Note:
This is a reprint of a post I originally published in 2011. I have modified it
slightly. At the time it was initially published, late Other Half and I were
living in Arizona.
My
late Other Half was a teenager when the Great New England Hurricane slammed
into Hampden County, Massachusetts, in late September 1938. He had ditched
school in favor of working at the fairgrounds in West Springfield during the
Eastern States Exposition.
He
was only fourteen then; however, he had worked on farms during the summer for
several years. That experience helped him to get hired for a short-term, 24/7 job
at the horse barn. He looked forward to feeding and watering horses much more
than he looked forward to sitting in a classroom. And dealing with horses was a
whole lot better than dealing with school authorities. Horses didn’t yell at
you because you weren’t paying attention in class. Or because you had failed to
show up for school again.
“I
stayed in the barn most of the time,” he said. And it wasn’t only the bad
weather that kept him there. “I didn’t want to go outside a lot because the
truant officer might be walking around.” Other Half had more than a nodding
acquaintance with that guy. If the technology had been available then, the
truant officer most likely would have had Other Half’s mom on speed dial.
Despite
the wind and heavy rain, The Powers That Be initially expected to keep the
agricultural fair open. However, the Exposition’s organizers revised that
expectation when: (a) the roof of one of the buildings went airborne, (b) The
Westfield River overflowed and began flooding the fairgrounds, and (c) the
police “strongly suggested” that people get the heck out of there and take the
animals with them.
Exhibitors
with livestock trailers loaded up their animals and headed to safer areas.
People without transportation rounded up the remaining horses and cattle and
slogged through the storm to higher ground. Other Half was drenched by windswept
rain as he led a horse named Scarlett O’Hara across an iron bridge and up to
the old Agawam racetrack.
That
was an experience he would never forget. And, of course, Other Half never
imagined then that his job providing fodder for the horses in 1938 would one
day provide a different kind of fodder for this blog post, written in between
reading online reports about a hurricane named Irene in 2011.
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