When I was a kid, Little Duck Creek had a different name
at my house, the “StayAwayFromThat” Creek. If my brother mentioned going to the
creek or my dad thought he might be contemplating a trip there, Dad would warn him
to “stay away from that creek!” It was a constant temptation for my brother, who
could spend hours exploring there and even my mom played along the creek in the
1940s. I suspect that most Fairfax kids have been tempted by the allure of the
creek. As idyllic as it seemed in childhood, the Little Duck Creek has really
been a thorn in the side of people who live near it for decades.
Although we speak about “the creek” in Fairfax, there are
actually two primary creeks here. Little Duck Creek (which I will abbreviate as
LDC) originates in Madeira and roughly follows Camargo Road south into
Madisonville. It enters Fairfax at Murray Avenue, just east of St. Margaret-St.
John Parish and meanders through the village until it empties into Duck Creek
south of Red Bank Road. Duck Creek (which I will abbreviate as DC) flows
several miles through Cincinnati before it reaches Fairfax, running south along
Red Bank Road before ultimately flowing into the Little Miami River.
Map showing the flow of Duck Creek and Little Duck Creek through Fairfax
Over a hundred years ago, Madisonville residents complained
to the City of Cincinnati about the deplorable condition of LDC. Sewage was
dumped into LDC at Bramble Avenue and there was a dump on the creek farther
upstream. The smell was unbearable and there was an abundance of flies, mosquitoes,
and rats. Sewage in the creek was still a cause of concern with the early
Fairfax village council in the mid-1950s. Flooding, though, has historically
been the major problem.
Virmorgan Ziegler, longtime village resident and elected
official, recounted in the 1976 book A History of the Village of Fairfax
by Elizabeth Steele and Patricia Kuderer, that when she and her parents moved to
Washington (now Watterson) Road in Fairfax in 1921, their new home overlooked a
“very small creek.” Fairfax was a rural area then and many families kept
chickens. Some residents who had cows pastured them in “the bottoms,” which
would later become Warren and Simpson Avenues. Mrs. Ziegler recalled the
following incidents from her youth:
I was looking out our back window and suddenly saw great
rolling waves of water surging down through the channel and before it was over,
the creek had covered the entire bottoms. We had two huge sycamore trees on the
other side of the creek and a Brahma hen had gotten caught in the sudden storm
but had found shelter directly against one of these trees on a slightly raised
root section and was marooned there until the water receded. Another time when
the creek was a raging river, Charlie Hartzel was drug across the fields behind
their cow which had been tethered in the bottoms and he had gone to take her
back to the barn. As soon as she was unleashed from the stake, she streaked for
the barn taking Charlie on his stomach.
Fairfax became an incorporated village in 1955 and in 1956
voters approved a bond issue for an improvement
project. Flood control was one of the priorities. The project included
straightening LDC at Bancroft, construction of bridges on Bancroft Street, Bedford
Street, and Murray Avenue (the roads were not contiguous, but separated by LDC),
and rerouting of Watterson Road with a new bridge over the creek.
August 1957 street improvement map showing Watterson's original route (outlined in blue)
and current route (outlined in red).
Through the years, flooding and other issues with LDC
primarily impacted Fairfax, but many of the problems originated upstream. In
1960, the village hired consulting engineers to study flood prevention on LDC. Recommendations
included constructing a series of three small check dams on LDC along Camargo
Road to control runoff during heavy rains; creation of a joint flood control
conservancy district with Hamilton County, Cincinnati, Madeira, and Indian
Hill; and removing concrete floors under bridges and deepening the channel to
allow water to flow more freely. In March 1961, Fairfax Mayor Ralph Mitchell
met with officials from the county, Cincinnati, and Madeira about LDC flood
control measures. He reported to village council that although they
sympathized, those officials declined to take any action, saying that it was up
to Fairfax to solve the flooding problem.
Around the same time, there was something else going on
in the northern part of Fairfax (the portion from Bancroft to Murray) – a
building boom. There had been homes in that area for decades, going back to the
old farming days, but in the years between the end of World War II and the
early 1970s, the number of homes there nearly doubled. Undeveloped space that had
absorbed water was replaced by structures and pavement that didn’t.
