North Sea flood of 1953
Meteorological history | |
---|---|
Duration | 31 January – 1 February 1953 |
Overall effects | |
Fatalities | 2,551 |
Damage | 9% of total Dutch farmland flooded, 187,000 animals drowned, 47,300 buildings damaged of which 10,000 destroyed |
Areas affected | Netherlands, Belgium, United Kingdom |
The 1953 North Sea flood (Dutch: Watersnoodramp) was a major flood caused by a heavy storm surge that struck the Netherlands, north-west Belgium, England and Scotland. Most sea defences facing the surge were overwhelmed, resulting in extensive flooding.
The storm and flooding occurred at the end of Saturday, 31 January 1953 and in the morning of the next day. A combination of a high
Realising that such infrequent events could reoccur, the Netherlands and the
Flooding summary
In the
In England, 307 people were killed in the
Twenty-eight people were killed in the north of West Flanders, Belgium.[2]
At-sea fatalities
More than 230 deaths occurred on seacraft along
Netherlands
External videos | |
---|---|
"Eerste beelden van de stormramp" [First images of the storm] parts 1, 2 & 3 – Polygoon newsreel, 1–2 February 1953. Collection of Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision. 1953 was the first time video was able to record the aftermath of a major flood.[12] |
From midday on 31 January 1953, water was driven from the northern reaches of the North Sea between Norway and Scotland by a strong north-west gale. A surge developed along the coast of the Netherlands, which coincided with a high spring tide, leading to many water levels on the Dutch coast on the morning of 1 February 1953 being higher than any previous recorded figures, particularly in the south-western areas of the country.[13]
At 10:30 p.m. on Saturday evening 31 January, it was low tide. But this time the water remained high. The strength of the hurricane had broken the tidal movement.
On the night of 1 February 1953 around 3 a.m., many
At 4 p.m. on 1 February, the flood reached a second high. The water rose even higher than during the first flood, and more dikes broke. Many people who had survived the first flood died, as the houses on which they sheltered on the rooftops collapsed due to the persistent water pressure. At that time, the government did not yet know that Schouwen-Duiveland, Goeree-Overflakkee and Tholen were almost completely under water, and no large-scale rescue operations had yet taken place.
Only on Monday 2 February were fishermen the first to sail deep into the disaster area to save hundreds of people. Rescue operations from the air were hardly possible: the Netherlands had only 1 helicopter and had to wait until other countries offered help.[14]
On Tuesday 3 February, a large flow of people and relief supplies started. Planes dropped sandbags, dinghies, boots, food and water over the disaster area. At the same time, thousands of Dutch soldiers, administrators, aid workers and volunteers arrived to carry out coordinated actions in the disaster area. Tens of thousands of residents were being evacuated from the area to shelters elsewhere in the country.[14]
Foreign helicopters and amphibious vehicles also came into action on Tuesday, but the vast majority of rescue operations had already been completed by then.
Donations and relief supplies were pouring in at the National Disaster Fund in The Hague. Other countries, including England, Sweden and Canada sent more than 61 million guilders in relief supplies.[14]
Many people still commemorate the dead during the Herdenking Watersnoodramp on 1 February.[15]
Warnings
Rijkswaterstaat had warned about the risk of a flood.[16] At the time of the flood, none of the local radio stations broadcast at night, and many of the smaller weather stations operated only during the day. The following broadcast from the Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute (KNMI) was made at 6.15pm (18:15) on 31 January 1953 on Hilversum Radio:
Over the northern and western parts of the North Sea, a strong gale rages between northwest and west. The storm field is extending further. It is expected that the storm will continue for the whole night, and given this fact, this afternoon at 5.30pm the areas of Rotterdam, Willemstad and Bergen op Zoom have been warned for dangerous high water.
— "Hilversum Radio broadcast, Saturday January 31, 6.15pm", January 31, 1953 and 9/11: Living with risk (2019)[17]
Another warning was broadcast shortly before midnight on 31 January 1953, followed by the Wilhelmus, after which broadcasts ceased for the evening, as was standard in the Netherlands at the time.[18] As a result, the warnings of the KNMI did not penetrate the flood-threatened area in time. People were unable to prepare for the impending flood. The disaster struck on a Saturday night, and hence many government and emergency offices in the affected area were not staffed.
As telephone and
Resulting damage
The Zeeland dykes were breached in 67 locations.
