Connellsville, Pennsylvania
Storm & Flood
May
26, 1902
Cloudburst and Flood
Sweeps Away Breakneck Reservoir Monday Night and
Deluged Valley Below
Damage Done P., McK, & C. Railway and Southwest
Tracks.
Dutch Bottom Given a Bath
And a Bad Scare by Sudden Rise of Mountz Creek,
the Damage Elsewhere
On Monday at midnight the worst rain storm that
has visited the Yough region for a number of
years swept the territory between Connellsville
and Scottdale leaving much damage in its wake.
On the west side of Chestnut Ridge, east of
Moyer, the storm was worst. A cloudburst on the
mountain side, inside of a few minutes swelled
the little streams draining into the Breakneck
reservoir of the Connellsville Water Company so
that the breast strained and finally gave way
entirely. The reservoir breast was swept away
and the big body of water passed down the valley
to the junction of White’s run and Mountz creek.
It had too broad a territory to spread over, or
some lives would have been lost. The farms and
properties of William
Bettle, Sherrick Wilson and
David Lontz were inundated and left
strewed with wreckage from points higher up.
Five county bridges were carried away on White’s
creek and Johnson run. Coming to the junction of
White’s and Mountz creeks the water wrought
havoc with the tracks of the Pittsburgh,
McKeesport & Connellsville street railway and
the Southwest railroad. The railroad track near
Coalbrook was washed out, delaying traffic from
Tuesday morning till late in the afternoon, and
about 1,000 feet of the street car company’s
track was washed out above the Point of Rock and
Moyer.
The streams coming into Breakneck were normal on
Monday evening. The violence of the storm waked
the people living in the valley below and some
of them took a look at the reservoir. They
discovered it in bad shape and warning was given
an hour before the first break occurred. Then
the whole breast bulged out and upwards of
16,000,000 gallons of water, the reservoir’s
capacity, rushed down the valley, in many places
forming new channels for the creek. Many of the
houses at Breakneck and further down were
surrounded with water two and three feet deep.
Fields in which wheat, oats and corn were
planted were ruined. The reservoir breast was
about 30 feet wide and about the same depth. The
water was backed up between two hillsides
upwards of 1,000 feet, the depth of water
decreasing towards the upper end. The whole
flood did not last over an hour.
Mountz creek above White’s creek was greatly
swollen from the torrent of rain. When the flood
from Breakneck struck it, the street railway
track, county bridge and railroad track were
washed out and swept away as though they were
shingles. Coming down to Connellsville, Mountz
creek flowed over that portion of the Second
Ward known as Dutch Bottom. In some houses there
were four and five feet of water. People living
there were waked by the swish of the water and a
panic ensued when their homes were discovered
surrounded. Nearly every family there has a cow,
pig or two and some chickens and ducks. To save
these domestic animals housed in stables and
coops nearby required heroic work. One well
known resident there, his neighbors tell,
rescued four ducks from a pen and placed them in
an upstairs room while the coop of fine chickens
drowned. The streets were rendered impassable
and the old railroad bridge and trestle across
Mountz creek was carried down stream.
The most inconvenience caused in
Connellsville was suffered on account of the
breakage in the gas main of the Fayette Gas
Company over Mountz creek, near town. The break
necessitated shutting off the supply from
Connellsville, and people who use it in their
stoves had to hunt up their friends and
relations for breakfast, dinner and supper on
Tuesday. The break was repaired by Wednesday
morning.
Yesterday morning a committee of Council went
over the flooded Second Ward district and noted
the improvements that will have to be made at
once on the streets and for the citizens whose
places were damaged by the water. The Breakneck
reservoir held a beautiful body of water, but
has not been used for several years by the
Connellsville Water Company. No announcement has
been made that it will be repaired.
In the other country districts throughout the
county the rain was heavy, but not much damage
was reported except the washing away of small
county bridges. Some roads too were badly
washed. The Frick company barn at Lemont No. 1
was struck by lightning and one mule was killed
by lightning in the pasture field.
The lightning and storm, accompanied by a
heavy rainfall, which centered over Scottdale
and vicinity Monday night, was one of the worst
that section has ever felt. The electrical
disturbance was marked by its great violence.
The blaze of the lightning was almost continuous
and lasted nearly three hours. The damage to
light, telephone and telegraph wires was
considerable. The entire section of electric
light wire on Fitsburg Street went down. The
washing away of the main of the Fayette Gas
Company on Mountz creek, left the town without
gas lights, and on Tuesday there were many who
had to go without cooked meals. The big barn on
the farm of Mrs.
Sarah Shupe,
near Scottdale, tenanted by
William McWilliams,
was struck and burned to the ground. The loss is
$2,000 with no insurance. Two small houses
occupied by foreigners in Swedetown, a suburb of
Scottdale, were struck and burned. The Scottdale
House, a four story building, was struck.
The Courier, Connellsville, PA 23 May 1902
Transcribed by
Michelle. Thank you,
Michelle!

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