{"id":233,"date":"2025-05-10T02:07:58","date_gmt":"2025-05-10T02:07:58","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.kentuckianagenealogy.org\/archives\/?p=233"},"modified":"2025-05-10T02:07:58","modified_gmt":"2025-05-10T02:07:58","slug":"1937-flood","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.kentuckianagenealogy.org\/archives\/2025\/05\/10\/1937-flood\/","title":{"rendered":"1937 Flood"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p>In the Fall of 1936 the country was in the grip of the Great Depression. My father,<br>mother, grandmother, and I were living near Mooresville, Indiana on the little five acre<br>place where I was born. Although my father worked very hard and took any job that he<br>could find, he was having a very hard time making a living. I don&#8217;t know all that led up to<br>it, but apparently he and Mother talked it over and decided that he would have to leave<br>her and me and go to the city to try to make more money. I think it was sometime in early<br>November when he packed up and went to Louisville, Ky. It was a hundred or so miles to<br>the south of where we lived, which seemed like a very long way at the time. I missed him<br>very much for I was what was known as a &#8220;Daddy&#8217;s girl&#8221;. I remember he was gone over<br>Thanksgiving and I had chickenpox at the time. Although my grandmother cooked a hen<br>and made my favorite things, I just lay on the bed and couldn&#8217;t go to the table because I<br>was so sick with chickenpox and so sad because my father wasn&#8217;t there. Even though I<br>was only six at the time, that memory is very vivid today and still makes me sad.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Then Christmas came and Mother and Grandma did everything they could to make it a happy<br>one for me. Mother managed to go out and cut a tree which was up and decorated with homemade<br>decorations on Christmas morning when I got up. Since money was so scarce, I doubt if there<br>were many gifts, at least I don&#8217;t remember what they were. The thing I remember clearly was a<br>bucket filled with the old fashioned hard candy that was common at the time and although it<br>was not expensive, I am sure it represented a sacrifice. Of course I believed in Santa at the<br>time and had no idea how my folks struggled to get me things. Anyway, loving candy as I did,<br>it made me very happy.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>After Christmas there was exciting news. Since I was to be out of school for two weeks<br>Christmas vacation, I was in the first grade that year, Mother and I were going to Louisville<br>to visit my father. I was so excited I could hardly contain myself. I remember well the<br>preparations. Mother got out the old suitcase and started packing our things. I wanted<br>to take my father something so I put some of my precious hard candy inside a lemon rind<br>that had been discarded and told Mother I was going to pack it in the suitcase. She told<br>me in no uncertain terms that I must not do that. Usually I minded what I was told, but<br>that time I would not be deterred from taking my father my perfect gift. I burrowed down under<br>the clean folded clothes and placed my candy filled lemon rind. Sometime later I heard a<br>shriek and my full name, Ardath Adell, was being called and I knew I was in trouble. It seems<br>the candy and the juice from the lemon had mixed and made a sticky red syrup which had<br>run all over the clothes. Poor Mother, she worked so hard washing on the board and hanging<br>the clothes on the line in the bitter cold Indiana winter. Now she had to wash again before<br>we could leave on our trip. I don&#8217;t remember what happened, I am sure she spanked me,<br>for disobeying was definitely a spanking offense when I was growing up.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>At last the day came to leave. We had to get up very early and wait to be picked up<br>by one of our neighbors who drove the milk truck. I think we left about five in the morning<br>because he had to make his delivery in Indianapolis, about eleven miles away. We got to<br>Indianapolis and it was still dark and he let us out on some street corner and instructed<br>Mother to wait there and catch a certain city bus or trolley that would take us downtown<br>to the Greyhound bus station. I still remember standing out there on that dark, cold morning,<br>but I was happy because I was soon going to see my father.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I remember riding on the Greyhound bus but the trip was uneventful and the only thing<br>I remember about it was thinking that I could show my father my chickenpox scars when I<br>got there.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>He met us at the bus station in Louisville and took us to the rooming house where he<br>was living. We had just one room for the three of us. It was called a light housekeeping<br>room. There was a double bed for my parents and the landlady had moved in a cot for me.<br>There was no private bathroom. There was one on the second floor that was shared by everyone<br>in the house. Our room had a table and a few chairs and something to cook on, a hot plate<br>I guess. When we arrived at the room there was something sitting on the table all covered up<br>and there was music coming from it. My father told me to lift the cover, and when I did, I still<br>didn&#8217;t know what it was. I had seen a Victrola that played records before but this thing didn&#8217;t<br>have a record, it was just a brown wooden box. My father said it was a radio and it was his<br>surprise for us. I don&#8217;t know how much it would have cost in those days but he had a job<br>then and apparently had been able to scrape enough together to buy this Emerson radio that<br>had to be hooked up to a car battery to make it play. To me it was a wonderful thing.