The highest death tolls were recorded on the islands of Schouwen-Duiveland and Goeree-Overflakkee. 305 people drowned in the village of Oude-Tonge. 20-year-old Jos de Boet from Oude-Tonge lost 42 family members in the disaster.[1] 200,000 animals died, 3,500 houses and farms were lost in the flood, and another 43,000 were severely damaged.[20][21]
Afterwards, the government formed the Delta Commission to study the causes and effects of the floods. They estimated that flooding killed 1,835 people and forced the
Near flooding of other parts
The Schielands Hoge Zeedijk (Schielands High Seadyke) along the river Hollandse IJssel was all that protected three million people in the provinces of North and South Holland from flooding. A section of this dyke, known as the Groenendijk, was not reinforced with stone revetments. The water level was just below the crest and the seaward slope was weak.
Volunteers worked to reinforce this stretch. However, the Groenendijk began to collapse under the pressure around 5:30 am on 1 February. Seawater flooded into the deep polder. In desperation, the
The Afsluitdijk across the entrance of the Zuiderzee was said to have paid for its construction cost in that one night, by preventing destructive flooding around the three great meers that used to be the Zuiderzee.
Reaction
Several neighbouring countries sent soldiers to assist in searching for bodies and rescuing people. The
It was found that the flooding could have been 4 feet (1.2 m) higher; the Rijkswaterstaat's plan concerning the protection and strengthening of the dikes was accepted. [16] As a result, the Delta Works were authorized, an elaborate project to enable emergency closing of the mouths of most estuaries, to prevent flood surges upriver.
United Kingdom
The North Sea flood of 1953 was the worst flood of the 20th century in
Probably the most devastating storm to affect Scotland for 500 years, the surge crossed between Orkney and Shetland. The storm generated coastal and inland hazards, including flooding, erosion, destruction of coastal defences, and widespread wind damage. Damage occurred throughout the country, with 19 fatalities reported.[25] The fishing village of Crovie (then in Banffshire, now Aberdeenshire), built on a narrow strip of land along the Moray Firth coast, was abandoned by many, as large structures were swept into the sea.
The surge raced down the east coast into the mid-to-southern North Sea, where it was amplified by shallower waters.
On the north side of the Thames Estuary Canvey Island in Essex was inundated, with the loss of 58 lives.[26] Some 41 people died at Felixstowe in Suffolk when wooden prefabricated homes in the West End of the town were flooded.[27] Another 37 died when the seafront village of Jaywick near Clacton was flooded.[28]
In Lincolnshire, flooding occurred from Mablethorpe to Skegness, reaching as far as 3 kilometres (2 miles) inland. Police Officers Charles Lewis and Leonard Deptford received George Medals for their part in rescue work. Lewis leapt from a police station upper window to save an elderly couple being swept away in 3 feet (1 m) floodwater, carrying them to a house across the road to safety, then continuing rescue work for hours until he found a working telephone to call for help. Deptford was off-duty at his son's party when the wall of water hit. He realised that elderly people were vulnerable as the sea wall was breached and he dragged and carried many to safety. At one house he found a bedridden elderly couple with their middle-aged daughter; in the waist-high floodwater, he lashed together oil cans to make a raft, to which he tied the couple and pulled them to safety. He carried on into day light, his last rescue being a dog.[29]
Reis Leming, a US airman, and USAF Staff Sergeant Freeman A Kilpatrick were also awarded the George Medal for rescuing respectively 27 and 18 people at South Beach, Hunstanton.[30][31] At Salthouse the Victorian Randall's Folly was badly damaged, resulting in its subsequent demolition.[32]
In south-west Essex, water overspilled the Royal Docks into Silvertown, where it drained into the sewers but flooded back in Canning Town and Tidal Basin. William Hayward, a night watchman at William Ritchie & Son, died of exposure to gas from a damaged pipe – the only fatality in London. Almost 200 people were homeless and took refuge at Canning Town Public Hall.[33] The village of Creekmouth on Barking Creek, the mouth of the Roding, was wholly flooded by the sea surge and later demolished. Residents were relocated elsewhere in Barking.[34]
The total death toll on land in the UK is estimated at 307. The total death toll at sea for the UK, including the MV Princess Victoria, is estimated at 224.[35]
Belgium
The coastal defence of Flanders was severely damaged. Near Ostend, Knokke and Antwerp, heavy damage was done to the sea defence with local breaches. Twenty-eight people died, including musician Robert Dubois.
Responses
After the 1953 flood, governments realised that similar infrequent but devastating events were possible in the future. In the Netherlands the government conceived and constructed an ambitious flood defence system beginning in the 1960s. Called the
In the UK, the
Commemoration
In 2013 a service was held at Chelmsford Cathedral to mark the 60th anniversary of the Great Flood, attended by Anne, Princess Royal. Acts of remembrance were also held in Lincolnshire, Norfolk, Suffolk and Essex.[36]
A blue plaque marking the level of the flood water was installed by the Leigh Society on the wall of the Heritage Centre in Leigh-on-Sea to commemorate the flooding there.[37]
There is also a blue plaque marking the height of the flood water at Sutton-on-Sea in Lincolnshire.[38]
In 2011 58 years after the flood, a service of remembrance was held outside the library on Canvey Island in Essex to unveil a plaque commemorating the 58 people who lost their lives on the island.[39]
The Watersnoodmuseum or Flood Museum in Ouwerkerk, Netherlands opened in 2001 as the "National Knowledge and Remembrance Centre for the Floods of 1953".
