Quarter Century Since Epic Maine Flood
Sunday marked the 25th anniversary of one of the worst floods in Maine history.
On April 1, 1987, major rivers overflowed their banks, ripping out bridges and roads, destroying homes and wrecking businesses.
Experts called it a 500-year flood, while others called it the April Fools’ Day flood. But it was no laughing matter.
By the time it was over, Maine Today Media reports, 2,100 homes had been flooded; 215 were destroyed and 240 more sustained major damage.
The Maine Emergency Management Agency says the state had a normal snowpack and normal flood potential in late March 1987. But two storms brought rain to the mountains and foothills of Maine and New Hampshire, which combined with 6 or more inches of melted snow. The water ran over frozen ground, and streams and rivers flooded.
- Tennessee Eyes Claims Denials, Florida Offers to Check Contracts with Adjusters in Wake of Hurricanes
- Cargo-Ship Owner to Pay US $102M Over Baltimore Bridge Collapse, DOJ Says
- The Data Behind Rising Homeowners Premiums: by Peril and by State
- Sony Sues CBS Over ‘Dismal’ Jeopardy, Wheel of Fortune Revenue