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Great Flood of 1968

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Great flood of 1968
Pool River in Catford during the flood
Meteorological history
DateSeptember 1968
Overall effects
FatalitiesNone[1]
DamageMore than 14,000 properties flooded.[2]
Areas affectedHome counties

The Great Flood of 1968 was a flood caused by a pronounced trough of low pressure which brought exceptionally heavy rain and thunderstorms to South East England and France in mid-September 1968, with the worst on Sunday 15 September 1968, and followed earlier floods in South West England during July.[3] This was likely the severest inland flood experienced in the Home Counties during the last 100 years.[1][4]

The areas worst hit were Crawley, East Grinstead, Horley, Lewisham, Petersfield, Redhill, Tilbury, Tunbridge Wells and Tonbridge. [5]

On 15 September 1968, the 9:50 Charing Cross to Hastings was diverted along the Edenbridge line, but was surrounded by flood water at Edenbridge railway station. 150 passengers spent 12 hours stuck on the train.

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Transcription

France

In the first seven hours of 15 September 1968 three inches of rain fell on Nice. In Toulon a cyclist was killed by an electricity cable that had fallen into the flooded road. The wine harvest was seriously damaged.[6]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Eden, Philip. "September 1968 Floods – London cut off". weatheronline.co.uk. Retrieved 10 February 2018.
  2. ^ "Forty years on from the floods of 1968". 12 September 2008. Retrieved 10 February 2018.
  3. ^ "Wednesday 10 July 1968" (PDF). Met Office. Retrieved 26 March 2012.
  4. ^ Jackson, M. C. (January 1977). "Mesoscale and Small-Scale Motions as Revealed by Hourly Rainfall Maps of an Outstanding Rainfall Event: 14-16 September 1968". Weather. 32 (1): 2–17. Bibcode:1977Wthr...32....2J. doi:10.1002/j.1477-8696.1977.tb04471.x.
  5. ^ Staff reporter (17 September 1968). "Good neighbours ease the burden in flood areas". The Times.
  6. ^ "Storm havoc in south France". The Times. 16 September 1968. p. 1.

External links

This page was last edited on 4 March 2024, at 19:03
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