Mill River Flood: Next Day
The first bodies
borne by water,
and taken from
this Earth, were
buried, on this
Sunday afternoon,
May 17, 1874
and John Belcher
keeps ringing
the church bell
of warning
in his dreams,
the sound
now one
of loss and
the mourners,
singing
Reference: The Mill River Flood of May 1874, in Williamsburg, Leeds Massachusetts
https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/407b6288771447afb2961988ef321fd4
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Mill River Flood: 9:00 am
In New York City,
the messaged wire
to the owner
of the woolen mill
from bookkeeper
Gaius Wood
read like a flash
fiction tragedy:
‘it gave way …
washed away …
half the village …
don’t sail …”
And so the telegraph
followed the river,
sending news of
the unimaginable
into the world
Reference: The Mill River Flood of May 1874, in Williamsburg, Leeds Massachusetts
https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/407b6288771447afb2961988ef321fd4
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Mill River Flood: 7:30 am
Later, it was known:
Lewis Bodman probably knew,
that they all knew
the leaks in the dam, grew,
but too few of those
in power cared to invest
enough to stop the disaster
until that fateful day
in May 1874 when panic flew,
but never fast enough
to outrun water and wave
barreling through
Reference: The Mill River Flood of May 1874, in Williamsburg, Leeds Massachusetts
https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/407b6288771447afb2961988ef321fd4
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Mill River Flood: 7:30 am
No time even
to saddle his horse,
George Cheney fled
the mountain, quick,
galloping on a mission,
and still Onslow Spelman
wouldn't listen,
still, he stood at the door
of his factory of buttons,
arguing the reality -
the dam was breaking
and disaster was coming,
far faster than George Cheney
ever could ride
(this poem is part of series of poems I aim to write as my village commemorates the 150th anniversary of The Mill River Flood of 1874. I am using the project's StoryMap – https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/407b6288771447afb2961988ef321fd4 — each pin of timed event will one small poem).
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