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>For some reason we didn&#8217;t go back home after my Christmas vacation was over. Instead<br>they decided for Mother and I to stay there. I don&#8217;t know how they were going to work it out<br>because Grandma (this was my Pavy\/Kern grandmother) was still alone back at the house in<br>Indiana and the neighbors were having to milk the cow and take care of whatever else<br>needed to be done because Grandma was past eighty and unable to do much other than a<br>little housework. Anyway they enrolled me in a school not far from the rooming house. I have<br>some vague, unpleasant memories of that school. Mainly I didn&#8217;t like it. You must remember<br>that I had started school in a little school in a small town that was no more than a wide place<br>in the road. Now here I was in this big city school where there were things I had never seen<br>before like a cafeteria and a nurse&#8217;s office. One day someone came and took me to this room<br>that looked a little like a doctor&#8217;s office and I was really frightened. I didn&#8217;t understand what<br>they were going to do, and they asked me questions about shots and vaccinations and I had<br>never heard of them and apparently had not had them so they proceeded to give them to me.<br>The vaccination wasn&#8217;t so bad, just a little scratch on my shoulder, but then they stuck me with<br>a needle and that was awful.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The cafeteria was a bad experience also. At home I had always taken my lunch, but in<br>this new school I had to eat in the cafeteria. I had never had any experience in ordering food.<br>I well remember the first day I ate there. Instead of just giving me a plate with proper food on it,<br>they asked me what I wanted. For some strange reason I ordered a lettuce sandwich and for<br>some stranger reason they gave it to me. One would think they would have had better judgment<br>even though I didn&#8217;t. So that was all I got for lunch, two pieces of white bread with a leaf of<br>lettuce between them. well it only took a couple of bites for me to decide to leave it on the<br>tray and go back to my classroom. After lunch when everyone was back in the room, the<br>teacher stood up before the class holding that miserable sandwich. &#8220;Who left this sandwich<br>on their tray?&#8221;, she asked. Me, being an honest person, held up my hand. The children<br>laughed and the teacher lectured me about waste. She even mentioned the fact that I wasn&#8217;t<br>paying for my meals, that I was being treated as a charity case. I didn&#8217;t even know that I was<br>supposed to pay for them and my folks probably didn&#8217;t either. They were just country people<br>who thought that went with the schooling there in the city. I remember how humiliated I was<br>that day. At least I didn&#8217;t have to go to that school very long. One day soon after that Mother<br>came for me at school and said we had to return to the rooming house quickly because we<br>were moving. She didn&#8217;t tell me what was wrong because she didn&#8217;t want to frighten me.<br>We loaded everything into the car and moved to another rooming house. This time we were<br>in a very small room with a kitchenette. We were not there very long before we had to move again.<br>The main thing I remember about the second place was that while we were living there, my father<br>taught me to tie my shoes. I was so proud, I would sit on the edge of the bed and tie them over and<br>over.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Anyway, we soon had to move again. The reason for all this moving finally had to be told. When<br>the water started coming up in the street, they couldn&#8217;t keep it from me any longer. The Dix Dam<br>somewhere up the Ohio River had broken and the river was flooding Louisville and many other<br>areas along the way. We had to continually move to higher ground. The third place we moved<br>to was a three story rooming house. We got a room on the third floor and that was lucky because<br>the water was soon up in the first two floors. So everyone from those floors moved to the third floor.<br>I don&#8217;t remember how they managed but everyone seemed to have a room. Perhaps the third floor<br>rooms were vacant before the flood. Our room was at the end of the hall toward the back of the house<br>where the stairs came up. There were rooms all along one side of the hall with a bathroom in there<br>somewhere. At the front of the house were two rooms facing the street. One directly at the end of the<br>hall and one to the right of it. In the room directly at the end of the hall was a very peculiar old lady.<br>She was from Georgia and thought she was a southern belle. She seemed to think that made her<br>superior to the rest of us. In the front room next to her was a nice young couple named Blanche and<br>Jimmy. I think they were from Tennessee. Jimmy liked to sing and he went around singing some country<br>song, &#8220;Careless Love&#8221; I think. They were nice to me and tried to keep me entertained. Mother told me<br>after I was grown that Blanche had confided to her that she and Jimmy weren&#8217;t married, a thing almost<br>unheard of in those days. The landlady and landlord had a room and there were a few other people<br>that I don&#8217;t remember very well. There was a big heating stove set up in the hallway and everyone<br>spent a lot of time standing around the stove and talking or else looking out the front windows watching<br>the flood waters. There was no heat in the rooms so people only went to their rooms at night to sleep.<br>Blanche and Jimmy left their room open so the heat from the stove would go in and everyone used it<br>as a place to gather and look out the windows. There was no gas or electricity because of the flood.<br>There was water but it had to be boiled before we could drink it. For Christmas my father had given<br>me a small kerosene lamp. That with a few candles was all the light that anyone had. The heating stove<br>had a small flat area on top and that was where everyone cooked and boiled water. People pooled their<br>supplies and cooked together and ate together, that is except for the Georgia lady. Now I had been<br>taught not to go to anyone&#8217;s house and ask for food, but under the circumstances, with everyone sharing,<br>I didn&#8217;t see anything wrong, when I saw the Georgia lady cooking corncakes on the stove, to ask her for<br>one. She turned on me viciously and screamed something to the effect that &#8220;It&#8217;s mine, no you can&#8217;t have it!