Floyd River Flood of 1892
Spring
of the year 1892 came like many before. The Missouri and the Floyd Rivers were
swollen but seemed to be under control. Unlike previous years, it had been
raining steadily for the past three weeks. May 16 had been a day of constant
downpour of rain.
On May 17, in the evening, the Floyd began to rise, but no one appeared
concerned.
About 6:00 AM the next morning a huge wave of muddy water rolled through the
city. The citizens were not prepared. People were climbing trees, climbing on
their house roofs and up onto the elevated railroad line to avoid being swept
away by the swirling waters. At its high point the river swept from the base of
Floyd's Bluff to Court Street by way of Fourth Street.
More than three thousand people were left homeless. The lumber yards, stockyards and railroad lines were all severely damaged. The Queal lumber yard located on Third and Stueben caught on fire, adding to the confusion.
Cattle
and hogs were swept away from the stockyards and railroad cars and their tracks
were torn apart by the wave of water. The cedar blocks used for paving were
dislodged.The hardest hit area in town was Leeds. Water poured through the streets of the area. The hilly area north of Sioux City had received a lot of rain and it all drained toward Leeds. Levees that had been built to the north to hold the water back instead held the water in. Floyd Avenue and Leeds boulevard were under water and mud.
The
cost to the city was staggering. Newspaper accounts at the time listed the death
toll, by drowning, to be ten (10) and the damage at more than half a million
dollars. The death toll was raised to twenty-five (25) in Army Corps of Engineer
records prepared in the 1960's. This was the second most deadly flood in Sioux
City history. One man, Andrew G. Anderson, a thirty-eight year old Swedish immigrant spent the day rescuing all the people he could locate. He was a very good swimmer and good with a boat. He is credited with saving 27 people from death that day. He died while trying to rescue another family. A monument to this brave man was built in Logan Park Cemetery in his honor.
Fourth Street looking East






