The storm of January
31 1953 is described as the worst peacetime disaster
that the UK has known. It killed 307 people and 30,000
were evacuated - but that is only part of the story.
On the same night 132 people out of 172 passengers and
crew died when they abandoned the British Rail ferry,
Princess Victoria, in heavy seas, and across the North
Sea another 1,835 people were drowned as the dykes gave
way.
In the intervening fifty years it
is only luck that has prevented it happening again -
and no-one doubts that a similar storm surge will come
again. The difference is that next time there will be
an early warning so people can evacuate and move to
higher ground, and at least some of the sea defences
will be strong enough to withstand the storm. In 1953
there was a combination of an intense low pressure heading
down the North Sea, hurricane force winds and a high
tide. As a result a huge mound of water was pushed south
down the North Sea creating a high tide up to 2.5 metres
(8ft) above normal.
The first event of January 31 was
when the Fleetwood trawler, Michael Griffiths, sank
off the Hebrides in the early hours without trace. At
1.45 pm the Princess Victoria was abandoned off Belfast
and another 132 died. At 5 pm the first sea walls on
the Lincolnshire coast gave way and waves over 6 metres
high (20ft) crashed onto homes, drowning 41 people.
The tide, continuously getting higher and higher, ran
down the East Coast. In the Wash, King's Lynn lost 15
people, and a few miles round the coast, in the small
village of Heacham, 66 lost their lives. As the night
wore on every coastal town and community on the East
Coast was battered by the storm. In total there were
breaches in the sea defences in 1,200 places, and thousands
of animals were drowned.
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