
My brother Tom and I pose at our house in Gulfport, Mississippi, almost a year before Hurricane Camille.
[This is a re-run of a post from last year. Today is the 41st anniversary of Hurricane Camille.]
August of 1969 could be described as a month of turmoil and rebellion. The Vietnam War was in full swing, provoking protests in the streets and heated disagreements at the dinner table. The infamous Charles Manson cult went on a murderous rampage, killing Actress Sharon Tate and six other prominent Californians. And on a 600-acre dairy farm in New York, a half million free-loving, mind-altered hippies stayed stoked and stoned during the Woodstock Music Festival.
I was only nine-years-old, so I wasn’t exactly tuned in to the events swirling around me. But I do remember August 17-18, 1969. As Blood, Sweat, & Tears belted out “Something Comin’ On” at Woodstock, my little brother Tom and I were hunkered down behind a small table turned on its side, hoping the fierce winds of Hurricane Camille would not blow in our windows or cause our house to collapse.
We had been upstairs, near the same room pictured above, watching the occasional transformer explode from our window, the only hint of light in the pitch black sky. Then, in the glow of candle light, the ceiling collapsed on us, raining wet leaves and bristly branches on our heads. Terrified that the house might be caving in, we ran screaming to the lower floor. We stayed there behind that shielding table the rest of the storm. Tom finally fell asleep, but I was wild-eyed the entire night, fretting the whole house was going to crush me to death at any minute.
A huge stack of burlap sacks was piled in our house that evening. We were storing them for an entrepreneur cousin of my dad’s who had just built a “Super Slide” on the beach in Gulfport. It was a new tourist attraction, a towering multi-lane slide. Ticket-holders would carry the burlap sacks to the top, lay them out, and slide in waves to the bottom. Cousin Dan was afraid the hurricane was going to blow the sacks away, so he asked us to store them. They came in handy, soaking up the rain that poured in from the gaping hole in the ceiling. The Super Slide and most everything else on the beach was swept away.
When the storm cleared, my dad and I walked to the beach to see the devastation. Everyone was awestruck and certain that Camille was the worst hurricane the world would ever see.
[See also: SS Hurricane Camille Gift Shop and Hurricane Katrina - Four Year Anniversary, a four part essay.]



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