Books, films and music
- The composition Requiem Aeternam 1953 by Douwe Eisenga was written as a commemoration of the flood.
- The composition Noye's Fludde of 1958 by Benjamin Britten evokes the memory of the North Sea flood.
- The Dutch public broadcasting foundation has made numerous documentaries about the North Sea Flood. Two have been adapted as English versions: The Greatest Storm and 1953, the Year of the Beast.
- BBC Timewatch made a documentary about the North Sea flood of 1953, called The Greatest Storm. BBC Radio Four broadcast in 2023 an account of the flood and lessons learned, such as the Thames Barrier: Learning From the Great Tide - BBC Sounds
- An episode of the ITV series Savage Planetfeatured the flood.
- The 1953 floods were mentioned in detail in the drama film Flood (2007).
- In 2009 a Dutch action drama titled De Storm (The Storm) was released.
- In 2018 a Dutch documentarytitled Stormvloed in De Schelphoek ("Storm surge in the Schelphoek") was released.
- The book The Little Ark by Jan de Hartog, published in 1953, depicted the flood. It was adapted as a film by the same name in 1972.
- The short story "The Netherlands Lives with Water",[40] by Jim Shepard, contains a passage describing the event.[41]
- The 1976 book Oosterschelde, windkracht 10, by Jan Terlouw is the story of the flood in Zeeland, Netherlands. The first part describes the storm, while the second part describes the later conflicts about constructing the Delta Works.[42]
- Penelope Fitzgerald, The Bookshop (1978), set in Suffolk in 1959, makes many references back to the 1953 flooding.
- The 2012 non-fiction book, The Sugar Girls, by Duncan Barrett and Nuala Calvi, describes the effects of the flood in East London, and on workers at Tate & Lyle's East End factories.
- The flood and its effect upon the coastal town of Lowestoft is the subject matter of a painting by British artist Mark Burrell.
- 'The Great Tide' by Hilda Grieve (published 1959) gives a detailed description of every aspect of the flood in Essex. The author was an experienced historian, commissioned by the Essex County Council.
See also
- Flood control in the Netherlands
- Floods in the Netherlands
- Inundation of Walcheren
- Lists of disasters
- List of floods in Europe
- List of natural disasters in the British Isles
- List of disasters in Great Britain and Ireland by death toll
- North Sea flood of 1962
- North Sea flood of 2007
- North Sea flood of 2013
- Radio Amateurs Emergency Network
- Storm tides of the North Sea
References
- ^ a b "Watersnoodramp herdacht: 'Getallen zeggen iets, verhalen zeggen alles'". nos.nl (in Dutch). 1 February 2023. Retrieved 1 February 2023.
- ^ "The devastating Storm of 1953". The History Press. Retrieved 8 October 2022.
- ^ "Aspo". www.wrecksite.eu. Retrieved 15 November 2023.
- ^ "Yewvalley". www.wrecksite.eu. Retrieved 15 November 2023.
- ^ "Sheldon". www.wrecksite.eu. Retrieved 15 November 2023.
- ^ "Michael Griffith". www.wrecksite.eu. Retrieved 15 November 2023.
- ^ "Guava". www.wrecksite.eu. Retrieved 15 November 2023.
- ^ "Salland". www.wrecksite.eu. Retrieved 15 November 2023.
- ^ "Westland". www.wrecksite.eu. Retrieved 15 November 2023.
- ^ "Catharina Duvvis". www.wrecksite.eu. Retrieved 15 November 2023.
- ^ Alan Villiers, Posted missing. The Story of Ships Lost without Trace in Recent Years, pp. 3 to 75
- ^ a b Komen, Lizzy (31 January 2019). "The Watersnoodramp: the Dutch battle against water in moving image". Europeana. Retrieved 31 January 2019. (CC BY-SA)
- ^ d'Angremond, K. (March 2003). "From Disaster to Delta Project: The Storm Flood of 1953". Terra et Aqua (90): 3–10.
- ^ a b c d "Watersnood, een reconstructie van de watersnoodramp in 1953" [Watersnood, a reconstruction of the flood disaster in 1953]. lab.nos.nl (in Dutch). Retrieved 1 February 2023.
