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Tallulah, Louisiana submerged in floodwater after the Great Mississippi Flood, with a woman drying laundry on a deck at left, citizens rowing through the streets, and the P.P. Williams & Co. Wholesale Grocery building at right, Tallulah, Louisiana, May 24, 1927
Tallulah, Louisiana submerged in floodwater after the Great Mississippi Flood, with a woman drying laundry on a deck at left, citizens rowing through the streets, and the P.P. Williams & Co. Wholesale Grocery building at right, Tallulah, Louisiana, May 24, 1927
TitleTallulah, Louisiana submerged in floodwater after the Great Mississippi Flood, with a woman drying laundry on a deck at left, citizens rowing through the streets, and the P.P. Williams & Co. Wholesale Grocery building at right, Tallulah, Louisiana, May 24, 1927
PhotographerUnknown
Date1927
NotesFour-part panorama mounted on linen.

Printed on image: V.S. & P--Tallulah 5-24-27

PH Coll 715.205
Contextual NotesThe Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 was the most destructive river flood in the history of the United States. The flood began in the summer of 1926, when heavy rains pounded the Central Basin of the Mississippi. By September, the Mississippi's tributaries in Kansas and Iowa were swollen to capacity. Rain continued to fall throughout the winter of 1926, pounding the entire Mississippi Valley, from the Appalachians to the Rocky Mountains, in quantities that exceeded the yearly average by ten or more times. On April 15, 1927, 15 inches of rain fell in 18 hours, causing the levee system of the Mississippi River to break in more than 145 places. The resulting flood covered more than 27,000 square miles, affecting Arkansas, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Tennessee, Texas, Oklahoma, and Kansas. By July 1, even as the flood began to recede, 1.5 million acres were under water. The Mississippi River was now 70 miles wide. Despite pleas from governors, mayors and other officials in the flooded states, President Coolidge refused to visit the area. Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover stepped in to chair a special committee to handle the emergency, using the position not as a means to alleviate suffering but to get publicity for himself. He emerged a hero, and thus won the 1928 Republican nomination for presidential candidate. Ultimately, the flood caused over $400 million in damages and killed 246 people in seven states.
Subjects (LCSH)Tallulah (La.); Floods--Louisiana--Tallulah; Buildings--Louisiana--Tallulah; Mississippi River
Location DepictedUnited States--Louisiana--Tallulah
Digital CollectionPanoramic Photographs
Order NumberPPC091
Ordering InformationRestrictions apply to the ordering of this image. Please contact photos@u.washington.edu for more information.
RepositoryUniversity of Washington Libraries. Special Collections Division
Repository CollectionWesley L. Jones Photographs. PH Coll 715
Object TypePanoramic photograph
Physical DescriptionSilver gelatin; b&w; 8 x 36 1/2 in.
Digital Reproduction InformationScanned from a photograph at 400 dpi in TIFF format using a Graphtec CSX300-09, resized and enhanced using Adobe Photoshop, and imported as JPEG2000 using Contentdm's software JPEG2000 Extension. 2010.
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