The Palo Alto History Project
The Christmas Flood
                                                                                             Greer Park & Surroundings
2006
"The Night Before Christmas and All Through the House --- Was
Mud"

The San Francisquito Creek had been flooding for centuries, but it wasn’t much of a concern to anyone.  
Three days before Christmas 1955, however, it became a major problem for everybody living in the new
housing developments that surrounded Greer Park.

The 1955 flood was not the largest San Francisquito flooding ever seen.  Floods in 1911 and 1862 had
been more extensive, but with few homes having yet been built, damage was minimal.  After all, flooding was
good for undeveloped apricot orchards.  But by the mid-1950s, an enormous housing boom had taken
place to the west of Bayshore Highway.  The new residents living in those recently constructed Eichler
housing tracts found their Christmas plans drenched in flood waters.

That winter had actually been a dry one in Northern California.  Most folks were glad to finally see rain fall
on December 9th, bringing relief to the parched crops of the Santa Clara Valley.  But precipitation also
marked the weather reports of December 18th, 19th, 20th and 21st and still more rainfall was due.  On
December 22nd it rained all day and into the evening as the San Francisquito Creek rose to dangerously
high levels.  As debris and wood got caught under the bridge over Bayshore Highway, the creek began to
back up.

By 11:30 PM, flood waters had jumped the levees on the Palo Alto side of the creek, bursting a 20 foot gap
in one levee wall.  Creek water began to rush downhill joining overflowing canals and gutters and sweeping
down Greer Road and into the surrounding homes along the way.  At the dead end at Seale Canal near
Greer Park, water began to seep further out, inundating homes throughout the low-lying subdivisions south
of Embarcadero. And there was more bad news for the Greer Park area: At Matadero Creek, flood waters
burst their banks at Greer Road Bridge bringing more flood waters nearly two feet high.

By 1:45 in the morning, evacuees were everywhere.   Those who tried to make their escape in cars soon
found the water rising so rapidly that they had to abandon any plans for a vehicular exit.  Over 1,000 people
were forced to abandon their homes as emergency trucks and buses mobilized to move flood victims.  At 1:
50 AM, shop teacher David Downs used his assigned key to open up Jordan Junior High School, which
became a place of refuge for the rest of the night.  At one point more than 600 evacuees crammed into the
school, most of them without shoes, socks or dry clothing.  

There were some close calls too.  While helping to evacuate families, Palo Alto police officer Otto Niehues
fell into an open manhole that had its cover popped off by extreme water pressure.  Niehues managed to
save himself only by somehow catching the edge of the rim with his hands as he fell.  (Oddly, Niehues later
would become a victim of the
1998 rains as a much older man. During a severe El Nino downpour he was
nearly killed when hit by a car and he never did fully recover from those injuries)

Other heroics took place nearby.  A 75 year-old Greer Road woman too feeble to leave her house was
rescued by two neighbors as she was unable to battle the dark swirling currents on her own.  At Van Auken
Circle, John Vecsey and four other men balanced a table and two chairs to steady a surplus navy life raft
and rescued their neighbor, Winnie Coughlin.  They then returned to save her guest, seven dogs and a
parrot.  Bill Bronson of Moffett Circle, a victim of polio, had to walk through blocks of flooded streets on
crutches to make it to the safety of a nearby school.

Others, who were in less danger, let the Yuletide spirit help make the best of a difficult situation. Higgins
Court residents merrily sang “Jingle Bells,” as they piled into a truck to make their get-away from high water
levels.  And things could not have been better for a pet duck named Ginger that the Hacker family of Chabot
Lane had won at a state fair.  Mrs. Hacker told a Palo Alto Times reporter that Ginger had last been seen
happily swimming down their street. Indeed Palo Alto did seem to have become a virtual home for ducks ---
Mrs. Sullivan of Indian Drive told the Times that one of her excited girls had squealed, “Oh a duck pond in
our own house” when she first observed the transformation of her living room.

In the end, no one was seriously injured in the 1955 flood, but damage was extensive.  
More than 650 Palo Alto homes were flooded, totaling $1.1 million in damage.  And many Palo Altans had
to forego caroling and Christmas hams to spend their holidays cleaning mud from living rooms, salvaging
damaged furniture and shoveling out lawns and driveways.

In the years following the Christmas Flood, attempts were made to remedy the danger posed by the San
Francisquito Creek.  Still, events would repeat themselves again 43 years later.  
The 1998 flood that would
again overflow the levees at the San Francisquito Creek was even worse than its 1955 predecessor.  This
time, Palo Alto would incur $28 million in damages.  

And the similarities between the two floods were unsettling.  In 1998 --- as in 1955 --- water from the
creek overwhelmed the levees, rushed down the eastern side of Palo Alto and settled in the lowlands near
Greer Park.  Again residents woke up to water in their bedrooms and again there were some near death
experiences.   

Since then, more improvements have been made to creek walls and levees, and better warning systems have
been put in place, but many feel that it is only a matter of time before residents are seeking the high ground
again.  After all, history has a way of repeating itself.
                                                                                                                                -Matt Bowling
                                                                          
Palo Alto: Then & Now
Cars were rendered pretty
much useless during the flood
(PAHA)
Moffett Circle today
Palo Alto Home Page
A yard full of creek water
(PA Times)
Historic Events
Green Gables
Palo Alto Memory Bank
Do you have memories or stories
of the 1955 Christmas Flood?  
Post them in our memory bank.  
Corrections or comments are
also always welcome... Thanks!
Your name:
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Subject:
Sources:
Palo Alto Times, Palo Alto Historical Association
1955
2007
The corner of Colorado Avenue and Clara Street on the
morning of December 23rd, 1955.  Much has changed in the
current picture and it's a whole lot dryer...
"Before San Francisquito Creek was basically wild before it was cleaned up on both
sides.  Kids played in the creek making forts and finding Indian artifacts that they
didn't recognize at the time but now realize what they were.  Played all the way from
Newell Road to Bayshore under the highway.  There was lots of shrubbery along the
sides and in creek and lots of poison oak.  

The flood in 1955 changed the creek.  it was cleaned out then.  They removed the
couches, bed springs, everything and anything.  No more playing in the creek after
that."
-Alice
Memories added by readers:
"My daughter is furious because she slept through it and the rest of us were up all
night watching it come up.  And it just about came to our door but it did not come into
our house.  But my son remembers that the man across the street for some reason
got sick and they took him away in a rowboat.  So there was enough water to take
someone away on a rowboat.   A lot of our neighbors got out, but we stayed and
guarded the house."
-Dot