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Mississippi River Crests At Nearly 48 Feet In Memphis, Tennessee

AP    
First Posted: 05/10/11 09:51 AM ET Updated: 07/10/11 06:12 AM ET

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -- The Mississippi River crested in Memphis at nearly 48 feet on Tuesday, falling inches short of its all-time record but still soaking low-lying areas with enough water to require a massive cleanup.

National Weather Service meteorologist Bill Borghoff says the river reached 47.85 feet at 2 a.m. CDT Tuesday and is expected to stay very close to that level for the next 24 to 36 hours. Hitting the high point means things shouldn't get worse in the area, but it will take weeks for the water to recede and much longer for inundated areas to recover.

"Pretty much the damage has been done," Borghoff said.

The crest is just shy of the record of 48.7 feet recorded during a devastating 1937 flood in Memphis.

The soaking was isolated to low-lying neighborhoods, and forced hundreds of people from their homes, but no new serious flooding was expected. Officials trusted the levees would hold and protect the city's world-famous musical landmarks, from Graceland to Beale Street.

"The levees are performing as designed I'm happy to report," Army Corps of Engineers Col. Vernie Reichling Jr. said Tuesday on CBS's "The Early Show."

Still, the corps' Memphis commander added: "I think we'll breathe a sigh of relief once this crest has passed and is in the Gulf of Mexico."

To the south, residents in the Mississippi Delta prepared for the worst. Farmers built homemade levees to protect their crops and engineers diverted water into a lake to ease the pressure levees around New Orleans. Inmates in the Louisiana's largest prison were also evacuated to higher ground.

Scott Haynes, 46, estimated he would spend more than $80,000 on contractors to build levees around his house and grain silos, which hold 200,000 bushels of rice that he can't get out before the water comes. Heavy equipment has been mowing down his wheat fields to get to the dirt that is being used to build the levees, and he expected nearly all of his farmland to flood.

"That wheat is going to be gone, anyway," said Haynes, who lives in Carter, Miss., about 35 miles east of the Mississippi River. "We don't know if we're doing the right thing or not, but we can't not do it."

He knows time is not on his side. "I've got to get back on that dozer," he said, before walking away.

Nearby, Ed Jordan (pronounced JER'-din) pointed to a high-water mark of about 7 feet in the family's old general store left by the deadly flood of 1927. Floods have taken crops since then, but the Mississippi River hasn't swamped their homes in generations.

He was afraid it will happen this time.

"We have 400 acres of beautiful wheat that's almost ready for harvest. We have about a thousand acres of corn that's chest high and just waiting on a combine (to harvest it). That's going to be gone," Jordan said. "I don't know what is going to happen to our houses."

Similar scenes played out across the Mississippi Delta, the flatlands that stretch about 200 miles from Memphis to Vicksburg, Miss. Shelters were open and farmers were already applying for federal aid.

In Memphis, an NBA playoff game featuring the Memphis Grizzlies at the FedEx Forum downtown wasn't affected Monday night, but a barbecue contest this weekend is being moved to higher ground.

Other popular sites were also spared, including Sun Studio, where Elvis Presley made some of the recordings that helped him become king of rock `n' roll and Stax Records, which launched the careers of Otis Redding and the Staple Singers.

Graceland, Presley's former estate several miles south of downtown, was in no danger either.

"I want to say this: Graceland is safe. And we would charge hell with a water pistol to keep it that way and I'd be willing to lead the charge," said Bob Nations Jr., director of the Shelby County Emergency Management Agency.

Talking about the river levels, he later added: "They're going to recede slowly, it's going to be rather putrid, it's going to be expensive to clean up, it's going to be labor-intensive."

Because of heavy rain over the past few weeks and snowmelt along the upper reaches of the Mississippi, the river has broken high-water records upstream and inundated low-lying towns and farmland. The water on the Mississippi is so high that the rivers and creeks that feed into it are backed up, and that has accounted for some of the worst of the flooding so far.

Because of the levees and other defenses built since the cataclysmic Great Flood of 1927 that killed hundreds of people, engineers say it is unlikely any major metropolitan areas will be inundated as the high water pushes downstream over the next week or so. Nonetheless, they are cautious because of the risk of levee failures, as shown during Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

In Louisiana, the Corps partially opened a spillway that diverts the Mississippi into a lake to ease pressure on the levees in greater New Orleans. As workers used cranes to remove some of the Bonnet Carre Spillway's wooden barriers, hundreds of people watched from the riverbank.

The spillway, which the Corps built about 30 miles upriver from New Orleans in response to the flood of 1927, was last opened in 2008. Monday marked the 10th time it has been opened since the structure was completed in 1931.

Rufus Harris Jr., 87, said his family moved to New Orleans in 1927 only months after the disaster. He was too young to remember those days, but the stories he heard gave him respect for the river.

"People have a right to be concerned in this area because there's always a possibility of a levee having a defective spot," Harris said as he watched water rush out.

The Corps has also asked for permission to open a spillway north of Baton Rouge for the first time since 1973. Officials warned residents that even if it is opened, they can expect water 5 to 25 feet deep over parts of seven parishes. Some of Louisiana's most valuable farmland is expected to be inundated.

At the Louisiana State Penitentiary in Angola, home of the state's death row, officials started moving prisoners with medical problems to another prison as backwaters began to rise. The prisoners were moved in buses and vans under police escort.

The prison holds more than 5,000 inmates and is bordered on three sides by the Mississippi. The prison has not flooded since 1927, though prisoners have been evacuated from time to time when high water threatened, most recently in 1997.

___

Associated Press writers Michael Kunzelman in Norco, La.; Mary Foster in Angola, La.; Jim Salter in St. Louis and Chuck Bartels in Little Rock contributed to this report.