&#8221;.<br>With that she grabbed the pan off the stove and ran into her room. I guess I was standing there with my<br>mouth open, I did not expect that kind of reaction. I was only six and very small for my age and had<br>been everybody&#8217;s pet since we had been there. Blanche overheard her and called me into her room<br>and gave me something that she had to eat. Then she took Mother aside and told her to watch me very<br>closely and never leave me be alone with the old lady because she was &#8220;off in the head&#8221; and hated children.<br>Blanche was afraid she would push me out the window if she got a chance.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>One day they were all trying to keep me away from the front windows and I didn&#8217;t find out until a long time later,<br>that it was because there was a dead body floating by. Little did they know that I was so nearsighted that I did<br>well to see the street, let alone a dead body. I wouldn&#8217;t have seen it if they had pointed it out to me.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>One evening my father went with some of the other men to get food and supplies. The stairway had a landing<br>about half way down. At that landing was a window which was half way between the second and third floor.<br>My father, Jimmy, and the landlord took down one of the doors from one of the rooms. They opened that window<br>at the stair landing and stuck that door out the window. Apparently they rested the other end on something next<br>door, perhaps a windowsill. They crawled out on this door and someone came by with a boat and picked them up.<br>They went down to where the stores were and the National Guardsmen were just going into the stores and handing<br>out any food that was still good, mostly canned goods. We all ate well for a while. I really loved canned sardines<br>and I remember he brought back a lot of those.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>One afternoon some Coast Guardsmen came down the street in boats. They shouted up to the<br>people at the windows and asked if there were any children up there. They replied that there<br>was one. The Guardsmen said to send down a rope and they did. I don&#8217;t know how they happened to<br>have a rope that would reach from the third floor. Anyway the men attached a bucket containing<br>canned spinach and canned milk. On seeing the spinach, I called out,&#8221;I don&#8217;t like spinach&#8221; and<br>someone called back, &#8220;Eat it anyway.&#8221;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>That was the first chance Mother had to get a letter out. They told her to put it in<br>the bucket and they would see that it got mailed. She was finally able to get word<br>to Grandma that we were still alive. Grandma told us later, when we returned home,<br>that she had been about to go crazy with worry before she got that letter because<br>she thought we had drowned.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I don&#8217;t know how long the flood lasted. My concept of time then was not very good. The only point of measure<br>that I have is the fact that I was vaccinated right before the flood came and the scab came off the first time we<br>walked out after the flood waters went down. I remember crying when I found it was missing and I wanted to go<br>back and look for it because I had planned to take it home and show Grandma. My folks laughed and said it<br>would be impossible to find.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I guess after the flood my parents had had enough of Louisville because as soon as the water went down and<br>the roads were open, they loaded up everything in the old Pontiac, my father had bought this old Pontiac coupe<br>shortly before going to Louisville, and headed home to Indiana. That was in February of 1937. Not long after that,<br>they sold the little five acre place and bought a forty acre farm near Scottsburg, in Scott County,Indiana. That is<br>about thirty five miles north of Louisville.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Submitted by Ardath and copyright 1999. Do not copy or reproduce in anyway without written permission of the author<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>(Originally Posted 28 JUN 2000)<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>In the Fall of 1936 the country was in the grip of the Great Depression. My father,mother, grandmother, and I were living near Mooresville, Indiana on the little five acreplace where I was born. Although my father worked very hard and took any job that hecould find, he was having a very hard time making [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[11],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-233","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-interesting"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.kentuckianagenealogy.org\/archives\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/233","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.kentuckianagenealogy.org\/archives\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.kentuckianagenealogy.org\/archives\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.kentuckianagenealogy.org\/archives\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.kentuckianagenealogy.org\/archives\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=233"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/www.kentuckianagenealogy.org\/archives\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/233\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":234,"href":"https:\/\/www.kentuckianagenealogy.org\/archives\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/233\/revisions\/234"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.kentuckianagenealogy.org\/archives\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=233"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.kentuckianagenealogy.org\/archives\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=233"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.kentuckianagenealogy.org\/archives\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=233"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}