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Monday, March 06, 2017

The True Tale of Misty, Stormy, and maybe the worst nor’easter of them all

The deluge lasted three long days and stretched across five high tides right at the time of the full moon. More than 90 percent of Chincoteague Island flooded. The water ran six feet deep at times on Main Street in downtown Chincoteague. The island’s chicken industry was destroyed–an estimated 350,000 birds died in the storm. Chincoteague’s famous ponies suffered horribly as well. By the time the rain stopped, more than 100 of them had died.

The culprit was the Ash Wednesday storm of March 6 to 8, 1962.

The most famous of Chincoteague’s ponies managed to survive the storm. A pregnant Misty was living at that time on the Beebe Farm in Chincoteague. Floodwaters did, in fact, reach her barn, but before that happened Ralph and Jeannette Beebe moved Misty into the kitchen of their home. She stayed there for three days. The aerial photo here shows how things looked at the Beebe Farm during the flooding.


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5 comments:

Anonymous said...

OMG, I am actually old enough to say, "I was there!" I remember coffins in the graveyard floated to the surface and were actually floating down the street. It was a nor'easter and formed off the coast and there was no warning from the weather bureau and it really caught everybody by surprise. I also remember that another inlet was cut through Ocean City at 33rd Street. It was a wild time for about a week around here.

Anonymous said...

Thanks for bringing back these memories
from my childhood days!!

Anonymous said...

Maybe the next one will wipe out this entire hell hole.

Anonymous said...

6:45, If you were to move to Kalifornia or NYC it would be a start to improving the area. Anything we can do to help you pack up?

Anonymous said...

8:15 There are a lot of places in the middle of the spectrum of CA/NYC and the outhouse of MD.