North Sea flood of 1962

1962 North Sea flood

Flooded streets in Hamburg-Wilhelmsburg
Date 16–17 February 1962
Location North Sea coast of Germany and the Netherlands
Deaths 347[1]
Property damage DM 3 billion (Hamburg only)[2]
Part of a series on the
History of Hamburg
by timeline
by other topic
  • Other Hamburg topics


  • Hamburg portal
Map of flooded areas of Hamburg 1962

The North Sea flood of 1962 was a natural disaster affecting mainly the coastal regions of Germany and in particular the city of Hamburg in the night from 16 February to 17 February 1962. In total, the homes of about 60,000 people were destroyed, and the death toll amounted to 315 in Hamburg. In addition, three people were killed in the United Kingdom by high winds, which damaged around 175,000 houses in the worst affected city, Sheffield.[3]

Causes

The flood was caused by the Vincinette low-pressure system,[4] approaching the German Bight from the southern Polar Sea. A European windstorm with peak wind speeds of 200 km/h pushed water into the German Bight, leading to a water surge the dykes could not withstand. Breaches along the coast and the rivers Elbe and Weser led to widespread flooding of huge areas. In Hamburg, on the river Elbe, but a full 100 km away from the coast, the residential areas of Wilhelmsburg was most affected.

Events

Hamburg-Wilhelmsburg in 1962

On Thursday 15 February, German authorities published the first storm warning for the North Sea with wind speeds up to 9 Beaufort. A severe storm warning followed the next day, with a predicted gauge of 3 Metres above normal, which was a level the dykes could withstand.

The severe storm and the flood it caused in the last hours of 16 February affected the dykes more than predicted and led to some 50 breaches before officials raised alarm for Hamburg. At this time of the day, most city offices were closed, which retarded the notification of the population. Civil protection plans were not implemented yet.

Hamburg Sturmflut North Sea flood

Due to telephone landline breakups, warnings could not be forwarded from coastal to hinterland emergency offices. Breakups at alarm siren lines and electricity lines affected the warning system severely. Radio amateurs had to establish emergency operations to support emergency services in means of communication.

Around midnight, the peaks were too high for some dykes to withstand. The back of the dykes was not yet fortified, so the first waters destroyed the dykes from behind and cleared the way for the flood.

Helmut Schmidt, police senator of Hamburg, coordinated the rescue operations, and requested for emergency help throughout Europe. He requested parts of the Bundeswehr for emergency purposes, especially engineers. That meant overstepping his legal authority, ignoring the German constitution's prohibition on using the army for "internal affairs" - a clause excluding disasters was not added until 1968. Also he got help by helicopters from other NATO states. The latter were called Fliegende Engel (Flying Angels) by the people.

120 square kilometres or a sixth of the city of Hamburg were flooded, destroying 6000 buildings. Streets were unusable and railway operation was suspended, leaving Hamburg unsupplied for an indetermined period of time.

Aftermath

Greece donated 500 tonnes of raisins to the people of Hamburg after the flood.[5] Afterwards, emergency plans were implemented, and dykes were shortened and strengthened, leaving some river arms and bays unattached from the sea.

See also

References

  1. "Historical storm surge events" (PDF). Munich Re. Retrieved 24 March 2012.
  2. "Rückblick auf Hamburger Flutkatastrophe,Hamburg, 15 February 2012". radiohamburg.de (in German). Retrieved 25 April 2015.
  3. http://www.rmets.org/sites/default/files/hisnews1201.pdf
  4. "Wenn wir diese Nacht bloß überleben!" (in German). bild.de. Retrieved 10 April 2012.
  5. "Korinthen-Geschenk für Heime und Schulen" (PDF). Hamburger Abendblatt (in German). 21 June 1962. p. 2. Retrieved 23 May 2013.

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.