In 1973 there were a couple of heavy storms. A June flood
of DC caused a temporary closure of Red Bank Road. A July storm caused flash
flooding of LDC, especially in the area east of Watterson. DC also flooded in
the July storm, impacting businesses near Red Bank Road. Frustrated residents
appeared at the July 1973 village council meeting demanding action. One
resident pointed out that the flash flooding wasn’t a new problem and asked
what council was doing about it. Another said that residents sustained $50,000
to $60,000 in losses that were not covered by insurance.
A couple of residents expressed the opinion that the
Watterson bridge was at fault, pointing out that debris caught on the center
pier, damming the water. Councilmember Jim Finan introduced a motion to
instruct Village Engineer Arthur Andrews to make a study of the problem. Residents
were also concerned about items that were dumped or had fallen into the creek upstream. Finan suggested that the village clerk contact the communities
upstream to encourage them to keep a closer eye on dumping.
Watterson bridge with center pier from the Cincinnati Enquirer August 16, 1980
Citizens also asked about a warning system to alert them
to rising waters. The police had been monitoring the creek level for several hours
prior to the flooding, but issued no warning; neighbors warned each other. Residents
further said the police were dismissive and rude when they reported to the
scene.
In 1978, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development announced the results of a flood insurance study of DC and LDC.
Previously, property owners in flood-prone areas had been able to participate
in the federally subsidized Emergency Program of the National Flood Insurance
Program, which limited payments to $35,000 for residences and $100,000 for
commercial properties. With the study, the flood-prone area was moved to the
Regular Program, with premiums subject to actuarial underwriting, but an
increase in the maximum benefit payable. Existing properties could continue to
purchase the federally subsidized coverage, but all new construction in the
100-year flood plain would need to meet National Flood Insurance standards
before any federal loans could be secured.
On September 13, 1979, the outer bands of Hurricane
Frederic hit the Greater Cincinnati area with three to six inches of rainfall.
LDC flooded and there were emergency evacuations of residents living near the
rapidly rising creek. Water and sewage flooded into approximately 60 homes.
The September 1979 council meeting was contentious, with
around 100 residents in attendance with questions and comments about the
flooding and complaints about council’s inaction regarding LDC. Some residents
were upset, saying that council told them six years earlier that the creek
would be cleared and the Watterson bridge replaced. One frustrated resident
said he didn’t expect anything to ever be done to address the flooding because the
village had a “do-nothing council” and then promptly exited the meeting.
Residents said the creek was littered with fallen trees,
utility poles, shopping carts, and other debris. They related how they had to
shovel raw sewage out of their basements and tear out carpeting and said that
advance notification of rising water, like police sirens or a loud speaker,
would have helped them salvage more of their belongings from their homes before
the flooding began.
Councilmember Gary Hodge introduced a motion that the
village finance immediate dredging of LDC, replacement of the Watterson bridge,
and a study of the flood area. Although the bridge was the
property of Hamilton County, Hodge suggested that the village replace it immediately and seek reimbursement from the county later. The village had applied to the
county for work on the Watterson bridge earlier in the year, but the county
commission would not fund it.
Resident Kenneth Martin opined that all of this work
would be in vain if something wasn’t done at the Norfolk & Western Railroad
bridge downstream, where trash and debris accumulated and blocked the culverts. Council
said they would contact the railroad to clear the culverts at their bridge.
Council also voted to dredge the creek within the next 30 days, replace the
Watterson bridge, and get a new study of the flood area.
Debris accumulated at the N & W Railroad culverts,
from February 24, 1982 Eastern Hills Journal
Some residents were upset that the only assistance
available to them might be a Small Business Administration loan, if there were
to be a disaster declaration for the area. At least one of the residents in
attendance expressed disappointment that the only help available was a loan
with interest. Earlier in the meeting Councilmember Jim Finan pointed out to
those in attendance that residents in the flood area were eligible for federal
flood insurance, as was stated in previous council meetings and published over
a year earlier in the Eastern Hills Journal. He urged residents to get
flood insurance.
Around 70 residents attended the October 1979 council
meeting. A Metropolitan Sewer District representative attended and explained how
the water from the flooded LDC backed up into the overwhelmed combination
sanitary and storm sewer system and then into the basements of homes on seven
Fairfax streets. He said the sanitary
and storm sewer combination was not designed for the current usage level and
that there was nothing MSD could do about it at that time, except routine
maintenance.
A citizen questioned why permits were given to build homes
in the flood area and an official explained that at the time the structures
were built there were no federal flood plain regulations. This was followed by
a discussion of how development caused an increase in runoff because there was
a decrease in green space to absorb excess water.