- ^ "Herdenking slachtoffers watersnoodramp 1953, 66 jaar geleden" [Commemoration of the victims of the 1953 flood disaster, 66 years ago] (in Dutch). 1 February 2019. Archived from the original on 31 December 2022. Retrieved 31 December 2022.
- ^ a b c Ley, Willy (October 1961). "The Home-Made Land". For Your Information. Galaxy Science Fiction. pp. 92–106.
- ^ Embrechts, P. (2019). "January 31, 1953 and 9/11:Living with risk". London School of Economics Public Lecture. Retrieved 31 December 2022.
- doi:10.18146/tmg.524.
- S2CID 24008591.
- ^ Schreuder, Arjen (1 February 2023). "'Als we nu geen drastische maatregelen nemen, zullen we nog veel herdenkingen zoals deze nodig hebben'". NRC (in Dutch). Retrieved 1 February 2023.
- ^ Wismans, Laura (1 February 2023). "Er zit nog wel wat speling in de Deltawerken om de stijgende zee te keren". NRC (in Dutch). Retrieved 1 February 2023.
- ^ a b c d 1953 east coast flood - 60 years on – Met Office, April 2013 (retrieved January 2019)
- ^ a b c The Flood of 1953 – The Open University OpenLearn, September 2004
- ISBN 978-0-212-97022-3.
- S2CID 129865692.
- ^ Heatherson, Liam (1 December 2013). "Remembering the 1953 Floods on Canvey". Beyond the Point. Retrieved 18 March 2022.
- ^ "Disaster victims to be remembered on floods tragedy anniversary". Ipswich Star. 4 January 2018. Retrieved 9 January 2018.
- ^ Grieve, Hilda (1959). The GreatTide: The Story of the 1953 Flood Disaster in Essex. Essex County Council.
- ^ "Queen Honours Men and Women - 1953 Flood". Liverpool Daily Post. 29 April 1953. p. 6. Retrieved 15 November 2023.
- Daily Telegraph. 18 November 2012. Retrieved 18 November 2012.
- ^ "Tributes paid to forgotten hero, Freeman Kilpatrick, who saved lives in Hunstanton in 1953 floods". 25 September 2014. Archived from the original on 31 December 2018. Retrieved 22 September 2021.
- ^ "Onesiphorus's Wealth and Folly!". Norfolk Tales, Myths & More!. 23 August 2020. Retrieved 23 May 2021.
- ISBN 978-0-00-744847-0.
- ^ "The Great Flood of 1953". Creekmouth Preservation Society. 31 January 1953. Archived from the original on 5 August 2020. Retrieved 15 April 2020.
- ^ "1953 east coast flood – 60 years on". Met Office. Retrieved 23 September 2014.
- ^ "Commemoration". BBC. Retrieved 3 February 2013.
- ^ Text on the blue plaque on the wall of the Heritage Centre in Leigh-on-Sea.
- ^ "BBC Radio Lincolnshire - Melvyn in the Morning, 17/10/2012, East Coast Floods - Melvyn with John Monk in Sutton on Sea". BBC. Retrieved 18 March 2022.
- ^ "Commemorating the North Sea Flood of 1953". Essex Explorer Magazine. Spring 2023. Retrieved 25 July 2023.
- ^ "BASS 2010: Jim Shepard, "The Netherlands Lives With Water" | A Just Recompense". Sloopie72.wordpress.com. 18 April 2011. Retrieved 19 March 2014.
- ^ "Google Drive Viewer". Retrieved 19 March 2014.
- ^ nl:Oosterschelde; Windkracht 10
- Kelman, Ilan. Assessment of UK deaths, 1953; study made for CURBE (Cambridge University Centre for Risk in the Built Environment)
- Lamb, H.H. and Frydendahl, Knud (1991). Historic Storms of the North Sea, British Isles and Northwest Europe. ISBN 978-0-521-37522-1
- Instituut voor Sociaal Onderzoek van het Nederlandse Volk, U.S. National Research Council. Committee on Disaster Studies (1955). Studies in Holland flood disaster 1953. Four volumes.
External links
- Floods of 1953. - RAF Sculthorpe Heritage Centre
- BBC — future flood risk
- The Flood of 1953 in the Netherlands Archived 2 May 2019 at the DeltaWorks.org; includes animations, images and video
- 1953 Floods
- Suffolk under water — BBC Suffolk
- LIFE Magazine article (Feb. 16, 1953)
Video links
- Dutch newsreel, on Pathe site Archived 12 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine
- Pathe newsreel, images of Netherlands Archived 5 December 2009 at the Wayback Machine
- Pathe newsreel, images of Netherlands[permanent dead link]
- Pathe newsreel, images of Canvey[permanent dead link]
- Pathe newsreel, evacuation in Lincolnshire[permanent dead link]