The Peterborough Evening Telegraph

Easter floods 20 years on

- By Nigel Thornton nigel.thornton@peterborou­ghtoday.co.uk Twitter: @PTnigeltho­rnton 01733 588714

Peterborou­gh has just endured a wet and miserable Easter, but it was nothing compared to 20 years ago. Easter was later that year and on April 13, 1998, the floods came. A month’s rain fell in just 24 hours as the River Nene burst its banks.

There was misery for many but the experts reckoned Peterborou­gh escaped much worse by the skin of its teeth.

Today’s pictures reflect how bad the conditions were.

Here is how that Easter unfolded.

Maundy Thursday, April 13 : Flooding started in Alconbury near Huntingdon.

Good Friday – 9am: The A1 Northbound flooded, as did Bullock Road in Elton, Haddon fly-over, Bishops Road in Peterborou­gh, Tasmin Caravan Park in Eye, Parnwell Way in Peterborou­gh, the A605 in Elton, Windsor Road in Yaxley, Furze Road in Dogsthorpe and Carr Road in Peterborou­gh. Thorpe Road in Peterborou­gh was under three foot of water.

Noon: A red alert issued for the River Nene. A city-wide alert was put out warning people of the possibilit­y of evacuation­s.

Easter Saturday – 7.30pm: 50 homes in Riverside Gardens and Thorpe Meadows evacuated.

8pm: Police set up a special emergency advice line manned by civilian staff. Temperatur­es drop to -2 degrees.

Easter Day: 70 people evacuated from Thorpe Meadows. Severe flooding in Elton and Wansford.

The basement of Bridge Street police station flooded twice and the station had to be abandoned.

Wansford’s Haycock Hotel is flooded. Residents in Gleneagles Road, in Orton Longuevill­e were evacuated.

More city centre residents put on evacuation alert, including those living in Rushmere Gardens, Thorpe Meadows, Riverside Gardens, Thorpe Lea Gardens and Winchester Way – and many more.

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