As an update from the previous meeting, village officials
reported that the N & W Railroad had agreed to clear their culverts on a
monthly basis and after heavy rains. The village was working on clearing the
creek bed, but was awaiting the required permission from the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers (USACE) to dredge the creek.
After the 1979 flood, residents who lived near LDC were
energized and not going away. In February 1980, Hodge introduced a motion to
council to immediately advertise for bids for rebuilding the Watterson bridge.
The motion was defeated; an engineering study of the creek had just started. In
response to claims from residents that it was a “do-nothing” council,
councilmembers who voted against the motion explained that they just wanted to
make sure the work was done properly. Many residents wanted quick action, fearing
spring floods.
There were a number of opinions about what caused the
flash flooding, who was responsible, and what the solutions might be. Some said
that the water rushed into Fairfax from the north, so upstream communities needed
to be involved in the solution. Others said that inadequate culverts at the N
& W bridge over DC caused flooding upstream on LDC. Some said that the LDC
needed to be dredged regularly. Others said that the problem was the center
pier of the Watterson bridge, where debris lodged during storms.
In March, residents again appeared at the regular monthly
council meeting. They were frustrated that the only action council had taken
since the September 1979 flood was clearing the creek. Residents learned at the
meeting that Engineer Andrews had not yet completed his study of the creek.
Councilmember Hodge was not satisfied with this and pressed Andrews on what could
be done to prevent future flooding. Andrews said he would recommend rebuilding
the Watterson bridge, replacing the street, and straightening the creek. Hodge
wanted to introduce a motion to advertise for bids to replace the bridge and
straighten the channel, but there wasn’t a full council in attendance, so he
postponed until the next meeting.
At the following meeting, Andrews made formal recommendations
to reconstruct the bridge, realign, rechannel, and/or dredge the creek, pipe
the creek and/or line the creek banks, construct ponding areas, and
miscellaneous maintenance work. Council deadlocked on a vote to authorize
Andrews to prepare a report on what it would take to realign LDC at the
Watterson bridge. Mayor Cribbet, who had previously resided in the flood area
and experienced flooding himself, broke the tie in favor of authorizing the
report.
Fairfax officials and residents met with county
commissioners on May 1, 1980. The county declined to fund a new Watterson bridge,
saying that replacing the bridge would only have a minor impact on flooding and
that the bridge was structurally sound. They did agree to have the county
director of public works review the situation. In late June, the director of
public works recommended a reservoir be placed in Bramble Park to capture excessive
water flow upstream and release it gradually. The City of Cincinnati and
Cincinnati Parks Board rejected this plan.
In July, LDC flooded again. The village had recently
cleared debris from the creek, but the debris was coming from upstream, outside
the village. Police Chief Paul Ferrara explained at the July council meeting
how quickly the water rose and that a heavy wrecker had been called in to
remove debris that accumulated at the Watterson bridge. Debris then flowed
downstream to the N & W Railroad bridge where it accumulated and a heavy
wrecker was also used to remove the blockage there.
From the July 30, 1980 Eastern Hills Journal
Council was in special session on August 14, 1980 when a
police officer entered the meeting and announced that the creek was flooding.
Mayor Cribbet and others present rushed to the creek and saw a tree lodged
against the center pier of the Watterson bridge. Maintenance workers removed
the debris from the creek and the fire department pumped out basements. Around
10 homes in the area of Simpson and Bedford were flooded.
LDC-area residents felt that county and village officials
were dragging their feet about doing anything about the creek. Not only were they
in frequent danger of property loss, but the flooding problem made it virtually
impossible for them to sell their homes. Longtime Simpson resident Jo Lakeman
said that residents had “pleaded, begged, and cried” for help to no avail. Residents
in the flood zone said that Fairfax officials, most of whom lived in the
“upper” section of the village, were insensitive to their plight.
At the regular August council meeting, council authorized
Engineer Arthur Andrews to work with county engineers on a plan to remove the
center pier from the Watterson bridge, though there was concern that this would
only push the problem downstream to the N & W Railroad bridge over DC.
In a September 1980 letter to the editor of the
Cincinnati Post, Councilmember Jim Finan called out the City of Cincinnati over
their lack of cooperation in addressing the flooding problem in Fairfax. He
said that the logs, tires, appliances, debris, and soil from bank erosion that
clogged the creek in Fairfax were coming from upstream in Madisonville.
