For younger people today, it is something an earlier generation talks about. But those who lived through Tropical Storm Agnes in June 1972, will never forget the damaging force that disrupted lives along the lower Susquehanna River. Over a five-day period (June 20 to 24, 1972) the National Weather Service issued bulletins about the storm that moved along the coast, bringing torrents of rain. On June 21, 1972, the bureau downgraded Hurricane Agnes to a tropical storm, but it was bearing down on the Chesapeake.
As it wobbled across the bay, it brought a thorough soaking to Maryland. But after it passed through the state it hooked back and stalled, dropping even larger amounts of rain over the Susquehanna River watershed in New York and Pennsylvania. According to the National Weather Service, the “storm split into two centers over Pennsylvania, one hovering over the northeastern corner of the state and the other over the north-central portion.”
Just when some thought Cecil County had escaped the worst of the Agnes. the waterway and its tributaries upstream started rising dangerously, all that water headed south to Cecil and Harford counties at the mouth of the river.
Maryland thought it haD Escaped Agnes
Late on June 23, a mandatory evacuation of Port Deposit was ordered as the water continued to rise. Many evacuees were brought out by boat during an eight-hour period “as the brown water came thundering through the floodgates of the Conowingo dam with unprecedented force,” the Evening Sun Reported.
Main Street was like a canal, under 4 feet of water, the Evening Sun noted on June 24, 1972. Port Deposit was empty, having been evacuated early yesterday morning, the News-Journal added while parts of Perryville were also being evacuated.
In the center of Port, only one small part of a block of Main Street was dry. Since Port Deposit’s Water Witch Fire Company had been forced from its station house earlier by feet of water, the firefighters used this dry spot as its operational headquarters,” the Wilmington paper added. Across the river parts of Havre de Grace were being evacuated with State Police and National Guardsmen pitching in.
Port Mayor Ryan, observing the scene, said, “We’ll get by, we’ll get through.” Roland, Johnson, a Port Deposit man, since 1890, pointed to the post office at 15 S. Main Street, “See the mark on the brick wall? That’s where the water came up in the 1910 flood. That was the worst, but this one is worse than 1936.”
Clean-Up in Port Deposit
On Saturday as exhausted first responders watched, the bulk of their emergency response work having been completed as the water rushed into town, the river slowly started returning to its banks. Soon, it was time to begin the cleanup.“Never in eastern North America had a storm rained so hard across so many thousands of square miles – enough, it was calculated, to add two feet of water across the 2,500 square miles of the Chesapeake if the bay had been a reservoir, dammed at the mouth,” the Washington Post Reported.
For additional photos on Tropical Storm Agnes see this Album on the Cecil County History Facebook Page.