Bowland Scrapbook | Page 16

These pictures are taken from a cine film of the flood as it happened. THE FLOODS OF 1967 The floods of 1967 devastated two of the communities in the area. The village of Wray was flooded, the force of the water smashing through the village and destroying property, land and livestock. One man living in Dunsop Bridge wa s more annoyed ab anything else as it out his sports car th was ruined. an Another lady who was visiting her da ughter at the time that someone had returned home to climbed in through find a little window at th so that he could go e back of her hous and open the front e door to let the water annoyed about that out. She was more than the water! ll affected as record rainfa Dunsop Bridge was also o shing massive boulders int fell, in August 1967 wa the rivers for the land and the village and affecting e. years to com Roeburndale Va In 1992 British Te lecom sited their 100,000th telepho Dunsop Bridge aft ne box in er it was found by the Ordnance Su the village neares rvey to be t to the centre of Great Britain. pact emic had a major im Foot and Mouth epid The g felt. er-effects are still bein on the area and the aft lley before the flo od A lady who lived on a farm at no the time recalls that there was of the severity of the flood, warning and although it had been thundering lightning all day. top The cloudburst happened on like an explosion, the of the fell the impact of the water washing y. The force of the water bridge awa t down was such that some of it wen Roeburn Scar after Backsbottom Fa rm after the flo od: Half the fa swept away w rmhouse was hilst the owne rs were still in side. ns rain fell in 90 mi the flood: 120mm of noise was ent said: “the e ne Wray resid O lly grown wer g, big trees fu a great roarin indows were w st, downstairs being swept pa ed to shake the house seem s.” ing smashed, be tree it was struck by every second as Volunteers repaire d Dunsop Village G re en ay the River Roeburn through Wr n the River Dunsop. and some dow y five Five inches of rain fell in fort remembers “telephone minutes. She er, poles danced on top of the wat uprooted but were still they had been so much held by the wires. There was down that it was 13 debris washed the weeks before we c