Around this time, some residents engaged legal counsel
and formed a group called “Citizens for Flood Control.” They were skeptical
that council would do anything and said if they did it would only be because
their group was threatening litigation. Citizens for Flood Control attended
council meetings for at least six consecutive months, and contacted county,
state, and federal officials to plead their case.
In November, after receiving authorization from the
county, the village awarded a contract for removal of the center pier of the
Watterson bridge. The county would split the bill with the village. Village
officials cautioned that this wouldn’t solve all of the problems and that
flooding was still possible in the event of heavy rain. By February of 1981,
the bridge modification had been completed.
Watterson bridge as it is today, without a center pier.
In the meantime, N & W was conducting a study to
determine if the culverts under their bridge were adequate to handle heavy
water flow. They ultimately increased the flow under the bridge at no cost to
the village.
N & W Railroad culverts after work was completed
from February 24, 1982 Eastern Hills Journal
Life along LDC appeared to return to some degree of
normalcy and in early 1990, attention turned to DC. In the previous 10 years,
flooding along DC had cost local businesses, including those in the Red Bank
Road area, $3 million. Council voted to join USACE and the City of Cincinnati
in financing a three-year study of DC that would lead to a flood control
project. Officials were concerned that if Fairfax didn’t participate in the
project that the Red Bank Road area would become more prone to flooding.
Council approved participation in the study at the April 1990 meeting at a cost
of $87,000 over three years.
Less than a month later, LDC flooded for the first time
in several years when four to five inches of rain fell over the course of three days. DC
flooded as well. Water was waist-high in some places. 30 families were
temporarily relocated, three of whom spent the night at the Recreation Center.
40 homes in the area sustained damage. A basement wall collapsed at one house.
A USACE project manager said that the level of work needed to prevent flooding
of LDC would be cost-prohibitive. The only solutions he could offer were to
jack up the houses, relocate them, or seal up the basements.
Not surprisingly, residents in the flood area were upset.
They complained that removing the center pier of the Watterson bridge had not
solved the flooding problem. The most frequent question was why the village was
financing a study of DC that would benefit businesses, but wouldn’t invest in a
study of LDC that would benefit homeowners. Residents were so upset by the DC
study funding that they circulated an initiative petition to repeal the ordinance
authorizing it. This initiative later failed at the ballot box.
In the early 1990s, USACE released its plans for DC,
which would involve construction of flood walls, removal of a couple of
bridges, and other improvements. The federal government would cover 75% of the $14
million price tag with Cincinnati and Fairfax responsible for the remainder. Without
intervention, USACE estimated that businesses and residences, mostly in the
Madison Road area in Cincinnati, would face around $1.8 million per year in
losses. Fairfax businesses were also impacted by
flooding, just not to the same extent. If funded and approved, the project
would begin in 1996 and take three years to complete.
In May 1994, three years after applying to the Ohio EPA
and USACE, the village finally received permission to clean up LDC. Workers
removed sandbars, debris, and rocks from the creek. Gabions (wire baskets
filled with rocks) were placed at some spots along the creek bed between Murray
Avenue and Watterson Road to prevent erosion. Installing gabions between
Watterson and Nightingale Court was too expensive at the time, though they were
installed sometime later. In late June the Cincinnati Enquirer declared that
LDC “has been tamed.” Mayor Ted Shannon was a little more realistic, saying, “We
can't eliminate the flooding completely, but this will help out a lot."
Gabions can be seen along the left side of the creek bank in this photo
taken from the Bedford St. bridge.
In April 1997, village council voted to spend up to
$200,000 to help pay for the USACE project to address DC flooding. Hamilton
County would kick in $600,000 and the remainder of the 25% local share would be
Cincinnati’s responsibility. Although DC hadn’t flooded in several years,
Fairfax officials thought this was an important project. The Swallen’s stores had gone out
of business two years earlier and they hoped that flood-proofing the area might
help spur business development in the Red Bank Road area.
In June 1997, two inches of rain fell in two hours,
causing both DC and LDC to flood. Fairfax was the hardest-hit area in Greater
Cincinnati with damage to dozens of homes and businesses.
From the June 19, 1997 Cincinnati Enquirer
By September 1998, the USACE DC project still hadn’t
started. Fairfax was still negotiating with a business for easement rights so
an abandoned bridge could be removed. After filing suit against the business,
an agreement was reached. However, Cincinnati was still working on getting
easement rights from a property owner.
