Nearby, floodwater inched up Southwest Boulevard. Firefighters deployed to the Turkey Creek pumping station and tried desperately to keep the engine room dry. According to the official Kansas City Fire Department report, Capt. Guy Mills volunteered to drop down a 22-foot shaft to close underground floodgates, a route already compromised by water and dangerous electric cables.
Mills’ heroics were successful, but it was too late. The dike had broken, and the firefighters abandoned their efforts. Soon, the pump station was submerged, the engines stopped, and water pressure plummeted across most of the city.
Sirens, horns, and shouts to evacuate rang out in the West Bottoms and along Southwest Boulevard all morning, but the speed of the flooding still caught everyone off guard. Rescuers rowed boats, canoes, and rafts to people trapped in homes and businesses and on rooftops.
Nearby, floodwater inched up Southwest Boulevard. Firefighters deployed to the Turkey Creek pumping station and tried desperately to keep the engine room dry. According to the official Kansas City Fire Department report, Capt. Guy Mills volunteered to drop down a 22-foot shaft to close underground floodgates, a route already compromised by water and dangerous electric cables.
Mills’ heroics were successful, but it was too late. The dike had broken, and the firefighters abandoned their efforts. Soon, the pump station was submerged, the engines stopped, and water pressure plummeted across most of the city.
Sirens, horns, and shouts to evacuate rang out in the West Bottoms and along Southwest Boulevard all morning, but the speed of the flooding still caught everyone off guard. Rescuers rowed boats, canoes, and rafts to people trapped in homes and businesses and on rooftops.