Willard Historical Images

Michigan Central train moving through the flood waters in 1918

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dc.coverage.temporal Battle Creek. Michigan, circa 1918 en_US
dc.identifier.other LPC-033-018-003 en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://dspace.willardlibrary.org/xmlui/handle/123456789/12868
dc.description Postcard showing a photo of a Michigan Central train moving through flood waters in 1918. The Ward Building can be seen in the left background and the Michigan Central Depot in the center distance. The spire of St. Thomas Episcopal Church can be seen behind the telephone pole in the center distance. Battle Creek experienced major flooding in the downtown area in 1887, 1896, 1904, 1908, 1912, 1918, and 1947. By the mid-1950's local leaders worked with the federal government to vacate properties in the flood-prone neighborhood southwest of downtown Battle Creek known as "the bottoms." By 1954 a coalition of local industries and foundations and the federal government was formed to clear housing in the Bottoms. Displaced residents were encouraged to move to the Washington Heights neighborhood. Work began with the Army Core of Engineers on the "Cement River Project" to straighten the Kalamazoo River and channel it so that it no longer could flood the downtown area or displace homeowners. Caption on front: Flood Battle Creek March 16th 1918 en_US
dc.format.medium b&w postcard en_US
dc.language.iso En en_US
dc.subject Floods en_US
dc.subject Railroads and Depots - Michigan Central en_US
dc.subject Floods, Cyclones en_US
dc.title Michigan Central train moving through the flood waters in 1918 en_US
dc.type Image en_US


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