The Storm Of The Century


The Storm Of The Century

An old friend from Down East (North Carolina) called this morning to see if I had any advice for how to prepare for a Category 5 Hurricane.

I was succinct. I said, "flee." And mentioned we have a spare bedroom up here in the highlands.

He laughed, and then reminded me of this story, where the only survivors of work camps made of shell shocked WW I survivors clung to the railroad tracks.

Up here, there were four Civilian Conservation Corps camps, who famously did a lot of beautiful stone work on the Blue Ridge Parkway, and several state and national parks, supervised by Galician stone masons, descendants of whom returned a few years back to do some repair work.

But the story of what happened to the camps in the Keys is full of preventable tragedy, convenient lies, and bad politics... a cycle we seem to destined to repeat, over and over.

Katrina and The Great Labor Day Hurricane of 1935:
http://historynewsnetwork.org/article/15109

Revisiting The Lost Soldiers of Florida's Most Powerful Hurricane:
http://www.miamiherald.com/news/weather/hurricane/article22726479.html

The 1935 Labor Day Hurricane:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1935_Labor_Day_hurricane

Comments

  1. The only thing that would make this story more tragic would be if they sent Doug McArthur down there to finish off the survivors.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Entremet

Flushbunkingly Gloriumptious

Originally shared by Kam-Yung Soh