
Title: Hurricane Camille:
Richmond Flooding
Source: the Richmond
Times-Dispatch
More informationHurricane Camille arrived in
Virginia on the night of August 19, 1969, one of only three category five storms ever
to make landfall in the United States since record-keeping began. One of the worst
natural disasters in Virginia's history, the storm produced what meteorologists at
the time guessed might be the most rainfall "theoretically possible." As it swept
through Virginia overnight, it seemed to catch authorities by surprise. Communication
networks were not in place or were knocked out, leaving floods and landslides to trap
residents as they slept. Hurricane Camille cost Virginia 113 lives lost and $116
million in damages. It also served as a lesson that inland flooding could be as great
a danger as coastal flooding during a hurricane.
What started as a tropical storm became Hurricane Camille as it rounded Cuba and entered the Gulf of Mexico. When the storm was just one hundred miles from the Gulf Coast, a reconnaissance plane measured central wind speeds at more than 200 miles per hour, well above the 155 miles per hour wind speed required for a category five storm. Making landfall in the Bay Saint Louis area of Mississippi on August 17, the storm was still packing wind speeds of about 170 miles per hour and the surge was twenty-five feet high. Moving up the mouth of the Mississippi, Hurricane Camille killed 143 people in the Gulf Coast region before heading north. Two days later, the storm had significantly diminished in strength, becoming a much weaker tropical depression. On the evening of August 19, Camille appeared to pose little threat to Virginians. To the surprise of forecasters, however, that evening the storm made a sharp turn to the east, leaving Kentucky and heading over the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia, where during the night the rain intensified dramatically.

Title: Hurricane Camille,
Rainfall Map
Source: the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration
More informationBy ten o'clock on the night of August 19,
Camille stretched from West Virginia all the way to Fredericksburg, Virginia, and areas to the north and
east of the center of the storm were experiencing very heavy rainfall. The rain
landed on the eastern slopes of the Blue Ridge Mountains, rapidly swelling creeks and
exacerbating the effects of the storm. Overnight, rainfall accumulations were
measured at about ten inches between Charlottesville and Lynchburg, with Nelson
County receiving the brunt of the storm with at least twenty-seven inches
of rainfall. So much rain fell in such a short time in Nelson County that,
according to the National Weather Service at the time, it was "the probable
maximum rainfall which meteorologists compute to be theoretically possible."
This amount of rain in such a short period of time rapidly flooded mountain creeks and streams, creating flash floods and causing landslides. Because the increased intensity of the storm came as a surprise overnight, few residents were warned about the rising waters. The Weather Bureau received one call regarding the prodigious rainfall, but otherwise no authorities were alerted to what was happening. With no communications in place, rising waters and landslides caught most Virginia residents in their homes as they slept. The problem was compounded by the fact that area communications were ravaged as the storm progressed, making it impossible for communities to warn their downstream neighbors of what was coming.

Title: Hurricane Camille:
Workmen Prepare Richmond for
Flooding by Installing
Sandbags
Source: the Richmond
Times-Dispatch
More informationFinally, on August 20, Camille made its
way off the coast of Virginia and out to sea. It left in its path communities
devastated by floods and landslides. Virginia counted 113 deaths from the storm,
thirty-nine missing and presumed dead, and damages adding up to $116 million. The
majority of the deaths and damages occurred in Nelson County, where flooding along
Davis Creek and Huffman's Hollow surprised residents in rural communities. The
storm also swept away more than one hundred bridges in the state and left only a
single highway intact. With its tributaries and headwaters receiving the most
rainfall, the James River
experienced severe flooding all the way through Richmond.
The inland destruction caused by Camille resulted in a rethinking of the planning for natural disasters. Until that time coastal communities were presumed to be at the greatest risk from hurricanes; Camille proved otherwise and prompted the U.S. Congress to pass the Disaster Relief Act of 1969. Hurricane Camille, along with other massive disasters of the 1960s and 1970s, including Hurricanes Carla (1962), Betsy (1965), and Agnes (1972), led to U.S. president Jimmy Carter's 1979 Executive Order 12127 that merged many separate disaster-related organizations into the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). The agency is charged with coordinating recovery efforts after natural disasters in the United States.
In 1970, the Nelson County Chamber of Commerce commissioned Charlottesville Daily Progress associate editor Jerry Simpson and his wife, Paige Shoaf Simpson, to collect stories of Hurricane Camille into a book titled Torn Land. The book holds the accounts of numerous people who were involved in the rescue and recovery efforts following the storm; proceeds of book sales funded the building of a new Nelson County library.

Title: Hurricane Camille:
Buena Vista Clean-Up
Source: the Richmond
Times-Dispatch
More informationSigns of Hurricane Camille can still be
found throughout central Virginia. In 1972, the Virginia Historic Landmarks
Commission posted a marker and monument near Woods Mill in Nelson County
memorializing the tragedy of Hurricane Camille. James River State Park, which
encompasses the confluence of the Tye and James rivers, also commemorates
Camille's force at an overlook point. Just upstream on the James is where some
observers claim they saw the river flow backward because of the volume of water
Camille forced down the Tye River.
The devastation of Hurricane Camille remains fresh in the memories of many Virginians. Roar of the Heavens: Surviving Hurricane Camille (2006), by Stefan Bechtel, retells the story of Camille. Bechtel was inspired to write a chronicle of the storm when, after moving to Charlottesville twenty years earlier, he began hearing about Camille from local residents. How a hurricane could cause such damage so far inland mystified him, and his curiosity resulted in perhaps the most thorough account of the storm.
In July 2008, a new play titled The Bluest Water: A Hurricane Camille Story was produced by the Endstation Theatre Company at the Blue Ridge Summer Theatre Festival. Playwright Jason Chimonedes spent several years collecting stories of Camille from Nelson County residents and then created ten fictional characters to tell the story of the storm and its aftermath.
First published: November 6, 2008 | Last modified: September 9, 2010
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