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MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -- The Mississippi River crested in Memphis at nearly 48 feet on Tuesday, falling inches short of its all-time record but still soaking low-lying areas with enough water to require...
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -- The Mississippi River crested in Memphis at nearly 48 feet on Tuesday, falling inches short of its all-time record but still soaking low-lying areas with enough water to require...
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09:43 AM on 05/11/2011
ever hair about geo-thermal geo-domed roofs of beavers pueblo's or the new lee released of usamas compounded wives tails of grounded ,sows,cows,chics and forgetabout all the goddeses
09:37 AM on 05/11/2011
hey thar persons of pages and carpet bagers whye back whind thy people lived or loved in mounds thar levies were obsticules yo went abounding to boomarang yup fore all became hobits of dead frogs and rabbits
09:30 AM on 05/11/2011
fans of oval or pear unite intwo ArcA's and
09:28 AM on 05/11/2011
59/84th @9:26.00000000000000000000000000000
09:26 AM on 05/11/2011
time tics or toxs off on or out of overhearing the deef of spieling
09:24 AM on 05/11/2011
121/336 now at 9:24 est
09:22 AM on 05/11/2011
vat is die approval rate of approved raters
09:20 AM on 05/11/2011
how many persons two make a people
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dawg1000
ⒹⓇ. ⓇⓄⓃ ⓅⒶⓊⓁ
08:08 AM on 05/11/2011
This what you get when all that snow the global warming scientist insisted was a thing of the past melts, and cities and counties, who believed the global warming scientist and so were not prepared for the hard winters, get hammered.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NWBrunette
Blessed Girl
02:21 AM on 05/11/2011
People who build in floodplains get flooded. Proved over and over again year in and year out.
04:43 AM on 05/11/2011
Thats why Memphis was founded on the highest ground...far above any possible flood(hopefully). Those folks in the 1800's knew what they were doing when they settled here, thank heavens. I just feel very sorry for all the farmers along the river south of us. They are getting pounded by the power of mother nature. Also, the casinos, because of incredibly stupid MS state laws, are being wiped out. Tunica, the third largest gaming center in America, is getting wiped out. It is only 30 minutes by car from downtown Memphis. The national media should be concentrating on the disaster that is occurring there, not on Memphis, which is safe. What is NOT safe are going to be all the lost jobs for Memphis employees/Tunica employees who's livelihoods depend on those casino jobs. Very sad.
02:17 AM on 05/11/2011
Mississippi River Crests At Nearly 48 Feet In Memphis, Tennessee
To the south, residents in the Mississippi Delta prepared for the worst. Farmers built homemade levees to protect their crops and engineers diverted water into a lake to ease the pressure levees around New Orleans. Inmates in the Louisiana's largest prison were also evacuated to higher ground.
Because of heavy rain over the past few weeks and snowmelt along the upper reaches of the Mississippi, the river has broken high-water records upstream and inundated low-lying towns and farmland. The water on the Mississippi is so high that the rivers and creeks that feed into it are backed up, and that has accounted for some of the worst of the flooding so far.

Because of the levees and other defenses built since the cataclysmic Great Flood of 1927 that killed hundreds of people, engineers say it is unlikely any major metropolitan areas will be inundated as the high water pushes downstream over the next week or so. Nonetheless, they are cautious because of the risk of levee failures, as shown during Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
Thank God Mississippi Has lakes with earth filled dams, Like Sardis, Enid, Grenada, and Ross Burnett in Mississippi the flood would have been worse than the 1927 flood.. they weren't built when the first flood happened ...It makes this flood really worse than the 1927 , and 1937 flood.
Just though every 1 should know.
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Left of Right
Want to default your country? Default your job!
11:49 PM on 05/10/2011
These disasters are becoming all too common! These really are trying times. It's hitting all at once: The economy is bad and most are fairly broke, the weather has gone nuts and you never know what's coming, and so many drop thier homeowners insurance.

We had floods here just a few years ago and there are still homes in our neighborhood that were covered in water and condemned. Just a freak storm that decided to park over us and rain 9 inches within 4 hours and just after a 3 inch rain the day before. That's all it takes.

Life can change in a moment. Be grateful and thankful for the good days and the good times.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cammi Vaughan
Listening is giving.
10:51 PM on 05/10/2011
It would be so great to be able to pipe this "extra" water over here to the west where we are in constant drought, like the Alaskan pipeline pipes oil. The reason this has not been done I think is that oil has a big payoff whereas noone would get rich for pipeing water. It would have to be a government infrastructure project and we have enough trouble getting infrastructure projects for bridges and roads through Congress. I think it will happen though. In and enlightened society it would be so..
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mopsy1
07:18 PM on 05/10/2011
I have never lived near it but whenever I am in St. Louis, I love to look at it and also love to drive the old river road. It goes its own way and its limited what we can do about it.
06:49 PM on 05/10/2011
Does the brilliant writer of this story realize that the city of Memphis is built on a high bluff that is at least 50 feet ABOVE the current water crest? Obviously not. Beale Street, The FedEx Forum, Sun Studios, etc. were never IN any danger, and it has NOTHING to do with levees. Those levees protect low lying areas outside the city. Good grief. Hey genius...that's why Memphis is nicknamed the "Bluff City". Sheesh.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mopsy1
07:19 PM on 05/10/2011
geez---no need to be that grumpy
08:08 PM on 05/10/2011
I apologize...your right, I was too harsh. I just didn't appreciate the writer's complete lack of topographical knowlege about Memphis- making it sound like the city was in grave danger, which it never has been in. Two river parks and DeWitt Spain airport have been completely covered by the water, however, along with a large chunk of Arkansas on the other side. The river is currently 3 miles across at downtown Memphis...that is absolutely stunning. But rest assured America(and tourists), the city itself is and always has been on it's signature high ground.