Lynton And Lynmouth Disaster
The lynmouth flood occurred on the night of the 15 16 august 1952 principally affecting the village of lynmouth in north devon.
Lynton and lynmouth disaster. The worst post war flooding disaster in britain took place in the north devon village of lynmouth in 1952 in a tragedy which claimed 34 lives. After the 1952 disaster the village was rebuilt including diverting the river around the village. The flooding occurred on 15 august 1952 after nine. Similar events had been recorded at lynmouth in 1607 and 1796.
The theory has been dismissed as preposterous by experts. A storm with heavy rainfall combined with already saturated soil and flood debris led to the flooding of the village and a total loss of 34 lives. It offers help and assistance that enables visitors to enjoy the most from their visit and is a valuable resource to the local community. Operation cumulus was the name of the experiment being carried out by the raf and an international team of scientists in august 1952.
The disaster which occurred in and around the town of lynmouth on the night of august 15 th 16 th 1952 remains after 60 years the worst river flood experienced in the uk. Over 100 buildings were. A conspiracy theory has circulated that the 1952 flood was caused by secret cloud seeding experiments conducted by the raf. Thirty five people died as a torrent of 90m tons of water and thousands of tons of rock poured off saturated exmoor and into the village destroying homes bridges shops and hotels.
Raf rainmaking experiment blamed for devon s worst ever flood disaster.