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Southeastern
Australia, June 1952
The
late autumn of 1952 had seen abundant rain in Victoria and southern
New South Wales, and the ground was already saturated, when on Saturday
14 June a low pressure system developed and intensified east of Bass
Strait. As the low intensified, strong onshore winds dumped torrential
rains over those parts of southeastern Australia exposed to the south
and southeast. Tanybryn, in Victorias Otway Ranges, registered
587 mm in three days, an enormous quantity of rain for a midlatitude
location. The resultant surge of water down narrow, steeply-sloping
river valleys washed away parts of the Great Ocean Road, isolating Apollo
Bay. The swollen Barwon River flooded cement works and other buildings
at Geelong, and rendered the woollen mills along the Barwon inoperative.
Flooding in the town of Barwon Heads left 600 homeless, not to mention
marooning Sir Hubert Opperman MHR!
The
same system generated vast amounts of rain in eastern Victoria and southeastern
NSW, causing major flooding on every river in Gippsland and adjacent
southern coastal NSW. Sale was isolated, with all rail and road links
cut. A railway bridge was washed away, as was the railway line between
Bairnsdale and Orbost. Further east, a man was swept away in the Deddick
River. Flood waters poured into the open cut coal mine at Yallourn North.
In Walhalla, an old gold-mining town in a narrow valley, disaster struck
on the Tuesday night as an avalanche of water, rocks, silt and logs
swept down over the town. Residents barely had time to escape, and their
town was covered in a metre or two of debris.
Meanwhile
in NSW, the rising Lachlan river sliced the town of Forbes in three,
and there were two metres of water in the Commercial Hotel on the 18th.
The rampant Murrumbidgee prompted the evacuation of 1200 people at Wagga:
one man drowned, and 40 homes in the lower part of Narrandera were flooded.
Many highways were cut in NSW, and landslides rendered the Unanderra-Moss
Vale railway unusable for two months.
Ten
days after this deluge, torrential rain fell in Tasmania, causing major
flooding in the Derwent Valley. Parts of Hobart were flooded and water
entered the streets of Huonville. The remainder of 1952 continued to
be very wet over southeastern Australia, with further severe flooding
in October and November.
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