Friday, November 2, 2012

Cemetery Damage During Hurricane Sandy

Hurricane Sandy was a tropical cyclone of the 2012 Atlantic hurricane season that severely affected portions of the Caribbean, Mid-Atlantic and Northeastern United States in late October, with lesser impacts in the Southeastern and Midwestern states and eastern Canada. In diameter, it was the largest Atlantic hurricane on record, with winds spanning 1,100 miles (1,800 km).

Tree down and monument damage at Mont Royal Cemetery in Montreal, Quebec - LINK

The high waters of the Monocacy River have risen into Resthaven Memorial Gardens covering a large number of graves. Photo credit: Bill Green - LINK

Calvary Cemetery. Photo by Meta Nemegi - Paul Searing on Flickr

Flooding Forces Coffins Out Of Graves In Crisfield, Maryland - LINK

LINK

Inundated graves in in Chesapeake, Va - LINK

Flooding Forces Coffins Out Of Graves In Crisfield, Maryland - LINK

Tree down at Calvary Cemetery. Photo by Meta Nemegi - Paul Searing on Flickr

LINK

 At the cemetery where I live in Queens someone hurricane proofed their loved one’s plot - LINK

Calvary Cemetery. Photo by Meta Nemegi - Paul Searing on Flickr

At Green-Wood Cemetery, the top of this monument was knocked off a pedestal by a falling tree. Photo courtesy of Green-Wood Cemetery - LINK

Superstorm Sandy forced caskets above ground in the cemetery on Halls Creek Road.
Photo credit: Kim Hairston/Baltimore Sun - LINK

A casket floats from its grave in Maryland after Hurricane Sandy hammers the east coast.- LINK

Broken tree in the Gaskill cemetery. Photo by Rick Stilson - LINK

No comments:

Post a Comment