No one living on the banks of the Ohio River had seen anything like it. Rain pounded from January 12th to the 23rd, 1937, and along a 650-mile swath reaching from Pittsburgh to Cairo, Ill., the river overflowed its banks. Nearly 400 people died. No town was hit harder than Louisville, where the water crested 37 feet above the flood stage, including a rise of more than six feet in one day, from January 21st to the 22nd. Nearly seventy percent of the city was flooded and 175,000 people were forced to evacuate their homes. Light and water service was knocked out. Two city neighborhoods, Shippingport and The Point, were devastated out of existence.
It didn’t help that this was the middle of the Depression. The above photo locals lined up for food and medicine in front of what turned out to be a poorly placed billboard from the National Manufactures Association; the confidence boosting message only served to douse displaced residents with irony.
The months of January and February have proven to be dangerous around Louisville, with another serious flood in 1997 that caused $200 in damage, and further incidents in 2018 and ’19. Though the flood of 1937 remains the king.
The photos by Margaret Bourke-White captured how much was changed by the rising river. A racetrack becomes a refugee station. Four tubs becomes a boat. And an everyday convenience like a drink of water becomes a thing you need to work for.