1938 New England Hurricane album, New London, Conn.

Collection Type

  • Photography

Date

1938

Location Note

HAV-01-403-Z-L-404

GUSN

GUSN-364857

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Description

Black photograph album containing 102 pages, 74 of which are blank.
Pages 42-101 are blank and were not photographed.
The remaining 28 pages contain 85 black-and-white photographs documenting the damage done at various locations and structures, including, but not limited to, neighborhoods, the shoreline, and the business district in New London, Connecticut. The damage sustained by modes of transporation such as autombiles and boats is also heavily documented throughout the album.

Details

Descriptive Terms

hurricanes
weather
houses
trees
boats
wharves
automobiles
streets
storefronts
stores
restaurants
railroads
ferries
photograph albums
photographs

Physical Descrption

1 photograph album, 102 pages : black-and-white photographs ; 11 1/4 x 9 inches

Collection Code

PC009

Collection Name

Photograph albums collection

Date of Acquisition

2024

Reference Code

PC009.311

Acqusition Type

Library & Archives Purchase

Credit Line

Library & Archives purchase, 2024

Places

New London (New London county, Connecticut)

Record Details

Material Type

photograph albums
photographs

Subjects

Photograph
Hurricane damage

Restrictions

A small number photographs in the album are damaged. Some of the photographs have dislodged from their pages. Handle with care.

Description Level

Item

Location Note

HAV-01-403-Z-L-404

Related Items

A Photographic Record of the New England Hurricane and Flood, 1938

Historical/Biographical Note

Historical/Biographical Note

The New England Hurricane of 1938 is sometimes called the "Long Island Express".
The hurricane caused the death of approximately 700 men, women, and children. With respect to property, 4,500 homes, 2,600 boats, and 26,000 automobiles were destroyed, and the total cost of property lost amounted to $400 million. During the storm response, the Coast Guard assisted over 500 vessels and rescued over 1,000 persons. For people who lived through the storm, it remains the weather event of their lifetimes.

On September 21, 1938, Long Island, New York absorbed the initial impact of the hurricane. The storm came ashore as a Category 3 hurricane, with estimated sustained winds of 120 miles per hour and a storm surge over 10-feet. The impact registered on seismographs in Alaska.

In Connecticut, where the eastern coastline was not buffered by Long Island, damage was extensive. New London was devastated by wind, floods, and fires. In New London harbor, the tidal surge drove the five-masted school ship Marsala into a warehouse complex along the docks, setting off a10 hour fire which consumed a quarter-mile area of the business district. Ships torn from their moorings wrecked wharfs before sinking or beaching themselves. The permanently anchored 240-ton lightship at the head of the New London Harbor was found on a sand bar two miles away.
Ultimately, the storm became the deadliest and costliest storm in Connecticut history.

Sources


Janick, Herbert F. (2022, September 21). The Hurricane of 1938 Rocks Connecticut. Connecticut History. connecticuthistory.org/the-hurricane-of-1938-rocks-connecticut/\n
New Hampshire Public Broadcasting Service. (n.d.) American Experience, The Path of the Hurricane of ’38 pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/hurricane-path/\n
Thiesen, William H. (2023, October 20). The Long Blue Line: The Great New England Hurricane of 1938. My CG, United States Coast Guard. mycg.uscg.mil\n
1938 New England hurricane. 2025, September 25). In Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1938_New_England_hurricane \n

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