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Flash Flood — Frederick, Maryland

2006-06-27 to 2006-06-28 · near Countywide, Frederick, Maryland

5
Direct deaths
1
Injuries
$500K
Property damage

Event narrative

A mudslide closed a section of Harp Mill Road in Wolfsville. Numerous road closures and water rescues were reported countywide. The Monacacy River overflowed, flooding a parking lot and field along Monocacy Boulevard. Basement flooding occurred in Emmitsburg, Myersville and Middletown. Shank Road was closed indefinitely to repair a washed-out pipe.Three adults died when they were washed out of the bed of a pickup truck east of Myersville. They evacuated their car when it stalled in high water near Ellerton on Route 17 along the Middle Creek around 830 PM. The driver of the pickup truck gave the three a ride shortly before the three people went missing. It is unsure whether they were swept out or tried to swim. Additionally, two teenagers died after exploring Little Pipe Creek in New Midway along the Frederick-Carroll County line. They were last seen at 630 PM when they left home to explore Little Pipe Creek in Carroll County. One bicycle and some clothing belonging to the boys was found at the bank of the creek near MD Route 194. Authorities believe the boys went swimming and were washed away. The currents on June 28 were so strong that one of the rescue boats capsized and injured a man who was performing rescue operations.

Wider weather episode

A weak cold front settled over the forecast area from June 23 until June 27. Waves of low pressure rode northeast along the front. Flow in the atmosphere was parallel to the boundary, producing several rounds of training echoes. As a result, double digit rainfall totals affected parts of the region through the five days. Scattered areas of flash flooding began on June 23 and continued into June 24. Then, flooding began to take on a more serious nature since the ground had become saturated in so many spots. A slow-moving line of thunderstorms fired along a tropical moisture plume and dumped between 4 and 7 inches across the Baltimore Metro, causing extensive urban flooding on June 25 and June 26. Major disruption of transportation was experienced June 26 due to the flooding. MARC Commuter rail experienced disruptions, flooding in underground tunnels forced much of the Washington Metro rail to close, and numerous roads were closed due to high water or mudslides. Nearly 2000 people in Montgomery County were evacuated when engineers on site determined that the Lake Needwood Dam may fail due to substantially above normal water levels on June 28. Fortunately, this did not occur. Unfortunately however, 5 people lost their lives due to flooding. Three adults died when they were washed out of the bed of a pickup truck east of Myersville in Frederick County Maryland. They evacuated their car when it stalled in high water near Ellerton on Route 17 along the Middle Creek around 8:30 PM. The driver of the pickup truck gave the three a ride shortly before the three people went missing. It is unsure whether they were swept out or tried to swim. Additionally, two teenagers died after exploring Little Pipe Creek in New Midway, MD, along the Frederick-Carroll County line. They were last seen at 6:30 PM when they left home to explore Little Pipe Creek in Carroll County. One bicycle and some clothing belonging to the boys were found at the bank of the creek near Route 194. Authorities believe the boys went swimming and were washed away. The currents June 28 were so strong that one of the rescue boats capsized and injured a man.


Source: NOAA Storm Events Database, event_id 5515116. Narrative written by the NWS forecast office that issued the report.