Tis the season . . . to keep your eyes and ears on the weather. In 1938 . . . before hurricanes had names or we had satellites to track them thousands of miles off, a big one came ashore on Long Island, a once-a-century-or-longer storm. Do you know this structure below?
Here’s the ocean side view . . .
and the inland side. To the right and up the Acushnet River are the ports of
New Bedford and Fairhaven. Click here for info and photos on the building of the barrier.
The benchmark storm for the sixth boro is Sandy, and an event this past weekend happened on a location wiped out by the storm, Rockaway Beach at 106th Street. Click here for posts/photos from my friend Barbara that chronicle the before/after in that part of NYC. Welcome to the first annual Poseidon parade.
and a temporary replacement for Whalemina, the glacial erratic rolled away by Sandy.
Of the 10 worst hurricanes of the 20th century (judged by impact on the US), almost all happened in September. Since that link leaves off Katrina (??), I add this one.
Thanks to Barbara Barnard for the Poseidon Parade photos; the ones from the Achushnet are by Will Van Dorp, who will have photos from up the Acushnet soon. Technically, this fits into my “other watersheds” series.
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September 21, 2015 at 10:36 am
Anonymous
There is a Hurricane Barrier in Stamford Ct also. Operated by Army corps of Engineers
September 21, 2015 at 10:37 am
tugster
Thanks. i didn’t know about that one. there is one in Providence RI as well, but I don’t have a photo.
September 21, 2015 at 1:35 pm
Jim
The Stamford seawall was featured on Mike Rowe’s “Dirtiest Jobs”.
Also, theres an excellent book about our ’38 hurricane called “Sudden Sea”, I highly reccomend it.
Jim