuild federal highways, and make loans to homeowners and businesses.
</p>
<p> While the mess was not of the magnitude of last year's Mississippi
flood, which caused $12 billion in damages, Georgians had to
reach all the way back to General Sherman's Civil War march
to the sea to recall anything comparable. Some 10,000 sq. mi.
were under water, an area the size of Massachusetts and Rhode
Island combined. Thirty-two people died and 40,000 were temporarily
homeless. Thousands of acres of peanut, corn, soybean and other
crops were destroyed, including Georgia's renowned peaches,
which were almost ready for harvesting. Crop damage was expected
to reach $100 million in Georgia alone. "I believe this was
a 500-year flood," said Mayor B.K. Reynolds of Bainbridge, where
National Guardsmen had hurriedly erected a 20-ft. bulwark around
a fertilizer plant to prevent water from reaching the chemicals
within, which would have released deadly fumes.
</p>
<p> Meteorologists described the disaster as a freak occurrence
caused when tropical storm Alberto traveled up from the Gulf
of Mexico and stalled, dumping torrential rains. Roads, bridges
and dams swiftly gave way to the swollen waters of the Flint
and Ocmulgee rivers, bringing on a wave of tragedies. In the
town of Americus, where 21 inches of rain fell within 24 hours,
16 people perished. Georgians will not soon forget the images
of a young Americus woman screaming as the waters of Town Creek
engulfed her car and swept her and her baby downstream. Or of
dozens of coffins from Albany cemeteries bobbing in the clay-stained
waters that washed through city streets. Or of the foul smell
that permeated rural Macon County for days after 250,000 chickens
drowned, forcing National Guardsmen to don masks to pick up
the rotting carcasses.
</p>
<p> Residents who had to flee their homes were anxious to get back,
but authorities cautioned that houses should first be inspected
for water moccasins. They also wanted to be sure that none of
the alligators that inhabit the Flint River had taken a liking
to suburban living. "It's going to be a long time before things
get back to normal around here," said city councilman Jack Henderson
of Newton as he steered a boat through the town's streets. The
Rivertrace Restaurant and Oyster Bar was gone altogether, and
the only sign of city hall was a vent pipe protruding from the
water like a periscope.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>