The DC project was included in the Water Resource
Development Act of 2000, which President Bill Clinton signed into law in
December 2000. In the decade or so since the project was first proposed, the
price had increased from $14 million to $36 million. The increased cost was
blamed on delays in obtaining easement rights and changes in design and
specifications. The local contributions to the cost of the project were capped;
if they weren’t, Fairfax would have been unable to pay its portion.
The evening of July 17, 2001 into the following morning,
a heavy line of storms hit the area, with lightning, strong winds, and as much
as eight inches of rain in a three-hour period. During the storm, 21-year-old
Anna Davenport, a resident of Simpson Avenue, went to the basement of her flood-prone
home to retrieve her computer. When she didn’t return, her father, Ron, called
to her. When he didn’t receive a response, Ron went to the basement to help
her. Ron’s wife Debbie and the other two Davenport children evacuated their
home safely, but Ron’s and Anna’s bodies were later found in the basement in
seven feet of water.
Residents reported this was the worst flood in memory and
as bad as the flooding had been in the past, there had never been loss of life.
Understandably, residents again had questions and complaints. Some residents
questioned why millions of dollars were being spent for DC flood protection for
businesses, but not for LDC flood protection for homes.
Governor Bob Taft declared a state of emergency in Hamilton
County and toured the Fairfax flood area on July 20, where residents continued
their cleanup, removing personal belongings, mud, and sewage from their homes.
Concrete foundation walls were damaged; foundations of several homes had collapsed
or failed, including the Davenports’.
From the July 21, 2001 Cincinnati Enquirer
Members of the community and businesses came together to
help those affected by flooding. The fire department pumped out basements and hosed
down yards and streets to remove mud and sewage. The Mariemont High School
football team helped residents with cleanup. Several organizations held
fundraisers. Local restaurants and businesses donated food, drinks, and
cleaning supplies. St. Margaret of Cortona church served as a drop-off and
distribution site for donations. The Red Cross set up a disaster service center
that remained in the village for over two weeks.
On July 27, Roger Setters from USACE visited the flood
area and said the best solution might be to remove homes from the flood zone.
He said that improving the creek channel or erecting flood walls would probably
be impractical and cost-prohibitive.
On August 3, a meeting was held for residents who had
been affected by the flood. Representatives from a variety of federal, state,
and county agencies attended to answer questions, address rumors, and let
residents know how to seek assistance.
At a September 5 press conference, a Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA) representative announced that FEMA would help pay for
damage caused by the July flood. They also announced that FEMA and Ohio EMA
would help fund possible home buyouts and flood protection measures.
In mid-October, USACE formally announced their
recommendations for buyouts of dozens of homes, environmental restoration, and
creek channel modifications. Homes in the flood zone would be demolished and
the area restored to a flood plain. Funding for this project would primarily come
from the federal government with the village responsible for the rest.
Fairfax didn’t have money on hand to instantly fund their
part of the project; they were placing a .5 percent earnings tax increase on
the ballot just to maintain current village services. While funding was being
cobbled together, LDC continued to flood. Residents were growing increasingly
frustrated and felt that the village wasn’t doing anything to help. Many
residents were willing to sell their homes to the village and relocate.
Residents who wanted to get rid of their flood-prone
homes continued to question why the village was helping to fund the DC project
instead of using those funds to buy homes. However, that money was pledged to
the DC project, which had been in process for some time, and couldn’t be
diverted from that purpose.
In conjunction with a FEMA grant, the village ultimately purchased and demolished a couple
of dozen homes on South Whetzel Avenue, Warren Avenue, Simpson Avenue, Bedford
Street, and Nightingale Court. Other homes were flood-proofed. The properties
purchased by the village cannot be developed. They are now green space and part
of the flood plain.
Simpson at Bedford, July 22, 2001 Cincinnati Enquirer
Simpson at Bedford, Spring 2022
During a dry spell, LDC might be little more than a
series of puddles. It can't even be found on some maps. But during a heavy rain, it has become destructive and, tragically,
deadly. What caused the flooding? My (admittedly) uneducated opinion is that most, if not all, of
the factors mentioned through the years, worked together to create the “perfect
storm.” Whatever the reasons, let’s all hope and pray that we have seen the
last of the destructive flooding along Little Duck Creek.