Vermont has had a long history of flooding. Of its approximately twenty major floods in the last two hundred years, the flood of November 3-4, 1927, was one of the most devastating (rivaled, and perhaps exceeded, by the floods in May 2011 in Central Vermont and the widespread damage from flooding related to Tropical Storm Irene in August 2011). A severe rainfall had swept across all of New England on that November weekend. But when the deluge hit Vermont, the state’s soil had already become saturated and the streams were running full because of an unusually heavy precipitation in late summer and fall.
For more background on this episode, please visit: https://vermonthistory.org/flood-of-27-1927
Episode 51: Railroads
Episode 50: School Consolidation
Episode 49: The First Vermonters, the Abenaki
Episode 48: Act 250
Episode 47: Back to the Land: Communes in Vermont
Episode 46: The VT/NY Youth Project
Episode 45: The Aiken Formula
Episode 44: Dowsing in Danville
Episode 43: Democrats Rising
Episode 42: High Tech Comes to Vermont
Episode 42: Consuelo Northrop Bailey
Episode 39: The Case of Alex B. Novikoff
Episode 38: Maple Sugaring
Episode 37: Town Bands
Episode 36: Senator Ralph Flanders
Episode 35: Electricity Comes to Rural Vermont
Episode 34: World War II at Home
Episode 32: Fighting Silicosis, Dust Control in the Granite Industry
Episode 31: The OWLS, Vermont's Women Legislators
Episode 30: Legislative Reapportionment
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